We live in Olympia, Washington, and we are tired of the rain (it has not rained yet but it will happen soon). I am almost exhausted and I am searching the Internet for information about several cities in Washington state. My husband and I do not know anything about East Australia Before thinking about such a dramatic movement, I would like to get some good advice. I hope that people living in the western part of the state of Washington and the eastern part will respond. We want to know ... East, East and East are wonderful. I like green here and I know that it is green rain, but there is a green place in the east. Will not it rain so much? Season 4 is wonderful. 2 children
In Spokane in eastern Washington State, it is a bit quieter than West Washington State. Spokane's moistest moon is in November and December, the most dry month is July and September. The average precipitation in November and December (or equivalent precipitation, since most precipitation falls on snow) is about 2.25 inches rainfall (equivalent to 15 inches rainfall). The precipitation in August is only 0.68 inches. The precipitation in August and September is only 0.76 inches. Annual rainfall is approximately 16.67 inches, about 1.3 inches per month. Please refer to Table 4 below for monthly average precipitation of Spokane, Washington State.
The coldest month in eastern Washington is also from November to March. In the case of Spokane, Washington State, the coldest lowest temperature overnight was much lower than the freezing point of the 1920s. December and January are the coldest months, with an average minimum of 21.6 degrees. In turn, the warm month is 82.5 degrees average height, in July and August. Spokane's average annual average temperature is 37.1 degrees. The annual average temperature is 57.3 degrees. Obviously, due to the influence of the Pacific air, the western position of the Seattle Falls shows that the range of temperature change in summer and winter is much smaller. Due to the continental nature of this area and the source area of air masses, the temperature range of the eastern part of the state changes dramatically from summer to winter. For Spokane's average temperature range, please refer to Figure 2 below.
Eastern Washington State is part of the Eastern Cascades Mountains in Washington State. There are Spokane (the second largest city in the province), the Columbia River and the Grand Coulee Dam, the Hanford Nuclear Regeneration Reserve, and the fertile farmland of Yakima Valley and Parus in this area. Unlike the western state of Washington, the climate is dry and desert environments. The big difference between eastern Washington State and the West half of the state is its climate. The western half of the state is located in a rainy ocean climate, but in the east half there is little rain due to rain clouds from the cascade mountain range. Also, because it is far from the sea, the summer in the east is hot and in winter it is colder than in the west. For example, most of the eastern Washington states have heavy snow every year, but the amount of snowfall in the western part is small and there is no snow every year.