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Paul Botts's avatar

Honestly the Great Lakes coasts are hard to beat for summers. So many people I've met over the years who grew up elsewhere in the country have said they were amazed to discover how enjoyable areas like Michigan's west coast are June-September. (One of those is now my wife who grew up on Puget Sound, and loves that area, but says that if we lived there we'd be doing our summer vacations someplace along Lake Michigan.)

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Logan's avatar

Pacific Northwest summers feel a little extra special to me. Hot dry days for all your summery activities, but what really clinches it for me is the way the temperature drops when the sun goes down. Summer feels wrong to me in places with muggy summers, where the moisture in the air holds the heat all night long. Cool summer evenings have that extra little romance to them—gathering around campfires, huddling for warmth because you mistakenly thought you wouldn’t need a jacket (again), opening up all the windows at night to let the cool air in and falling asleep the sound of the crickets outside. And then the cool overnight temperatures also grant you cool mornings, which are invaluable for hikes and biking and other non-aquatic outdoors time.

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