Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Climatic characteristics of Belgium

Climatic characteristics of Belgium

Belgium is located 50 degrees north of the equator and has a temperate maritime climate with four distinct seasons. The temperature is between 15 and 35 degrees in spring and summer, rarely below-15 degrees in autumn and winter, often between -5 and 5 degrees in the daytime, and it can reach-10 degrees at night.

Because the temperature changes greatly, you need clothes to wear all the year round, especially a warm coat, to accompany you through the cold winter. Spring is the most charming. The earth is recovering, and everything you can see is thriving and full of vitality, but the days in early spring are still very cold.

Spring is the season of flowers. In many parts of Belgium, there are beautiful gardens open for tourists to enjoy. The days in summer are very long. It is already dawn at six o'clock in the morning, and you can drive without turning on the light at nine o'clock in the evening. Although the long summer makes people feel lazy, tourists from all over the world will arouse an impulse to go abroad for a walk.

After the hot summer, flowers bloom and bear fruit. Autumn comes and yellow leaves fall all over the floor. Autumn in Europe can often walk on the fallen leaves all over the ground, which is a very good enjoyment; When winter comes, everything is depressed, and even Grandfather Sun doesn't want to stay. At eight or nine o'clock in the morning, it was still gray and dark, and at four or five o'clock in the afternoon, I was rushing down the mountain. It seems that the twenty-four hours a day have been shortened by half.

Belgium has a temperate maritime climate-mild, cool and rainy, with an average temperature of 25℃ in summer and 7.2℃ in winter. The annual minimum and maximum temperatures are generally around-12.2 C and 32.2 C. ..

Extended data:

natural environment

1, regional position

Belgium is located in the west of Europe, bordering the Netherlands in the north, Germany in the east, Luxembourg in the southeast, France in the south and west, and the North Sea in the northwest. The land area is 30,528 square kilometers (including the Dutch enclave Bell-Elden), the territorial sea and exclusive economic zone are 3,462 square kilometers, and the coastline is 66.5 kilometers long.

2. Topography

Two-thirds of Belgium's land area is hilly and flat lowlands, with the lowest point slightly below sea level. The whole territory is divided into three parts: the Flemish plain on the northwest coast, the hills in the middle and the Ardennes Plateau in the southeast. The highest point is 694 meters above sea level. The western plain is flat, with many rivers and sufficient irrigation; The eastern part is the Ardennes Mountains, with high terrain and high forest coverage. The farthest point of this country is 280 kilometers away.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Belgium