I went on a backpacking trip on the Havasupai Indian Reservation in Arizona. the day we hiked out, I’m not sure what the temperature was there in the canyon, but the radio reported it was 124 degrees that day in Phoenix. The highest temperature I can say with certainty was 113, here in Sacramento one summer when I was a kid (though the neighbor’s backyard thermometer said 116).
The lowest was probably somewhere around 10-15 degrees, up at Lake Tahoe during a winter stay.
I’m in Hawaii and we’re experiencing a cold snap right now, going to be 64 degrees where I live and might hit the mid 50’s in the mountains! :eek:
Yeah I’m a wimp! When I talk to people in the mainland and they ask about the weather, I say “Oh 80 degrees, plus or minus 10.” Yeah, I can be jerk sometimes!
Been here all my life and the worst I’ve been in is ~8-10 degrees in Vegas around New Years and 110 there in April. The weather reports from the time say otherwise, but I swear I saw the thermometer outside our room on the Strip say 4 or 6 degrees early in the morning once.
Good for you! One of my favorite places on the planet! (That I’ll prolly never be able to visit again; thank Og I spent as much time down there as I did when I could.)
I was living there as well when the record was set. IIRC, it reached 122 two days in a row, didn’t it? I still have a T-shirt proclaiming my survival of that event.
As for lows, maybe 5 or 10 below zero (F) when I worked on N Sea oil rigs. I don’t know the exact number though.
Question for those who’ve experienced extreme cold: Can you tell the difference between -30 and -50 when you go outside?
My personal record low was -27F for many years (set in Davenport, Iowa, winter of '77-78). Finally topped it at -28F in South Dakota.
Never experienced any amazing record heat (probable high was around 107F south of Houston, and then of course it’s not the heat but the humidity. :smack:)
About -20 at the 8000 foot level of Mt. Rainier in March. It was a overnight camping trip for senior Boy Scouts, it was part of the process to get an Eagle badge.
The hottest was last June in Phoenix, 113 standing outside of the Peoria Sports Complex, the spring training location for the Seattle Mariners.
Leaving windchill factor out of the equation probably -22 back in 1994 and I had to be outside in it for quite a while. Hottest was maybe 104 if memory serves me correct about just where I was on a particular day.
If you count windchill the coldest was -31-32 (2 degrees at 70mph ---- and it broke the engine seals in my Harley). There have been days below zero like yesterday that probably hit a higher low but my exposure was for minutes and not hours.
The lowest I’ve ever been in was last winter here in CT when we had multiple nights of negative single digits. I wore my freezer suit for the drive home several times.
It got pretty hot when I lived in Singapore, but the place is literally 1 degree north of the equator, so everything is done with the heat and humidity in mind. Also I was a kid, so it was easy for me to adapt. The hottest was when I took a trip to Vegas a few years ago. In June. It was damn near 110F at the hottest. Thank Og for the fact that you walk most of the strip inside the casinos. And for frozen alcoholic beverages.
I think that I’ve told this before, but here goes again. I was living in Ft. Lauderdale, FL, heading back to Minnesota for Christmas time. I left Ft. Lauderdale at 85 F, landed in Minneapolis at -25 F. A nice swing of 110 F over the four or five hour flight. I’ve seen both colder and hotter, but not on the same day.
I was a student at Purdue in the late 70s. The closed the university for -80 windchill, tho I don’t recall the actual temperature. I’d driven in and was about to park when I heard the closure announcement on the radio… grrrrrrrr. Anyway, it was pretty far below zero, and I believe we went about a month staying below zero.
115F for three days in a row in Las Vegas at some time in the 1990s.
-40F in Lopez, PA at some time in the early 1960s (I think). Lopez is a small mountain village NE of Scranton / Wilkes Barre and is known as “The Icebox of Pennsylvania”. It occasionally replaces International Falls, Minnesota as the coldest spot in the USA on the national weather maps. I have relatives there and used to visit frequently when I was a kid.
Not me, but I have a friend who lives nearby in Hilo. He has visited Honolulu, but has never left the Islands.
The lowest temperature he has experienced was 58 F a few years ago and the highest was 93 F also a few years ago.
During Winter mornings here on the Big Island, temperatures sometimes drop into the low 60’s and one sees lots of people in long sleeve sweat suits complaining about the “cold”.