Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Comparison between rainy season and "dry" in Nantian and Northeast China

Comparison between rainy season and "dry" in Nantian and Northeast China

It has been raining continuously in Shanghai recently. I heard that there will be a rainy season in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, but now I realize it.

The so-called rainy season is the warm and humid air flow in the Pacific Ocean brought by the southeast monsoon in June and July every year, which passes through the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River in China, Taiwan Province Province in China, south-central Japan and south Korea. Because now is the mature period of plums in Jiangnan, it is called "Meiyu", and this period is called Meiyu season. At this time, the air humidity is high, the temperature is high, the clothes are easy to get moldy, and after the rainy and rainy season.

I don't feel much about the humidity and sultry weather, because compared with the weather around the south of China at home (the weather around the south is the name of a weather phenomenon, which usually refers to the phenomenon that the temperature starts to rise and the humidity starts to rise every spring. At this time, the weather in South China is changeable and very humid, with light rain or fog, which leads to the phenomenon of surrounding the south sky. Some cold objects begin to condense after encountering warm and humid airflow, forming water droplets on the surface of the objects. ), I feel that the rainy season is still a piece of cake.

Back in Nantian, if the floor is ceramic tile, it is estimated that you won't see a clean and refreshing floor for a long time. The ground seems to have been dragged by a wet mop, and there is no tendency to dry at all. That's not the saddest thing. When I think of going back to Nantian in high school, underwear and socks can be dried for a week, and clothes can be dried for two or three days, but they are rotten and sour. So it's time to compete who has the most clothes. Close the doors and windows at home, or sleep at night is covered with a wet quilt.

Compared with the north, because the university is studying in Heilongjiang, the air humidity can only say one word: dry! When I got there, the first reaction was my skin. Because I am used to taking a bath every day, I hardly changed it to two or three days after I came to the northeast. Slowly, my skin began to crack, itchy and painful. I'm not used to body lotion, but I started to use body lotion, and the situation of chapped skin gradually improved. The air is too dry. In the south, I sweat when I play ball, but in the northeast, there is no smell, and the air humidity is too low to ferment sweat (I am very happy about this and can rest assured to sweat).

Before the rainy season is over, the dog days are coming again, and I will be squatting here tomorrow. The so-called dog days, between the light summer heat and the hot summer heat, are the days with the highest temperature, the highest humidity and the sultry heat in a year. I wonder how hot Shanghai will be then. I'm looking forward to it (I hope it won't be overwhelmed by the heat)

China's territory spans a wide range of dimensions, and the air humidity between different dimensions is also different. Both are good and bad. It's time to experience the climate in Shanghai.

what do you think? What do you have to say about the climate of the city where you live now?