Good morning on this unseasonably warm Wednesday.

At what point along the 300-mile journey from New York City to the Canadian border would you consider yourself “upstate”?

Ask three New Yorkers, and you’re bound to get four different answers.

Some say upstate begins where Metro-North ends; a few cheeky Lower Manhattanites have told us it’s anywhere north of 14th Street.

We recently set off in search of a proper definition, and began by reaching out to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s office.

“No public official worth their salt would ever get in the middle of that one!” Rich Azzopardi, a spokesman for the governor, wrote in an email. He added that the office viewed New York as 10 distinct regions, “each with its unique local economy, its own strengths.”