Not too hot, Not too cold - Just right!

in life •  7 years ago 

Our daughter in New Jersey hasn’t seen her yard for months because it’s covered with snow. Our son in North Carolina finished raking leaves a while back just in time to get out the overcoats in preparation for the frigid weather ahead.

My wife Cynthia and I, we’re weather junkies, who like the climate to be perfect…not too hot and not too cold…

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The thermometer was already getting close to 100 degrees when we left Las Vegas for Cuenca, Ecuador almost five years ago. We’d had enough of that scorching heat—as well as the humidity and chilly winters in the southeast where we previously lived…

Besides the attractive cost of living, the mild climate of Cuenca was one of our major reasons for moving here. We wake up every day with no threat of natural disasters or thoughts about wildly fluctuating temperatures. The temperatures in Cuenca range from average highs of 70 F to lows of 50 F. Relative humidity is usually around 75%. Rainfall amounts to 2 ½ inches per month. Please remember these are averages. Within any given period of time a lot of something can be happening—clouds and coolness or sun and warmth.

When you’re home in front of your computer dreaming of escaping to an ideal climate you don’t conjure up images of shoveling snow or sweating bullets. No, you picture “perfection.” You tune out getting soaked in a downpour and getting bit by mosquitoes.

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The mild climate in Cuenca, Ecuador ensures that you’ll never pay for a heating or air conditioning bill again.

In truth the spring season from beginning to end often manifests all sorts of volatile, unpredictable weather patterns. And so does Cuenca. On a daily basis. A joke among locals is, “If you don’t like Cuenca’s weather, just wait an hour.”

What’s a “typical” day like? You may wake up to overcast skies and chilly temps. By mid-morning the sky is partly cloudy and sunny.

Out of nowhere a storm blows in. An hour later it’s sunny again. In late afternoon you’re cold. At night the air is noticeably warmer and you stroll around downtown in a light sweater.

Homes in Cuenca have no heating or air conditioning. This is great news regarding your utility bills. But when, as sometimes happens, the skies remain overcast for days, your residence never gets a chance to warm up. During last “winter” (July and August for us) the temperature inside our apartment ranged from 64 F to 58 F for a two week period. That’s pretty darned chilly.

We were uncomfortable, to say the least, as we moved a portable heater from room to room and cranked up our heated mattress pad each night before retiring. By donning extra layers we got through it, and yesterday I was sunbathing in a lounge chair outside.

I met an expat couple last week who were scouting Cuenca as a possible retirement destination. It was a somewhat chilly evening and the guy said, “I don’t think this place is right for me. I need somewhere that’s warmer.”

I replied, “You can be warmer living an hour from here. But you’ll have to contend with humidity and bugs. I prefer living in Cuenca and putting on a sweater when I need to.”

“Huh, I hadn’t thought of that,” he admitted.

So, yes, Cuenca does in fact enjoy year-round spring-like weather. And, no, every day is not “perfect.” But if you move here you won’t find yourself dripping with perspiration, and you can leave the snowshoes at home.

Source: Edd Staton

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