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Qastodon t1_iv84egc wrote

So there is less snow now?

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Identd t1_iv8thlb wrote

Ok you should post snowfalls for the 91 Halloween

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hepakrese t1_iv9xkhy wrote

This graph is impossible to read.

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ARoodyPooCandyAss t1_iva29ac wrote

2018/2019 was fucking brutal. Cold as hell in Feb and clearly lots of snow..

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Reddituser183 t1_ivaaj7v wrote

Yeah you should do another but go back to 91.

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matttproud t1_ivan4wt wrote

Here I was thinking Minnesota would be one of the last places facing water security issues …

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CollisionCourse321 t1_ivarvug wrote

At first I hated the organization of this but after 20 seconds I took kindly to it. Well done.

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Should_be_less t1_ivaspdc wrote

This a cool idea to display the data, but as-is it's nearly impossible to read. Like, if I want to follow a year's snowfall chronologically, should I be zig-zagging down a column or reading in short rows right-to-left?

At least for an English-speaking audience, I think it would work better if you flipped it so the years are rows and the months are columns, and keep all the snowfalls for one month in the same row. Will be a lot more intuitive to read right-to-left. To keep it from getting too spread out, you'd have to do something like spacing the snowflakes in their month based on % of the way through the month rather than having space for 30 individual days. Kinda like this, but not shit because you actually know how to use Tableau.

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40for60 t1_ivau7rs wrote

If you laid in average temp and daylight hours this would be a great chart for people who ask when to visit. I usually suggest March because there is snow, the coldest days are mostly past us and the days are getting longer.

Nicely done and unique.

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swimbikebadger t1_ivd3x8r wrote

The great blizzard of ‘91. Take a seat kids.

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