No, deserts that are hot during the summer are much cooler in the winter, especially in cold winter deserts.
In most deserts, it is hot in the summer and cool, or even cold, in the winter. It all depends on the particular desert.
Each desert is different. There are cold winter deserts, such as the Gobi, that can be quite hot in summer but bitterly cold in winter. There are hot deserts which are very hot in the summer but winters are generally mild. Even these hot deserts can have a few very chilly days in winter, however.
Hot deserts are very hot in the summer but have mild temperatures in the winter. Some cold deserts are cool or even cold all year long. Others are hot in the summer but can be bitterly cold in the winter.
The Karakum Desert is a cold winter desert with a hot summer and a cold winter.
A temperate desert may be as hot as a hot desert in the summer but has a much colder winter.
No, it is a hot, subtropical desert in Afghanistan.
Yes, because at night in deserts it's ALWAYS cold. Then in the morning, it gets BURNING hot.
A cold winter desert is characterized by a hot summer and a cold winter. Examples are the Gobi Desert, the Great Basin Desert and the Colorado Plateau Desert.
Summertime is the hottest in a desert out of the year. Winter/spring/or fall is recommended. Still hot, but cooler.
Although it can get quite hot in the Great Basin Desert in summer, it is considered as a cold winter desert.Although it can get quite hot in the Great Basin Desert in summer, it is considered as a cold winter desert.
Snow occasionally falls even in hot deserts such as the Sahara or Chihuahuan Desert. It is more common in cold winter deserts such as Antarctica, the Gobi Desert and the Great Basin Desert.
The answer depends on which desert. If it is a hot, subtropical desert, the summers are hot and the winters are mild., If it is a cold winter desert, the summers are hot and the winters can be bitterly cold.