If there is evidence of a great wide receiver playing on the outside in shitty weather during their mid 30's, then post it? It shouldn't be so hard if it's so ample. As I've now said a few times, there are TON of good receivers who played in the northeast. There are almost none who played well in their 32+ age years. However, there are a TON of guys who played great after age 32 in domes and warm weather environments.
And FTR, I ain't just talking about "cold." We get rain, cold ass rain, wind driven rain, snow. All of that is a completely different animal than playing in a dome, or playing in Tampa or San Diego or Jacksonville/Carolina, etc. Outside receivers on slick weather-related conditions don't perform well. Offensive players who have low centers of gravity and are agile have advantages in that weather over the defense, that tall straight line burners do not have.
It's not like there isn't evidence out there. I vividly remember a few dome and warm weather teams coming into Foxboro with their stud receivers and shitting the bed in crappy weather (cough, Indianapolis Colts, cough) year in and year out. I attended 160 out of 161 straight Pats games, and you knew going into a game if the weather was shit, the other team would curl up into a ball and lose. When Tom Brady came out in his SCUBA outfit underneath his jersey, the game was over before Peyton Manning and the high flyers even took a snap. It's been a while since I looked it up, but I believe the Pats have lost a total of 2 games in Foxboro in the playoffs when the weather was below 40 degrees. One was to a Jets team that plays in cold weather too, and one was to the Ravens on a day when Joe Flacco didn't throw for 40 yards. Meanwhile, the Pats have won like 13 home playoff games when the temperature didn't get above freezing and in a number of those games, there was also snow and/or rain falling. And opposing wide receivers, on some of the most prolific offenses in history, in the middle of their prime, were shut down.
The Patriots home field advantage in November, December and January may be the biggest home field advantage in sports, and a not insignificant part of that is because the team is built to play in those conditions. Julio could very well be the exception and put up 1,400 yards and 12 touchdowns at age 32 in New England and I'd love to see it from a fan perspective, a fantasy perspective and just for fun, but all I'm saying is it's far from a lock, and there are bigger holes on this team right now than receiver.