Where are America's Coldest Cities?
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I live in central Maine, and I am shocked that there's not one mention of this state. Although we've had a mild winter for us, I could name several towns here that are pretty sure to take the prize. But let's just start with Carabou, Maine for an example.
The rankings above are based on the consistently coldest cities in January 2019, so while it’s certainly possible that Caribou saw a minimum temp lower than other places, perhaps it was just not quite as consistently cold throughout the month.
Stanley, Idaho is one of the most beautiful places in the country but also one of the very coldest. Situated in the Sawtooth Mountains, near Redfish Lake, its population dwindles way down in the winter. Most people in this small town (population 68) walk to work. Commute time is 5 minutes! :) I only visit there in the summer!
I lived both in Indianapolis and Milwaukee. Milwaukee is a far better city for metropolitan 'feel', transportation, and consumer services, but Indianapolis is the far better city in the winter. I think I read Indy has an average daily temp of 40 degrees by late February, and I don't think Milwaukee hits the 40's until well into April! Plus neither Indy or Columbus have "ample snowfall". People writing this don't know what "ample snowfall" is. I've been in Indy for close to 3 years and I've never touched a shovel. If it snows, it's gone in 3 days or so...
Cheyenne, Wyoming...snowing up to 9mths of the year and hail the other 3 ...suicide rate is almost as high as wind speed.
I think you are confusing that with Seattle,WA which tends to not really get that much rain but more of low ceiling clouds and constant drizzle and mist. *Mistle*.
At least in Cheyane you can get decent sunny days spread in between stormy periods regardless of temperature which just seeing the sky can make all the mood differences.
I think that Indiana cities in the northern part of the state are much colder due to the wind coming off of Lake Michigan. Areas near Chicago have "lake effect" weather. Indianapolis is rarely colder than -10 Fahrenheit.
Hi Greg, We agree with your statement. The top cities had a population cut-off, so some of those towns are just smaller. Towns in Indiana near Lake Michigan do indeed 鈥渆njoy鈥 that lake effect.
Minot ND I lived there for over 7 years at the AFB and we got wind chills in the negative 50's but were never on the news
So, my hometown, Fairbanks Alaska doesn't count as a city?