Not if its windy! That pattern would be absolute perfection in my backyard. Calm, warm, and sunny.
Also... do you think a sun angle of 58 vs 70 would be that different in terms of what it feels like? I am not sure that is actually true. I was told a couple weeks ago by @Shaheen that a 10 degree difference in sun angle in summer is negligible when comparing Seattle at 70-degree air temp vs San Diego at 70-degree air temp... when @SeattleMarineLayerFan was complaining about our laser-like sunlight we have in the summer.
Which as I said is likely incorrect, it will be warmer than that verbatim (and it will definitely feel warmer with the stronger sun compared to North Bend).
Actually it’s the more frequent La Niñas that are increasing OHC uptake and overall warming. Seems counterintuitive on its face, but it’s actually straightforward.
La Niña augments oceanic heat uptake as cold upwelling reduces spatial coverage of convective cloud cover and heat is piled into the IPWP (atmospheric cooling is an artifact of more atmosphere—>ocean heat flux, relatively). On the other hand, El Niño releases said stored oceanic heat (evident in the increased total outgoing radiation flux during niño years). The atmospheric warming is a product of the more pronounced atmosphere—>ocean heat flux, relatively.
The ECMWF actually shows a high of 69 that day in both Charleston and at SEA but 69 at SEA means 73-75 in North Bend on a sunny day. Again... its a little annoying if it is actually that cool in Charleston but more annoying that we would miss a sunny day in the 70s here. Hope it changes!