It seems to me that poverty would be less painful in the sun
FR

Translated into English.

VÉ Véloteuse ·
Good evening everyone,

The warmth (25°C – not scorching heat) and especially the brightness give me so much energy and motivation... really nice, even essential to start the day. This natural resource is super effective at fighting the blues.

What do you think?
....On ne refait pas sa vie, on la continue...
PA Pat01255 Regular ·
Good evening Axelle,

I feel the same way when I wake up under a blue sky and radiant sunshine, whether it's cold or hot, actually! 😏 Still, the more pleasant the temperature (25°C to 30°C in the shade), the more effective the brightness is in giving me motivation and joy.

That’s why I love (hot) deserts, especially those in Africa, even though they get excessively hot for at least a long quarter of the year—if not a full semester or more—in the most scorching ones (Nubia, Afar, etc.)! 😎 The purity of the sky there is exceptional; the dry air and high temperatures have invigorating and cleansing benefits! It’s a real pleasure to enjoy such a special and unique environment! 😎

I don’t understand why so many people love the Mediterranean climate yet are systematically hostile to hot desert climates, when physiologically speaking, the latter is the most beneficial to the human body—if we ignore the sometimes fatal effects of extreme heat. It’s probably just a marketing thing...
DJ Djalma Globetrotter ·
I don’t get why so many people love the Mediterranean climate but are automatically put off by hot desert climates, even though physiologically, the latter is actually the best for the human body—if you ignore the sometimes fatal effects of extreme heat. It’s probably just a marketing thing...

Hey, Between the Mediterranean climate and the desert climate, the transition is almost imperceptible for all the countries in the Northern Hemisphere anyway, from Morocco to Egypt, passing through Syria, Israel, etc... In southern Tunisia, where does the Mediterranean climate end and the desert climate begin?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XCOyB7WStI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2eI67iCbKY
PA Pat01255 Regular ·
Desert (hot) climate occurs when the number of days with rainfall becomes very low, when the average annual rainfall is also very low, when summer temperatures become extreme (40°C in the shade and above, sometimes even 50°C), and so on... There are many criteria, and I won’t list them all.

You’re asking where the Mediterranean climate ends and the desert climate begins in Tunisia. One could just as easily wonder where the semi-desert climate ends and the desert climate begins in Chad, Niger, Mali, Sudan, Eritrea, or Somalia, for example! The transition is just as imperceptible, and it’s always very difficult to establish strict boundaries between two such similar climate types.

So, in Tunisia—since that’s the example you chose—the Mediterranean climate is separated from the desert climate by a semi-desert zone with Mediterranean tendencies. This means that the vast majority of annual rainfall occurs outside the long, very hot, and hyper-arid summer period.
DJ Djalma Globetrotter ·
So, in Tunisia, since that’s the example you chose, the Mediterranean climate is separated from the desert climate by a semi-desert zone with Mediterranean tendencies—that is, where the vast majority of annual rainfall occurs outside the long, very hot, and hyper-dry summer period.

Okay, fair enough for the details, but in your first message you said:

I don’t understand why so many people love the Mediterranean climate yet are systematically hostile to the desert climate (hot), when physiologically, the latter is the most beneficial for the human body.

So, do people who go to Tunisia go for the Mediterranean or the desert climate?😏
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XCOyB7WStI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2eI67iCbKY
PA Pat01255 Regular ·
Alright, I see what you're getting at! 😏

When I said that, I meant that most people are "scared" when you talk to them about a hot desert climate—whether rightly or wrongly—because in most people's minds, desert (hot) automatically means extreme heat, brutal daily and yearly temperature swings, no rain, etc. Those are just clichés, true and/or false in their own way. And what a lot of people tend to forget is that a hot desert climate also means almost continuous sunshine (the sunniest places in the world all have a desert climate, as far as I know) and, as a result, pretty much permanent "good weather." 😎

Meanwhile, the Mediterranean climate is oversold, overrated, and described as "ideal" when it’s really far from it (which isn’t to say the desert climate is either, but health-wise, there’s no contest). That’s how it’s presented, especially to people used to an oceanic climate, which is rather gloomy. Plus, in Mediterranean regions (in Europe only—it’s very different in Africa since they border deserts), the sun doesn’t shine as often as people like to think (just compare the average annual cloud cover of the Sudanese Libyan Desert with that of the French Riviera—some would be very surprised...), and the climate’s salubrity (dry atmosphere, clear skies...) is only guaranteed in summer, and even then, very few places have truly dry air... 😐
AT Attila Globetrotter ·
I’m bumping this thread back up—some folks seem really eager to discuss the idea of happiness right now.
Ponts du monde : concours de photos amical de juillet 2026 Rubrique Jeux Voyages C'est le moment de poster vos meilleurs clichés !
DJ Djalma Globetrotter ·
From the very first replies, it’s clear that some are missing the point. The main question is whether the PEOPLES of warm countries are happier than others. Not tourists traveling through or expats for a few years—no, we’re talking about the happiness of people who are native to these warm countries and have lived there year-round for generations. I think happiness is the result of many factors, but based on the replies (most of the forum users were born and raised in a Western mindset), they only reference external factors like climate, sanitation, material wealth, cost of living, etc. No one mentions internal factors such as belief systems, social organization, family ties, or the attitude people take toward life...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XCOyB7WStI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2eI67iCbKY
NI Nimou74 Veteran ·
I’m bumping this thread—some folks seem really keen to discuss the concept of happiness right now.

Personally, I’m craving a bit of cool weather...😏
« Voyager rend modeste. Vous voyez quelle petite place vous occupez dans le monde. » - Gustave Flaubert https://www.myatlas.com/anneclaire95
AT Attila Globetrotter ·
Haven’t you stored up enough of it in Iceland? 😉
Ponts du monde : concours de photos amical de juillet 2026 Rubrique Jeux Voyages C'est le moment de poster vos meilleurs clichés !

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