Anything over 20°C is too much.
Famine risk ?Oh no, that is indeed not good
So cold this morning, Had to put pants on.. Whuddupw/dat
Then 2 days ago it was BOILING hot 95+Show Image(https://i.imgur.com/T95NXT0.gif)
Anything over 20°C is too much.
eat m0ar veggies though, one can withstand higher temps as the system runs cooler w/ higher coolant flow rate (vasodialation)
Tp4 can push 90 F, without much sweating.
everyone who uses imperial measurements
Anything over 20°C is too much.It's very dependent on how long you've been somewhere, it takes about 2 years to acclimate.
So cold this morning, Had to put pants on.. Whuddupw/dat
Then 2 days ago it was BOILING hot 95+Show Image(https://i.imgur.com/T95NXT0.gif)
Anything over 20°C is too much.It's very dependent on how long you've been somewhere, it takes about 2 years to acclimate.
So if you move to Florida or Spain, within about 2 years you too would be singing a very different tune.
As someone who was born and lived in a tropical country most of their life, this is my experience. I've always hated hot weather and loved the cold. I lived in Northern Europe for 3 years and it was somehow the best climate for me, any temperature under 10C was my favorite (I think -20C was the coldest I experienced there, and I much preferred that to the 27++C weather in my home country). A lot of my Nordic friends wanted to switch countries with me and tbh I did too, haha.Anything over 20°C is too much.It's very dependent on how long you've been somewhere, it takes about 2 years to acclimate.
So if you move to Florida or Spain, within about 2 years you too would be singing a very different tune.
Everyone perceives temperature differently. Even someone who grew up in the Amazon can hate warm weather. Its genetic and has often nothing to do with acclimation. Of cause the proportion of heat intolerance is smaller within a population native to warmer climates, due to genetic adaptation. I for my part have a very narrow comfortable temperature range, always had.
everyone who uses imperial measurements
Back in the day when I was coming up, "room temperature" was defined as 72F (22C) and that was considered the "perfect" temperature. Funny how that seems very cool in the summer and very warm in the winter, but it stands to reason that our physical bodies have their own expectations relative to the time of year.
I agree with that norm but much prefer 62F to 82F and definitely 52F to 92F outside, while I want a much narrower range spread inside.
higher humidity feels warmer so you can save on heating, manipulating humidity cost alot LESS money than heating. .That's fine in winter but horrible in summer
Anything higher than 15C is no go for me:(Soooo no Phoenix for Phinix? (https://cdn.geekhack.org/Smileys/solosmileys/laugh.gif)
In last few days here temps were 22-26C... phinix is melting.
higher humidity feels warmer so you can save on heating, manipulating humidity cost alot LESS money than heating. .That's fine in winter but horrible in summer
No thanks.Anything higher than 15C is no go for me:(Soooo no Phoenix for Phinix?
In last few days here temps were 22-26C... phinix is melting.Show Image(https://cdn.geekhack.org/Smileys/solosmileys/laugh.gif)
higher humidity feels warmer
That's fine in winter but horrible in summer
higher humidity feels warmer
That's fine in winter but horrible in summer
It seems to me that high humidity in the cold makes it cut even deeper.
Billings MT is expected to hit 100F/38C today. And tell me how is it that Billings at 46N has been over 100 much more often in recent years than Atlanta GA at 34N ?
Arrgh !Oof Oo . Guessing Tennessee isn't particularly dry either?
Knoxville Tennessee briefly hit 101F/38C today.
Arrgh !Oof Oo . Guessing Tennessee isn't particularly dry either?
Knoxville Tennessee briefly hit 101F/38C today.
The accent is fantastic :D . Is it the most Southern-sounding state perhaps?Arrgh !Oof Oo . Guessing Tennessee isn't particularly dry either?
Knoxville Tennessee briefly hit 101F/38C today.
turn on the wild fire.
Tp4 knew this female from tennessee, loved the accent, tehnathy
Guessing Tennessee isn't particularly dry either?
40-42C in the shade
Summer should probably just get hotter then, right?
Summer should probably just get hotter then, right?
Even back then humanity was farming in a really bad way, plowing and mono-cropping rapidly degrades top soil. [/size][/color]Sure, but that's something we can fix.