Question:

Where is the warmest place to live in England?

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Where is the warmest place to live in England?

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  1. I heard Dorset was pretty good!


  2. usually in your bed with the electric blanket on or a loving partner to cuddle.

    but seriously, in the summer england can be a very warm country, you'll find the warmest temperatures on the west coast or the next town inland.

  3. London! It's warmer than the rest of the country most of the time.

  4. Aberdeen! You'd be surprised.

  5. Kent

  6. London is warmest

    But it's unnatural heat from all the pollution

    Sunny Devon has to win!!

  7. Anywhere but my house.

    My wife is a fresh air freak who insists on having all the windows open all year round and rarely turns the heating on.

    There's a brass monkey sitting in my living room crying his eyes out.

  8. the north is obviously cold, the south east is always hottest in summer and usually colder than the south west in the winter. The south west is quite wet, rarely gets the snow in the winter or the heat that the east have in the summer

  9. South west, devon & cornwall.  Actually it's probably London cos of it's population density.

  10. That will be on the big bonfires that our Eastern European friends will light when they become disillusioned and the handouts stop

  11. Cornwall LOL - well during the summer months anyway, most likely the south east. lucky people. :O)

  12. The Scilly Isles have the warmest average.

  13. On the South Coast

  14. Warmest all year round has to be Torquay in South Devon, not known as the Devon Riviera for nothing, it even has palm trees along its sea front. (Cornwall suffers from being too exposed  to the Atlantic from the Lizard round to Bideford.)



    South Devon is sheltered from westerly Atlantic weather fronts by Bodmin moor, Dartmoor and Exmoor. Torquay is also far enough up the English channel to be sheltered from Atlantic gales blowing northwards.

    The hottest places, where record temperatures are recorded, tend to be in the SE, because its so close to the European land mass and is less influenced by sea temperatures.

    I think somewhere in Kent holds the record for hottest daytime temperature, reaching 38.5 degrees C one day in August 2003.(That's above the average daily summer temperature in Death Valley USA.)

    But if that's not hot enough for you then move closer to Greece and Bulgaria, the heatwave last summer saw temperatures there reached 46 °C. We in the UK didn't notice though, we were too busy dealing with the floods.

  15. Cornwall or the Scilly Isles

  16. the south east, particularly London as it's so highly populated.  the south coast is warm but can be a bit chillier because of the wind

  17. In front of our log fire.

  18. up your butt

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