Living in Saskatchewan, I’ve commented before that we have a 70 degree range (in Celsius, of course). Hottest day of the year is normally +35 C; coldest day is normally - 35 C.
Forecast today is for + 35. I’m sweltering already. “But it’s a dry cold” works in winter; “It’s a dry heat”, not so much. I’m planning on staying in the shade as much as I can. :eek:
Bring on autumn, soon! Much prefer the coolth to the warmth.
Ouch!
Down here, +35 is expected-both A/Cs are running today.
In Saskatchewan, or at my wife’s parents in central Pa., toughing it out during a hot day is painful. And unproductive.
Stay in the shade, drink lots of water and think snow thoughts!
I love it. I’d be happy with 35 C every day.
I’m going to a campground next weekend and it looks like 23C, which is far too cool for this time of year.
South Texas here. Today my outdoor thermometer (in the shade) showed 104 (40 C) for a short time this afternoon. Then it plummeted to a chilly 98 (36 C). We’re not used to it here, but we expect it. However, you Canadians need to sue someone!
For most of us Celsius-impaired Americans, here’s a little aid that will help remind you of a general idea of how Celsius numbers run:
*Thirty,
Twenty,
Ten,
Zero:
A CBC announcer (Paul Rush) came up with this in 1974 when we went metric:
0 is freezing
10 is not
20 is pleasing
30 is hot.
In Montreal, I don’t think we have had anything over 30 this summer. And all that rain that didn’t fall in the west was dumped here. Coolest summer in memory (following the mildest winter, to be sure). Today was 27, tomorrow 28, very pleasant. Nothing warmer in prospect and rain later this week.
Pretty much, yes. It was probably in the mid-30s today, and a heat warning is in effect.
A little rain would cool things off, but while there’s a chance of it this week, it’s only a chance. Then we’re back to heat, apparently. I like a warm summer, perhaps even bordering on hot, but maybe not quite this hot.
Although since the heat wave started, I have been able to achieve better-than-usual golf scores. So maybe it’s not such a bad thing.
Oh yes, dry heat makes a huge difference, much like wind chill makes a difference in winter. You haven’t lived until you’ve had 95 degree (35 Celsius) and 75%+ humidity, which is typical for Georgia in July. Sweat doesn’t evaporate, it just makes one wet and even more miserable. We love our low humidity days here (90 degrees and 35% as I type this. Feels like fall! OK, not really, but noticeably cooler than the last few days).
One for the front of the house (kitchen area) and one for the bedrooms. So that we can better control the temp based on usage. And it was hard to install (at least back when this house was built) a single family A/C unit big enough for the entire house at once. Certainly large A/Cs were/are available, but not at consumer pricing.
It works out. If one needs servicing, we spend a lot of time in the other part of the house.