Houses of Parliament, you say? Well, here are two from early Sunday morning:
Shame on me, I took a tour of the Houses of Parliament in early 2003, and do not remember any of it, even though I have the booklets to prove it...
Rome has very predictable weather, and yes, very good, for the most part. December thru January is chilly and has the greatest chance of rain (though the temperature never goes below zero and you may chance upon a +20°C day in December, with 10-15 degrees being fairly normal); April thru June and, for people who do not mind autumn, September and October are the best and mildest and largely dry months, and July and August are usually hot (but not unbearably so, unlike, say, southern Spain) and permanently sunny. It has probably the best climate of the four cities around the world I have lived in, though I'd love to move back to Milan as I happen to like the city, and especially, the nearby lakes better, even though the weather is somewhat worse.
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Date: 2011-10-04 05:48 pm (UTC)Shame on me, I took a tour of the Houses of Parliament in early 2003, and do not remember any of it, even though I have the booklets to prove it...
Rome has very predictable weather, and yes, very good, for the most part. December thru January is chilly and has the greatest chance of rain (though the temperature never goes below zero and you may chance upon a +20°C day in December, with 10-15 degrees being fairly normal); April thru June and, for people who do not mind autumn, September and October are the best and mildest and largely dry months, and July and August are usually hot (but not unbearably so, unlike, say, southern Spain) and permanently sunny. It has probably the best climate of the four cities around the world I have lived in, though I'd love to move back to Milan as I happen to like the city, and especially, the nearby lakes better, even though the weather is somewhat worse.