That's what I'm saying. I'm already borderline heat stroke by the time I'm almost done with yard work. And that's only about an hour and a half outside.
I have a lot of health issues and get really fucked up in heat and humidity. Not to mention the smoke from Canada killing my lungs.
I've had to pay a guy to mow and weedwack my yard this year because I can't physically do it myself. Last time I tried weedwacking, I got 5 mins in and almost passed out.
As we suffer over the next three years, it would pay to remember that this is the warmup round. It's not over when the nex La Nina offers a brief reprieve.
Perhaps it's time to prioritise survival over the profits of the shareholders?
Made our problems worse by creating a massive spike in temperature that should have been slowly eased at worst, and risks catastrophic results as that spike takes it's toll.
I have to head out to Houston next week for work and I am not looking forward to how hot it is down there. I can’t even handle the heat up in here in the northeast.
Yeah but its been so disgustingly humid up here. At least in Houston it will feel like youre being baked to death and not smothered with a hot wet blanket...to death.
I’m staying right by a rail trail/path whatever you want to call it. I was going to bring my running shit and get some runs in during the early morning; you think it’s worth for me to even do that?
And how does that stand compaired to calculated temperatures from arctic and antarctic ice probes.
I dont now the numbers there. Is it higher or lower? Does anyone now a source where you can read those calculations?
Here's the best graphic I've seen for putting the numbers in context: https://xkcd.com/1732/
It's slightly out of date so we're actually at roughly +2 degrees C.
Basically, from year 0 CE to 1000 CE there was basically no change in average temperature. Then from 1000 CE to 1900 CE temperature actually went down about .5 degrees. Since then, we've gone up 2.5 degrees. So the past two thousand years temperature changed a total of .5 degrees down. We've increased about 5 times that in the past 100 years.