I've spent a lot of time in Northern British Columbia hunting with a guide/outfitter up there. Spring ( late May, early June) bear hunts when the temps start hitting 80 he just about dies, where I think it's great. Flipside is he can handle real cold way better than me. The temps and snow in his guide area are fkng cold in the winter.My brother had married his first wife and moved to New Hampshire to live with her. They had a child (now grown with a kid of her own) and later got divorced.
Then, he married a woman from Maine and moved up there (about an hour and half away from Bangor.) They later divorced. But when they were still married, I was talking with her and she was tired of the heat because it got up to the 80s one day the summer.
I said, "Well, here in Texas, we get days and weeks of 100 degrees or more. We call that "August.""
She said, " I won't visit in August."
Fair enough.
Now, my brother is married again, this time, to a woman from England. He has even been over there to visit her family. So, at least he is prepared for the weather.
Spent a week in England last May. In Bath , west of London. It gets into 70's and they think it's hot. Pretty area. One thing my wife noticed was there were not any screens anywhere. Not on windows or doors. So we asked someone about that, their response " it doesn't get warm enough or long enough to have to deal with flying bugs or insects"