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Topic: It's HOT or Its NOT  (Read 34113 times)
Roco
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« on: July 18, 2006, 08:10:41 AM »

Roco: I'm going to try & modify the title as you suggested. cholla

Hi, is 100 F. hot !,  or is that your normal summer temperature ,?
here in Great Britain our summer average temperature is  68 F.and it rains about every 5th day, very few people have a/c at home , I don't know anyone that does,
we had the coldest winter for 30 years, now we have the hottest temperatures ever recorded , 
most parts of England have a hosepipe and sprinkler ban , some areas have a drought order placed on them (no car washes etc.) it is beginning to affect some businesses ,   

 The record for the hottest day ever in Britain was broken on Sunday as temperatures soared to 38.1C (100.6F) in Gravesend, Kent.
Winter temperatures average 4.4 °C (40 °F )
Summer temperature average in  London from June through August
is around 20°C 68 F)
The trains are running slow and the roads are melting,

so anyone got any extreme weather experiences to share, or is this all just normal for your area ?
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« Reply #1 on: July 18, 2006, 08:21:49 AM »

Yes 100F is hot. Right now its 93 to 99 here in Kentucky with 60% humidity and it pushes well over 100F. This happens for about 2 weeks a year. Average temp. is 85-90F during the summer. Average winter temp. is 39-45F.
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« Reply #2 on: July 18, 2006, 09:23:12 AM »

 Roco ;The all time record high for Amarillo Texas is 108 F.& that's hotBTW I was born in 1953 check out the heat here that year.I posted a chart for Amarillo in some topic here one time I will have to look for it.Lately we have been right at 100 F or a little below.The hottest place I ever was Gila Bend Arizona the temp was 118 F very hot.I will have to find the record high for the USA.
Some drought restrictions here in Texas also.
"Greenland Ranch, California, with 134 °F on July 10, 1913, holds the record for the highest temperature ever officially observed in the United States. ...
 Here's the info from the old post:
I going to post some Amarillo weather stats but first want to say overall we have nice weather.This winter has been one of the warmest but also driest for many years.The chart will say but average windspeed 13 to 14 mph so good for wind chargers.
Highest: 108 on 24 Jun 1953 & 1990 and Jun 26 & 27 1998
Lowest: -16 on 12 Feb 1899
Monthly Maximum and Minimum Record Temperatures
Jan Feb Mar Apr  May Jun Jul Aug  Sep Oct  Nov  Dec
83  88  96  98   103 108 106 106  103  95  87   83
-11 -16 -3  13    26  38  51  48   30  12   0   -8


Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles Top 10 Weather Events of the 20th Century 
Dust Bowl (1930 to 1939)

Longest period of heat and drought in the Panhandles and much of the U.S. Plains.
5 of the 10 warmest years (average annual temperature in Amarillo) occurred in the 1930's.
The 1930's remain the driest decade on record in Amarillo.
Dust drifted to roof tops of homes, and buried farm equipment.
Surface visibility often reduced to zero during the height of the duststorms.
Astronomical economic losses, especially to farmers and ranchers.
Thousands of Panhandle residents relocated, 3.5 million nationwide, as a result of the Dust Bowl years.

 
April 9, 1947 White Deer/Glazier/Higgins Tornado


Completely destroyed the town of Glazier, nearly destroyed Higgins.
Responsible for 68 panhandle deaths, 272 injuries, $1.5 million in damage.
Only documented F5 tornado in the panhandles.
Reported as being 1 to 2 miles wide at times along its path.
The tornado or a family of tornadoes remained on ground for 5 hours, 20 minutes on a path from White Deer, TX to St. Leo, KS.

 
March 22-25, 1957 Blizzard

Worst spring blizzard on record.
Responsible for 11 panhandle deaths, numerous injuries, $6 million in damage.
Texas Panhandle reported 30 ft drifts; Oklahoma Panhandle reported 15 ft drifts.
10 to 20 inches of snow reported across the panhandles.
20 percent of the panhandles cattle population was lost in the storm.
Huge drifts stranded thousands of motorists, including snowplows attempting rescues.
True white out conditions, with visibilities reduced to zero at times.

 
Great Ice Storm (November 23-25, 1940)

Considered the worst ice storm in the nation through 1940.
Freezing rain (heavy at times) or drizzle fell for 2 ½ days.
Ice formed around power lines, 2 inches in diameter, and 6 inches in circumference, and weighed 13 lbs per linear foot.
Huge trees split in half and downed trees littered residential sections of Amarillo and Canyon.
Thousands of power poles and wires were down.
Communications in the panhandles failed completely for up to 3 days.
Complete power failure in Amarillo/Canyon for 3 days.
Amarillo city water supply failed for 3 days.
 
April 6-8, 1938 Blizzard

Known as the 84-hour blizzard.
Occurred across the eastern half of the Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles.
8 deaths, 7 in Pampa, 1 in the Oklahoma Panhandle.
10 to 20 foot drifts.
Sustained winds of 77 mph reported in Pampa at midnight April 7.
True white out conditions, with visibilities reduced to zero at times.
All transportation was brought to a standstill.

 
1995 Tornado Outbreak (including the Pampa tornado)

Over 70 tornadoes reported across the panhandles for the season, the most ever.
20 tornadoes reported on June 8th across the panhandles, the most ever reported in one day.
F4 tornado hit the industrial section of Pampa, destroying or damaging 200 homes and 50 businesses.
7 injuries, fortunately no deaths.
Pampa tornado resulted in $30 million in damage which is the costliest tornado on record.
Total tornado damage for June 8 exceeded $40 million, and for the entire season the total surpassed $60 million.

 
April 17-18, 1970 Tornado Outbreak

Tornadoes affected 9 counties across the south central portion of the Texas Panhandle during the 2-day event.
17 panhandle fatalities in the Clarendon and Greenbelt Reservoir area.
At least 66 injured.
Hundreds of cattle killed or injured.
Damage exceeded $8 million.
 
February 1-8, 1956 Snowstorm

Largest "unofficial" snow totals occurred in the Panhandles.
43 inches fell in Vega, 24 inches in Hereford, and 14 inches in Amarillo.
23 deaths, numerous injuries.
Longest continuous snowfall: snowed continuously for 92 hours in some locations.
All modes of transportation were brought to a standstill.
Hundreds of cattle died due to the storm.
Feed and supplies for cattle had to be airlifted in.

 
May 15, 1949 Amarillo Tornado

F4 tornado that moved along the south side of Amarillo and then on to the airport.
200 homes damaged or destroyed.
7 fatalities, 82 injured.
$5 million in damage.
Costliest tornado to hit Amarillo.
All time max wind of 84 mph was clocked at the NWS office at English Field (Amarillo International Airport).

 
(tie) Feb 1-15, 1905 and Dec 29, 1978 - Jan 11,1979 Arctic Outbreaks


Average high during cold wave: 21 (1905 outbreak) and 20 (1978-79 outbreak).
Average low during cold wave: 4 (1905 outbreak) and 5 (1978-79 outbreak).
Average temperature during cold wave: 13 for both.
Coldest max temperature: -2 (1905 outbreak and all-time record) and 6 (1978-79 outbreak).
Coldest min temperature: -15 (1905 outbreak).
Coldest wind chill: -43 (1905 outbreak) and -45 (1978-79 outbreak).
Longest continuous period of below freezing temperatures; 13 days, 5 hours: (1978-79 outbreak).
Coldest month on record with an average monthly temperature of 24.7: (1978-79 outbreak).
Number of days max temperature 20 degrees or colder: 7 (1905 outbreak) and 6 (1978-79 outbreak).
 
Honorable Mention 10
February 2-5, 1964 Blizzard
17.5 inches of snow in Amarillo, 26" in Borger, 21" in Panhandle.
Fritch Tornado Outbreak (June 27, 1992)
F4 tornado, 1 mile wide, destroyed/damaged 1360 homes, 7 injuries.
February 21-22, 1971 Blizzard
1 to 2 feet of snow, roads closed for 2 days, 12 ft drifts, high cattle losses.
March 23, 1987 Blizzard
1 to 2 feet of snow, 12 ft drifts, 3 injuries, thousands of motorists stranded.

     Summer Heat Wave of 1953
   26 days 100+ (most ever), 7 record high temps stand today, 108 on 6/24
.

 
December 1983 Arctic Outbreak
7 days temps fell below 0, 9 record lows stand today, 13 days below 32.
Summer Heat Wave of 1998
23 days 100+, 2 consecutive days at 108, 8 consecutive days over 100.
June 17, 1969 Amarillo hailstorm
Costliest hailstorm - $20 million damage to homes, autos, and crops.
Canyon Flood (May 26, 1978)
10 inches rain in 90 minutes, 4 deaths, 15 injured, 123 homes damaged.
January 28-30, 1999 Winter Storm
$8.5 million damage, 50,000 lost power - some for days , All travel ceased.
« Last Edit: July 18, 2006, 09:44:33 AM by cholla » Logged
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« Reply #3 on: July 18, 2006, 09:36:47 AM »

got an even 88 give or take a few year round here in puerto rico. it weirds me out to see santa in the mall and no change in the season whatsoever. (although i do admire the chutzpa of the people that don a santa suit and go outside in this weather.) christmas trees are sold from refrigerated trailers.
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« Reply #4 on: July 18, 2006, 09:40:07 AM »

here we normally hit like 90 as hot, but recently its been about 101-102 consistently in southeast kansas.
Yes 100F is hot. Right now its 93 to 99 here in Kentucky with 60% humidity and it pushes well over 100F. This happens for about 2 weeks a year. Average temp. is 85-90F during the summer. Average winter temp. is 39-45F.
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« Reply #5 on: July 18, 2006, 09:41:25 AM »

here it's been running 105-110ish...which is pretty normal for july...last week however we had a heat wave on friday...it got up to around 114...it'll hit that again before the month is out...this is our monsoon season...humidity aroun 30% (give or take) ...no real rains yet tho...we haven't had any rain to speak of since last october...wish it would rain...it's predicted to hit a high of 115 this friday...record high was june 26 1990 it hit 122...i see people with t-shirts that say "i survived 6/26/90 122 degrees" (and variations of that) my son found a 2 week old kitten in the park that day, just laying in the sun fixin' to die, he brought it home and we bottle fed him and named him charles...

so yeh roco 100 is hot...but we're bakin' here...but we just tell our selves it'll cool down soon...we're almost done, so would someone open the oven door please Very Happy

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« Reply #6 on: July 18, 2006, 01:48:06 PM »

repent sinners! the end is near! feel this taste of the fires of hell and renounce your sins!


scnr
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« Reply #7 on: July 18, 2006, 05:12:20 PM »

LOL @ reso.

It was 102 in my house yesterday, but the AC got fixed today! YAY!
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« Reply #8 on: July 18, 2006, 05:23:05 PM »

LOL @ reso.

It was 102 in my house yesterday, but the AC got fixed today! YAY!

That had to suck!!  crybaby2

I'm in Houston, so hot and humid describes almost every day from May through October.  :haha:  :haha:
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« Reply #9 on: July 18, 2006, 08:16:13 PM »

my temp gage in my car (which is very accurate btw) read 117 at one point today as i was driving around one part of the valley today (that's in phx)...the sweat was rolling off everyone in my car...can't wait to see what the humidity was...at like 6pm it had cooled down to 111 and i wasn't pouring sweat anymore...too hot
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« Reply #10 on: July 18, 2006, 08:56:07 PM »

105 here on average for the past couple weeks. Blegh.
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« Reply #11 on: July 19, 2006, 12:37:11 AM »

The best way I can describe it is:


"Excessive Heat Warning
Hazardous Weather Outlook

THIS HAZARDOUS WEATHER OUTLOOK IS FOR NORTHWEST...NORTH CENTRAL
AND WEST CENTRAL MISSOURI...AS WELL AS EXTREME EASTERN KANSAS.

.DAY ONE...THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT

THE EXCESSIVE HEAT WARNING CONTINUES TODAY...FOR LOCATIONS GENERALLY
ALONG AND SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 36. AFTERNOON TEMPERATURES IN THE UPPER
90S TO AROUND 100 DEGREES WILL COMBINE WITH HIGH HUMIDITY TO PRODUCE
HEAT INDICES FROM AROUND 105 TO 110.


.DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN...WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY

SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE ACROSS THE AREA
BY FRIDAY AFTERNOON AND THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS OF SATURDAY...AS
A STORM SYSTEM DROPS IN FROM THE NORTHWEST. AS THIS TIME...NO SEVERE
WEATHER IS EXPECTED. UNTIL THURSDAY EVENING...HEAT INDICES WILL BE
BETWEEN 105 AND 110 DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING HOURS."
http://www.crh.noaa.gov/forecast/MapClick.php?CityName=Liberty&state=MO&site=EAX

And a screen shot!
I have seen it worse.

Here are some of our records in this century:

The Century's Statistics
Warmest Temperature 118°. July 14, 1954 in Warsaw and Union
Coldest Temperature -40°. February 13, 1905 in Warsaw
Driest Year 1953. State average total precipitation: 25.53"
Wettest Year 1993. State average total precipitation: 56.90"
Warmest Summer 1934. State average temperature: 81.9°
Coldest Winter 1978-79. State averahe temperature: 24.1°
World Record Rainfall intensity: 12" in 42 minutes in Holt
http://www.mcc.missouri.edu/sigwxmo.htm

I have seen 113 F and 35F below. Both seem severe to me. The humidity kills you here. And it does not seem to end til about 1/2 way through Sept.
 :rolleyes2:

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« Reply #12 on: July 19, 2006, 07:15:19 AM »

tommie gorman ; 86 F at 12:54 am  in Missouri with 67% humidity that's plenty hot.
I bet you need a refrigerated AC & a dehumidifier.
I'm Amarillo our humidity is usually a lot less than that & temps drop more at night.
The night time lows about 4:30 am have been 70F but we are at 3600 ft above sea level.
« Last Edit: July 19, 2006, 07:22:51 AM by cholla » Logged
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« Reply #13 on: July 19, 2006, 11:55:09 AM »

just a UK update
Humidity 29% this would seem about normal for UK summer
and is not normally given in our UK weather reports
todays temp. down to a more bearable 91F  but still 20F above average for July
thanks for the posts , it brings things into a better perspective for me , and gave me geek cred. at work today , it's hot, you should be in Texas it's.... , sort of thing   Laughing
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« Reply #14 on: July 19, 2006, 03:59:26 PM »

Your right cholla. I can take 110 degrees, but it is difficult to take 92 degrees with 100%+humidity.

Roco, don't you all have fairly constant breezes on that island by the ocean?
I know one summer I was in florida and the temp was 85 with constant breezes, and a local said it was so danged hot. I looked at him with a smirk, and said it is not hot. Then he asked me if I was a midwesterner, I said yes. He replied he understood.
Another time I moved to Pennsylvania for a couple of years. I went up when we were having those 113 degrees and 100%+ humidity in Missouri. It was 85 degrees with little humidity in PA. I was loving it.
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