Oh that's cute. You get a couple days a year above 90 and you think you know what heat is.
LMAO you have no clue.
I won't pretend that NJ or NY gets as hot as the south consistently. I'd be a liar
But compare average temp one of the biggest city in the south (Atlanta) to the average temperature of the biggest city in the the mid atlantic (NYC) in the summer
https://weatherspark.com/compare/s/...Atlanta-and-New-York-City#Figures-Temperature
But we'll give the south even more benefit and pick much hotter places in Jacksonville and Houston. Also added Nashville and Philly for fun.
https://weatherspark.com/compare/s/...cksonville-Houston-Philadelphia-and-Nashville
I threw nashville in there because I know you're a tennessee boy.
And they're certainly hotter. THat's a given. As i said I'd be a liar if I said the south wasn't warmer than the north east.
What the difference is in the North East we have all seasons. That's not true in those hot places in the south. If we look at Jacksonville and Houston, tehir average lows in Dec, Jan and Feb are in the mid 40s low 50s. While NYC and Philly's average highs are in the mid to low 40s.
Now we haven't dealt with th eBoston of it all. Boston's average high temp comes from a low of about 36 to a high of about 82. Which I know that high is cold to you I'm aware. But that's essentially a 50 degree swing over the course of the year. Where as houston goes from about 63 to about 95 or about a 30 degree swing.
Now if we go closer to my weather. my average high is only around 78 (I know you'd be freezing your nips off) but our lowest average high is 25.
That's the different. THe north east has seasons, where it's cold in the winter, cool in spring, hot in summer, warm in fall. Some light variation year to year. It's called seasons