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Seoul blanketed by heaviest November snow on record (www.bbc.com)
33 points by Brajeshwar 2 hours ago | hide | past | web | 6 comments | favorite





Seoul has a seasonality remarkably similar to the Virginia-New York swath of the United States -- with slightly colder winters and slightly warmer summers due to a higher general humidity on the peninsula.

However, it's useful to also understand that Seoul is at almost the exact same latitude as Seville in the south of Spain -- just a couple hours by car to the coast where you can see North Africa. The last time Seville even had a covering of snow was in 1954, and the last time it snowed at all was in 2010.

Winter in Korea is beautiful, it gets cold enough for lakes and rivers to freeze over, and the mountainsides, nearly ever present display even the smallest dusting of snow as a lovely blanket intermixed with wintered trees. It doesn't get so brutally cold that it's painful to be outside, so it generally makes it enjoyable.

The cities can be a challenge, the hilly landscape makes everything slippery. The construction of buildings is often done without any central heating and the ground levels of mixed-use and commercial buildings are often entirely unheated. I've stepped into more than one public restroom where the floor was entirely covered in a sheet of frozen ice as the cleaning staff did their duties, and the result of their work was temporarily memorialized in the cold air.

Being a soup heavy culture, there are few joys better than walking off the street into a 칼국수 noodle shop and sitting down with a giant bowl of steaming soup. Temporarily warmed from the inside out, you are ready to adventure back to your daily tasks in the city.


> The construction of buildings is often done without any central heating

This seems incredible for a country that is so proud of ondol https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ondol


The U.S. is (justifiably) proud of sending astronauts to the moon, despite it being far from ubiquitous.

Busan is also very nice in winter. Although it's cold, humidity is low and most days are sunny. In summer, though, I prefer to be just about anywhere else.

Sounds like one of those polar vortex things: https://www.severe-weather.eu/long-range-2/early-data-weak-p...

(Air current around the poles contains the coldest air at the poles, this is destabilised by warmer overall temperatures leading to that cold air escaping and bringing cold snaps to random areas further from the poles.)


"Heaviest November snow on record so far" - Homer



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