Honestly I am looking for a tire more for comfort since I ride a lot. Something that's good in pretty much every condition/ temp except snow. Early spring mornings can be quite chilly, but I've also ridden in huge down pours and 100 degrees. So what I'm looking for is recommendations and sizes.
Thanks!!!
For the rear, you might want to consider a 205/60R15 in any good quality & well known brand of '
All Season' car tire that takes your fancy - the often mentioned Vredesteins seem to do very well over your way.

The stronger sidewalls & load specs of most car tires will allow (require!??) you to run lower pressure in that tire (16-18 psi,
maybe 20 psi if you're
reeeeally heavy/heavily loaded/towing!

) than you'd need/is specified for the lightweight Kendas &/or any of their clones in order to maximise traction & wet weather grip, and by running those sorts of pressures you will also improve ride comfort, tire life/even tread wear, and resistance to punctures from road hazards/debris. :yes:
You might need to run a pressure at the lower end of the scale on wet roads to maximise traction & hydro-plane resistance; and at the higher end of the scale in hot weather/on hot roads to avoid over-heating the tire; but very few Spyders/Spyder Ryders generally
need anything much more than 16-18 psi in car tires with their higher strength & load specs in order to optimise all those things mentioned
and get better performance, ride, handling, and tire life than you generally can from a Kenda/Kenda clone; with the smaller/narrower front tires up front swapped for car tires in the 165/50R15 to 175/60R15 range generally only needing about 18 psi to achieve the same ends. :thumbup:
I'm currently running a 205/60R15 Michelin All Season Tire very successfully on the rear of my Spyder in much the same range of conditions you mentioned above; paying attention to the pressure variations for conditions that I mentioned of course!

But it is very hard to get Vredesteins here in Oz, and almost as hard to get any of the 'other' performance tires some prefer over your way once I leave the 'settled areas' - which is fairly often!

. I've done well over 30,000 km on that Michelin, & it still looks so good I am beginning to think that I might hafta eventually retire it due to excessive age before I'll ever wear it out! :shocked:
Over to you! :cheers: