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Well, not exactly the "woods", but I live in S. Florida in a heavily wooded development where the trees form a tunnel over the roads. It definitely has an effect in lowering my line of sight connection to the T-Mobile tower that serves me. I've only had service for about two months, and the best I can get via my gateway is between 35 and 70 Mbps. I only connect to a 4G signal. The tower is a 5G tower, but the trees are too thick for the gateway to connect to it, although my phone does show one or two bars.
We are a retired couple who stream TV, have a few computers that run 24/7, iPhones and iPads, lots of smart switches and plugs and security cameras. All of them work fine.
One last thought about bandwidth. I moved from using Xfinity as my ISP to T-Mobile as my Fixed Wireless Internet (FWI) provider. I was getting 800 Mbps from Xfinity, and there is no question that I was leaving a lot of bandwidth on the table. T-Mobile is definitely less "snappy", but we are able to do everything we want with no latency when streaming and plenty of bandwidth to run our environment. My point is that just because the speed of your Internet may change as the leaves come out doesn't mean you'll actually see any performance hit. Unfortunately for us, the leaves never come off the trees in S. Florida, so what we see is what we get all year!
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