This website uses cookies. Spring, summer, fall and winter each have their own unique personalities, and the seasons vary a lot from north to south. Spring runs from March/April to May, summer from June to August, fall from September to October/November and winter from November/December to March/February.In a land as varied as Sweden, these seasons can be quite different depending on where you live. Here is a list of the hottest and coldest temperatures ever recorded in various locations in Sweden since 1860. At the time of the Archive’s creation, we expected that we might have to evaluate a new record every few years. Israel saw its heaviest snowfall since 1992 in After a cold March and early April in Finland and Scandinavia, a late, but very strong and widespread spring caused fast snow melting and Germany and areas of Central Europe had their wettest ever May, followed by the severe flooding during the After six days in early July with temperatures over 40 °C (104 °F), In July a heat wave struck China with alerts covering nine provinces, including Anhui, Jiangsu, Hunan, Hubei, Shanghai and Chongqing.
The storm formed from a deep upper level trough which became a cut-off low, the event was named "Achilles" by the The incident trapped over 6 dozen people inside of their automobiles and harmed 15 people in suburban Iowa and Nebraska.Tens of thousands of cattle were killed in South Dakota with ranchers reporting loss of 20 to 50% of their herds.During March a cold easterly flow across northern Europe from Russia brought intense snowfalls across the continent as it met moisture filled air masses from Ukraine to Ireland. Copyright © Here is a list of the hottest and coldest temperatures ever recorded in various locations in A temperature of 37.5°C recorded in July 1865 in Visby is dubious due to unknown exposure conditions.A temperature of -55 °C recorded in January 1917 in Vuonatjviken is dubious and possibly affected by thermometer malfunction.An unofficial temperature of -53 °C was recorded on Dec 13, 1941 in Malgovik with private equipment.A temperature of -49 °C recorded in February 1881 in Sveg was affected by thermometer malfunction.An unofficial temperature of -40 °C was recorded with private equipments in Sala on the same day.An unofficial temperature of -37.6°C was recorded at An unofficial temperature of -35 °C recorded the same winter.An unofficial temperature of -38 °C was recorded in February 1942 with private equipments.
This website is administered by the Swedish Institute. If you want more information, read about In most of the country, people stay outdoors well into the night, chatting in parks and outdoor cafés as the sun barely dips below the horizon. But because of the warm Gulf Stream, the climate here can be much milder than you might expect. On the way south, you’ll pass by endless numbers of lakes, streams, and pine and birch trees.On the Baltic island of Gotland, limestone columns rise dramatically from the sea. 'Extreme and strange weather' becoming more normal.
Such extremes include severe thunderstorms; severe snowstorms, ice storms, blizzards, flooding, hurricanes, and high winds, and heat waves. For simplicity’s sake, the country can be divided into three major regions: Stretching from Stockholm in the east to southern Norway in the west, The Swedish countryside is dotted with thousands of lakes, freshwater streams, mountains and rolling hills. As far south as Malmö, summer daylight outlasts the average person’s waking hours. This means that the clock is set forward one hour, from the last weekend in March to the last weekend in October, in order to gain more daylight.Winter, as you might expect, is dark and cold across most of the country. Due to the continental nature of the Swedish climate, the entire country is prone to absolute extremes, even though averages are normally moderate in most of the country.