Weekend Plans Post: It’s too dang hot

Jaybird

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7 Responses

  1. Shaun Curry
    Ignored
    says:

    It was similar when we moved to southern Rhode Island 30 years ago. There were not many hideously hot/humid days then and we made it the first 20 years without any AC. Ten years ago we bought a window unit for our bedroom, seven years ago a window unit for a room downstairs, and this year a window unit for my home office. The biggest change isn’t necessarily daytime high temperatures but we now have prolonged periods where the dew points are above 70 and nighttime temperatures stay in the 70s. Of course, we are also 30 years older and now in our mid-60s are less tolerant of high temperatures and dew points. I feel your pain. Hang in there.Report

  2. fillyjonk
    Ignored
    says:

    You must have got the high pressure dome we usually have all summer. It’s actually been cooler here and the other day I was thinking “huh I don’t feel miserable and depressed, what’s up with that” and then I realized it was in the lower 80s and dry instead of 100 and air like soup.

    my main plan in a little bit – I have yet to eat breakfast and put on outdoor clothes – is to mow the lawn. Which will be way less miserable than normal in the summer because it’s like 68F right now, UNHEARD OF for here in late JulyReport

    • Michael Cain in reply to fillyjonk
      Ignored
      says:

      The Colorado Front Range only flirts with the edges of the big high-pressure heat domes. They tend not to cross the country at the Central Rockies, but either north or south. The Parker Divide to the south and the Cheyenne Ridge to the north also help steer those air masses past.Report

  3. InMD
    Ignored
    says:

    I don’t mind the heat and humidity during the day. I just figure it’s in my blood. It’s the nights that are the problem. Sometimes I think back to the old settlers of the area in the 1600s and wonder how the hell they did it. Then I remember many of them just died.

    As for us our weekend is revolving around oldest son making divisionals in backstroke for the neighborhood swim team. He’s still there with his mom and grandma (and grandma latcher on). Me and the baby walked over for his race and *fingers crossed* looks like he took 2nd for his age group. Which considering this is his first year ever is IMO really impressive. I learned that the secret to motivating him is the use of swear words as encouragement.

    Anyway we will go to the banquet tonight. I am hoping for a bike ride before. Maybe some whiskey and a movie after. I watched Abigail last night now that it droppee to $5. Maybe something else spooky will be free or in my non-offensive-to-rent price range.Report

  4. Fish
    Ignored
    says:

    We bought this house in ’98 and it didn’t have AC. Our first-born came along in 2001 in July. My parents came to visit and my Dad (an HVAC tech) proclaimed that our house was too hot for a baby. A few weeks later he showed back up with a friend and a bunch of industrial gear and we’ve had AC ever since.Report

  5. Fish
    Ignored
    says:

    Also: Even after 28-ish years of living here I am continually amazed at how much hotter it is down in the city as opposed to the temperature up here in the forest. I get caught overdressing in the Summer All The Time!Report

  6. Michael Cain
    Ignored
    says:

    Last weekend we hit 102 °F here in Fort Collins. According to the local paper, this was the 29th day in the city’s history when it got to 100° or higher. According to the article the all-time record is 103°.

    Microclimates are wonderful things. 50 miles east out onto the plains the high-temperature extremes are several degrees higher, the low-temperature extremes lower, the blizzards worse, and the thunderstorms much worse.Report

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