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British Couple Reacts to British Heat Waves Ain't Got Nothing on America 

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British Couple Reacts to British Heat Waves Ain't Got Nothing on America
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Комментарии : 1,4 тыс.   
@beverly.alford
@beverly.alford 2 года назад
Here in Texas we don’t have heat waves; they’re called June, July, August, and September 😜. Hope y’all are finding some relief in the UK 🥰
@shawnteeisme
@shawnteeisme 2 года назад
Same in Az. We can wake up at 90 degrees christmas day smh
@sarahdixon1943
@sarahdixon1943 2 года назад
Yep, that's the Central Valley in Cali. as well
@michaeld6147
@michaeld6147 2 года назад
That's basically Vegas. Except sometimes the 100's start in April.
@dirkbsilver9260
@dirkbsilver9260 2 года назад
Yep that's Texas. I have a swamp cooler that we have to shut the pump off at night as we have to manually fill it by a hose. One Summer I spent more nights sleeping on ice packs than I did my bed. Fun times.
@fawnjenkins7266
@fawnjenkins7266 2 года назад
In South Texas, summer lasts from March through November. Hot and humid the whole time. You feel like you have stepped into a sauna when you walk outside. The drastic temperaturechamges from cold (inside with AC) to hot sauna outside, back to cold (AC in the car) back to the sauna again to walk across the asphalt parking lot to the store, where you get hit with AC once again causes a headach..I am from the northwest and when it got hot, we could find relief in the shade. In Texas, the shade is just as hot as standing in the sun! I spent 6 years as a resident. Too hot for me!
@star222333
@star222333 2 года назад
Great video, but not everyone in the US has air conditioning. I have a lot of empathy for everyone who suffers from the heat.
@TransWalk
@TransWalk 2 года назад
Alot of people in the United States do not have AC. Most people in the state of Utah don't have AC
@Blondie42
@Blondie42 2 года назад
Last two years with 100° + temps it killed several people here in WA. They had no AC in their homes. Not sure what percentage was homeless
@Mark-ko3mr
@Mark-ko3mr 2 года назад
@@TransWalk I don't think that's true. Not saying everyone has AC, but I think majority in Utah have it. Do you have a citation for statistic?
@davidorioli3870
@davidorioli3870 2 года назад
I have 5 AC units and central air. But I live in the desert so it's a must.
@knightguard3892
@knightguard3892 2 года назад
The first year I lived in Arkansas, we lived in a place with no Air Conditioning, just had fans, though we did later move to another location and it did have AC, for many years every summer the news company actually would ask for fan donations to help those people who didn't have any. The hotest I have seen was in Nevada, when moving back to the PNW, it was a dry heat of 115. In TX the tar from the interstate was coming up and we blew a tire. That was when I was young.
@naughty.r0bot
@naughty.r0bot 2 года назад
When remembering the greatest Americans in history, one should pause to consider Willis Carrier, the 1902 inventor of Air Conditioning.
@MultiKool13
@MultiKool13 2 года назад
National hero here in Louisiana 💀😂
@dragonslayerwill_travel3476
@dragonslayerwill_travel3476 2 года назад
Nikola Tesla invented AC! 👏
@aleta9134
@aleta9134 2 года назад
@@dragonslayerwill_travel3476 Alternating current.
@Someone-ll1rc
@Someone-ll1rc Год назад
Some others might be George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Neil Armstrong.
@grumblesa10
@grumblesa10 Год назад
He is one of the few people that honestly "revolutionized" society. Up until AC was a "thing", southern states were underpopulated and under-developed. Primarily due to the heat and humidity 6 months out of the year. AC made it possible to literally do more during the hottest period of the year.
@jairosoto3445
@jairosoto3445 2 года назад
I played soccer in 118 degrees once and my body shut down. I got the goosebumps and they wouldn’t go away. I got really cold to the point where I was freezing. I walked off the field and threw myself on the grass in the shade and I started to get better. This was in bullhead Arizona
@feivel069
@feivel069 Год назад
Played baseball in similar temps here in Phx. It is def no fun.
@tee_d_we_d
@tee_d_we_d 2 года назад
A British friend and I were discussing the heatwave there, you have my sympathy. I was in disbelief when I was told there was no form of cooling, not even a fan! I gave them tips to help cool off, something I learned being a native Texan. Two weeks of triple digit heat and 80% humidity here where I live. I'm waiting for it to cool off some in January.
@mortensen1961
@mortensen1961 2 года назад
I've lived in the Laughlin, NV/Bullhead City, AZ area since May of 1991, 120°F (48.9°C) temperatures are not uncommon here in the summer. . . .
@burntkrow4477
@burntkrow4477 2 года назад
It gets worse for Southern California. Sometimes during the heat waves, the wind blows fro East to West, blowing the hot air from the desert into the cities. It feels like your standing in front of a hair dryer. The winds will start fires, and some times the palm trees will spontaneously combust, exploding the tops of the trees. The winds are called the “Santa Ana’s”.
@colleen6304
@colleen6304 2 года назад
Oh my! I grew up in Southern California (near the beach, fortunately), and I remember the Santa Anas! Definitely do NOT miss them.
@seethe42
@seethe42 2 года назад
Winds don't start fires and the Santa Ana's aren't necessarily "hot", they are dry. They blow south through the mountain passes from the east. That crap about trees spontaneously combusting, give it a break. They are caused by Arctic winds actually. The cold dry air hitting the warm desert air. They are a necessary part of the environment of SoCal. They cause warming of the ocean, raising nutrients from the colder depths in the water, feeding the marine life.
@Mae-fj9bb
@Mae-fj9bb Год назад
Many of the older places near the beach in Ca. Don’t have air conditioning and those Santa Ana’s are nasty.
@curiousman1672
@curiousman1672 2 года назад
Just as a piece of interesting trivia, in MN, we frequently hit -40 to -50F in January or Febuary. When it gets that cold, stepping on hard packed snow gives off a quiet ringing sound. It's so cold the snow sings. Very dangerous. We have a young lady in our area that lost all of her fingers and toes because she ended up stranded outside in that temperature. Amazed she didn't die. Not fun at all.
@amandasargent2767
@amandasargent2767 2 года назад
Ugh no. The coldest I've ever experienced was negative 28 (sry my negative key is broken) in New England, where I was born and raised but I've lived in Florida now for years. I'd never be able to deal with that now. The coldest it gets here is maybe high 20s and thats only a handful of days a year and never with snow. It's funny how quickly you adjust too because after maybe 2 years here, that felt unbearably freezing to me.
@curiousman1672
@curiousman1672 2 года назад
@@amandasargent2767 Completely understand. Every frigid season I ask myself why I live in a place where the air hurts my face. The reason is spring, summer, and fall are theoretically worth it. As the summer closes, I know what's coming. Ugh.
@roldanbelenos1549
@roldanbelenos1549 2 года назад
In Alaska, being locked out of your car/house in winter is a legitimate reason to call 9-1-1, for this exact reason.
@curiousman1672
@curiousman1672 2 года назад
@@roldanbelenos1549 Yep. We don't mess around with winter.
@mjvk7146
@mjvk7146 Год назад
And then six months later we are regularly hitting +98-100 degrees. Lol we’re all crazy!🥵🥶🤪
@eTraxx
@eTraxx 2 года назад
In 1989 I was in a tank in the Mohave Desert .. 15 miles from Death Valley .. in August .. in MOPP-4 .. Chemical protective suit, rubber gloves, rubber boots and a protective mask. I sweated so much that water was actually sloshing back and forth in the mask goggles when I moved my head. I have no idea what the ambient temperature was .. but a gauge in the ammo compartment read 130° (Sun + big metal box).
@SherriLyle80s
@SherriLyle80s 2 года назад
Ugh. So miserable. My husband is a USPS worker. Brutal day and day out. No AC in the vehicles. Especially in Florida.
@debraleesparks
@debraleesparks 2 года назад
I’m from the Central Valley of California. I used to be a “flagger”for a crop duster. We had to wear all that when we sprayed weed killers in the fields. It was a living hell , (done in summer)..so I get what you went through! Love Grandma Debbie
@ZootSuitJZ
@ZootSuitJZ 2 года назад
While I was stationed in 29 stumps in the mid 1990's, I experienced 131°F (55°C).
@debraleesparks
@debraleesparks 2 года назад
I didn’t have to sit in a metal box, but I did half to jump up and down waving flags while a plane aimed straight at me !!! 😹I’d a quit but I was living with the dammed cropdusting tomato farmer !! Love Grandma Debbie oh.. the things we do for love !
@numbersasaname2291
@numbersasaname2291 2 года назад
I was at NTC that same year and experienced the same temps. Being infantry, we got to walk in MOPP-4 in those temps humping all of our gear. Our Battalion Commander thankfully decided on a lot of night ops, so rather than 103 or greater (38 or greater Celsius), it was only in the upper 90s at night. For how much I loved MOPP on winter ranges in Graf, I hated it on that vacation.
@snakei3ites164
@snakei3ites164 2 года назад
Well you can cool your house without ac. Our ac died for about a week so we blocked all windows to the living room block all entranced with just simple black sheets and kept the lights off. We then put 3 box fans into the room and let it sit for about 2 or 3 hours. At this point it is around 110 degrees Fahrenheit outside making it about a good 90 degrees in the house but the room we set up was at a good chill 68 degrees and it became our new ac unit while we waited to get the ac fixed. Of course can't chill the whole house but it help keep that room cold and the adjacent ones chilled as well.
@Texbec
@Texbec Год назад
3 or 4 years ago it got so hot here that in Ft. Worth Texas car tires were melting on the highways. Just to be clear the cars were driving not sitting still.
@davidterry6155
@davidterry6155 2 года назад
Many people who live in the Southwest don’t have AC but have an evaporative cooler (Swamp Cooler) which typically is only in one room and you rely on air flow. My family in western Washington state doesn’t have AC where it can rise over 105.
@luketauzin8321
@luketauzin8321 2 года назад
I live in south Louisiana where it rains everyday and is supper hot. It is always humid. My dad said 80° here is hotter than 100° when he went to Cali
@brianschaffer9220
@brianschaffer9220 2 года назад
Hot desert areas in the southwest US regularly don't drop below 85, even 90 at night in early and mid summer, but the dew is so low at that time of year that it isn't as bad, but still...imagine feeling in that if you don't have a/c or swamp coolers.
@kathrynsamuelson1983
@kathrynsamuelson1983 2 года назад
Not everyone in the US has ac.One summer it felt like 127 degrees in the Chicago area due to the combination of the actual temperature and the humidity.
@segroves3
@segroves3 2 года назад
When I left the Salton sea in California in 2019 it was July and 137 that showed on our car. It was 110 at night
@IndyRockStar
@IndyRockStar 2 года назад
it's over 90 degrees here in Florida from around end of May until well into Sept. When it drops to lower 70s in fall and winter we pull out the sweaters. We only have 2-3 weeks below 60 degress most years. Below 60 is freezing to us.
@tannnaramoonvale8364
@tannnaramoonvale8364 Год назад
Where I live in New Mexico, it's nothing for the temps to stay around 110-127 F for July, August, September! And my home uses a swamp cooler (puts moisture in the air to cool it) and little personal fans everywhere! LOL The only bad part is when the temperature is still 100 or more at midnight! Love it though.
@gmelectricllc5868
@gmelectricllc5868 2 года назад
Got to LOVE Arizona, We have heat wave on a regular basis... In the year 2020, was out hottest days, 145 consistant days over 100 degrees, 21 over 110 degrees in a row.... 53 days total over 110 degrees total that summer.
@bradmiller6023
@bradmiller6023 2 года назад
As for Texas Between March-April - Nov. depending on if you live in the Drier or Humid parts you got 2 heats Bake and Broil.
@danpals7678
@danpals7678 2 года назад
When I lived in Scottsdale Arizona I went to work one night at midnight and it was still 100 degrees.
@remiqaine
@remiqaine 2 года назад
Here in central washington state we reached 47.7 for a few days last year. This year we only hit 44.4 for a week.
@kenygordon
@kenygordon 2 года назад
Living just North of Tampa in Florida, we had 29 degree Fahrenheit weather for 3 days. I've gotten used to 100 plus degrees days at a time and if you figure in the heat index it can feel like 119 or higher. Coldest I've ever personally witnessed is -54 degrees. I was stationed at NTC Great Lakes which is North of Chicago by about 45 minutes. We had the great blizzard of 93. There were 10 foot snow drifts and the base was shut down for almost a week. Thanks for the content!!
@cyirvine6300
@cyirvine6300 Год назад
LA hosted the World Cup and the cameras in Pasadena kept scanning over to the thermometer which read 120 F all day. Stands were full in the sunshine. We don't hide we just get acclimated. That's possible because there's no humidity.
@bubblegum6817406
@bubblegum6817406 Месяц назад
I lived in Hawaii growing up and most of the homes don't have air conditioning. The average temp in summer was 85 F (29.4 C) and in winter 78 F (25.6 C). The worst though was the humidity. You'd sit on the couch and just stick to it. But it's all relative because for me anything under 70 F (21.1 C) and I need a sweater or a blanket. I'm sure for most people who live in cold weather, that's shorts and tank top weather. Just depends on what your body is used to
@DeltaElites
@DeltaElites 2 года назад
This last month where I am in California we had 95-115 (35 -46C) degrees every day. The last week was 90% humidity with 110 - 115 every day with one night where it didn't go below 88 (31c) degrees. It's been a rough summer.
@acolytegnobgib2790
@acolytegnobgib2790 Год назад
The average temperature in Las Vegas Nevada during the summer is 105-115 for 2 1/2 months.
@lindah5910
@lindah5910 2 года назад
I live in California's San Joaquin Valley (America's fruit bowl is one description). We have ANOTHER hot week teed up for the next 8 days (the first week of September - where is autumn?!) - 107-112F (or 42 - 44.4C). We generally have air conditioning as you rightly point out but every summer it is totally hoping that the equipment holds up because these temperatures (regularly over 100F or 38C) are brutal. Like in blizzards or hurricanes it's too hot for children to play outside in the afternoon/early evening. All you hear outside is the drone of the AC condensor units mounted outside each home. In the hottest hours the asphalt on the city streets gets tacky. I hope some kind of relief can be managed for you in the UK.
@ElliKeen
@ElliKeen 2 года назад
Highest highs and lowest lows, but the thing he didn't mention is if your state is land locked, meaning no big bodies of water, then the wind blowing outside is the same temperature; so you literally feel like someone has a hot blow dryer blowing in your face. If it's a humid location you feel like you're drowning when you breathe and if it's a dry location everything evaporates including your spit.
@gregoryjasongranado5248
@gregoryjasongranado5248 2 года назад
I live in New Mexico in the USA and it's over 100 degrees Fahrenheit most of the summer.
@erinh8159
@erinh8159 2 года назад
I’ve lived in apartments without AC before. Nothing is stopping you from getting a window unit for the times when it gets excessive.
@williamklett6660
@williamklett6660 2 года назад
Here in Minnesota, the records run from 114° (45.5°) to -67° (-55°) although typically we don't reach those extremes. Thanks be...
@exotickiller644
@exotickiller644 2 года назад
I live in the North Eastern part of Indiana and just about every year in the summer the temps range from 95 degrees to 110… but it gets worse plus the humidity… not only that most of the house in my area don’t have AC.
@lindadeters8685
@lindadeters8685 2 года назад
I’ve lived in Tucson, AZ for 35 yrs and well remember the summer of 2016. Our highest temp that summer was 117* (47.3* C). The airport was closed because the asphalt (tarmac) was melting. Not to mention we had over 100 days of 100* (37C) plus temps.
@ms_scribbles
@ms_scribbles 2 года назад
Yeah, and then you get the people who sneer "Yeah, but it's a dry heat!" As a comedian once said, "A bonfire is a dry heat, you don't see me sticking my ass in one of those, do ya?" I mean, yeah, humidity sucks, but it's not like a "dry heat" is a picnic either! You walk outside and immediately it feels like every bit of moisture that has ever existed in your body has immediately dried up and blown away. "But you can't breathe in bad humidity!" Yeah, you can't breathe in no humidity, either. Ever see that Spongebob Movie when Spongebob and Patrick have been put out to dry? (I've raised children, so of course I have. lol) Yeah, that's your lungs in a dry heat. So to heck with that!
@namelessandsouless1
@namelessandsouless1 Год назад
I live in Arizona. It's often called the armpit of America and for good reasons. It gets a little warm here in the summer. Weeks of temps over 37c/100f. You Need to have air flow of some kind, because there's No wind or clouds during those weeks. That sun will Beat you down if you don't take caution in it. We only have Two seasons in Arizona. Hot and cold.
@timothyarmstrong9351
@timothyarmstrong9351 2 года назад
In 2017 where I live in Texas we had a heat wave for 4 days that got up to 127° F
@markhine3232
@markhine3232 2 года назад
As a trucker, i had tostop in. Gila Bend Az for fuel one summer day. No clouds anywhere abd temp of 122°F. It was so hot, i felt like a piece of bacon frying in a pan. What a miserable day that was.
@r.s.5431
@r.s.5431 2 года назад
Interesting fact - Fahrenheit and Celsius temperatures are the same at -40 degrees.
@bigcountrydoug7023
@bigcountrydoug7023 2 года назад
We have been topping 110f for most of the summer here in Tx
@nancyscookin
@nancyscookin 2 года назад
I live in Southern California where it’s over 100 to 110 daily in summer with no AC. It can get unbearable at times.
@daviddodds30
@daviddodds30 2 года назад
In Dallas, Texas, our longest ever streak of days over 100°F is 69 in a row. The most we’ve had in a single year is 71, (a different year). Our highest temperature ever recorded is 113°… twice. Also in my lifetime, we’ve gone as many as 84 days without rain, though just last week, we received as much as 15.5 inches of rain in less than 12 hours. Meanwhile, since the beginning of the pandemic, we have reached temperatures as low as -2F in February, 2021.
@garyarnett1220
@garyarnett1220 2 года назад
Lawrence did this video in 2020, both the US and UK were more extreme this year (2022). Add to that the huge number of flash floods across the whole northern hemisphere. Even here, I live in the Colorado Rockies at an altitude of 5900 ft (1800m) and it's been 90F (32.22) or over for roughly 32 of the last 45 days. Hot for this country where most of us don't have AC but evaporative coolers, not bad, but it depends on the humidity.
@ThePeaceableKingdom
@ThePeaceableKingdom 2 года назад
A dozen 100f days in August in central Texas are usual, and yes, we do have AC and we are used to it. But this year (2022) was bad, with over 100 days in a row above 100F, or 38C. The AC strains almost as much as the bill strains the budget! Back in '01 or thereabouts, not an especially bad year but an especially bad day, temps hit 45C officially, but many unofficial reports said about 48C. I was working in it and got heat stroke, or heat exhaustion, the lesser of the two, but feel lucky to have survived. I dowsed myself with water, laid down and put a fan on me for an hour till I felt better. It does, sometimes get really hot here.
@Serenity_Craft
@Serenity_Craft 2 года назад
The hottest weather I was in was 115 F, with no a/c. That was in 2017 I think. Yesterday I was in 100 f temps, and still no a/c in my car. I do have a/c in my home though.
@asimovstarling8806
@asimovstarling8806 2 года назад
I used to live in florida. Hurricane season always sucked. Worst hurricane season of my life resulted 90 degrees outside with 100% humidity, with 90 mile per hour winds which is alot faster than you're bargaining for because 110 kilometers is only 60 miles, figure it out. Add on top of that up to a foot of rain per day for almost 6 weeks with no power which means no lights, no air conditioning, no cooking, no refrigeration, no radio, no internet, and it didn't get colder at night. with 4 people in that house, it soon became hotter inside than out because of humidity alone. And that hurricane didn't even hit Florida. That was a glancing blow, as in it went past us and hit the northern states.
@bretcantwell4921
@bretcantwell4921 2 года назад
I'm currently living in Dallas and while we beat the number of 100+ days in 2011 (which I was here to experience), the 1980 summer of 69 days of 100+ remains legendary because AC was less widespread back then. Thankfully was living in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan at the time.
@stevemak8620
@stevemak8620 2 года назад
I live just outside Portland, Oregon. We had a heat wave last year of epic proportions. It got up to 118F (47.7C) with hot days above 114F bracketing that 118 degree day, and temps around and over 100F for some time before and after. Well over 10 days. The year before, in 2020, we found ourselves in the middle of a worse heat wave, if measured by duration, and seemingly everything near me to the south and east of here caught fire. You couldn't see 60 yards to the end of the street, we received evacuation warnings, and the sun was just an orange blob most of the time making for a very eerie coloration of the surroundings. I have not seen it before and I hope to not see it in the future. I don't have AC, by the way, but I do have a basement. You just have to deal with it.
@markvoelker6620
@markvoelker6620 2 года назад
I've lived in the desert southwest (Tucson, Phoenix and Las Vegas) for years. In the summers we can always tell the visitors from the locals: The locals are the ones driving around with their windows down.
@Tony-rz4ks
@Tony-rz4ks 2 года назад
Texas in 1980 we had 42 days of 100, 2011 we had 40 days of 100 or greater. We always have 100-degree days in the summer so we are use to it. If you get out in the sun every day or week you dont feel it.
@barbarabates1357
@barbarabates1357 2 года назад
i live in Minnesota at the moment I only have a Fan, When It is real HOT i wait until nighttime to put the fan iin the window, It has gotten up to around 100 degrees. but with the humidity the Heat Index is higher, If I have to do something outside it is in the early morning or after the sunsets. As for out Winters with the windchill it can get down to 50 degees below zero, At least in winter you can put layers of clothes on to keep warm. In the Summer when it is HOT you can only take so mucj clothes off.
@kclovelypinky8561
@kclovelypinky8561 2 года назад
In wisconsin there is a little town called Dousmen it has this famous event called the Dousman derby days they do this unquie competition called the frog jump. So u can bring ur own frog or get one there then they put the frog in the middle with u in it u try to make it jump three times as far as u can after the three jumps its over they measure how far u go and at the end of it the person with the farthest jump wins and is written down in history. This is an amazing event I even did it its been around for a long time they have a parade and am entire fair for it if u want to go to a fair that is less crowded I would suggest this one
@NerdyNanaSimulations
@NerdyNanaSimulations 2 года назад
Here in Arkansas 100 degree (37 c) is pretty normal in July and August. Heat wave here is 105 to 110 ( 40 - 43 c). I guess while it's still hot you do become accustomed to it. We actually don't just sit around in A/C we still go to work, walk the dog, etc. While that is actual temperatures the humidity adds to it. It is not uncommon to have "feels like with humidity" temps of 105-112 during July and August. Hot isn't great but when humidity levels of 70% to 75% are present it feels like you are breathing under water and it doesn't really need heat to make it miserable, the heat makes it worse. Great Video. Be blessed.
@gw2955
@gw2955 2 года назад
I live in Texas. Hottest summer I ever experienced was the Summer of 1980. 69 days over 100 and 42 of those were consecutive. Temperatures up to 119 degrees in my location. We lived in a small wood framed house with one window air conditioning unit that did not cool the entire house. My brothers and I parked in front of that air conditioner much of the time and vied for position in front of one of the vents. At night, I shared a box fan with my brother. There was no air conditioning in the room. We would each get up and change the fan to point at ourselves in the middle of the night. This led to brawls in the dark when one caught the other changing the fan position. I compare what you've said about not having the equipment to winters in the North. In Texas we simply don't have all the equipment they have up there. So when we get a little bit of winter weather it has a far greater impact.
@TheJerseyNinja
@TheJerseyNinja 2 года назад
Just a side note on the fan comment. Fans work by convection. Meaning they blow air over your skin which cools it down. They don’t turn the air cold, or lower the temperature of the room that much, so turning on a fan even if the air blowing on your doesn’t feel cold, is still better than not because the air moving over your skin will cool it down
@royshafer3281
@royshafer3281 2 года назад
Texas a couple years ago had 100 days consecutive at over 100°f or 37.7°c beating the previous year having 98 days total
@mfee2079
@mfee2079 2 года назад
I live in South Florida where between July and September its 90 degrees F at 3 am and gets hotter from there. On the plus side our average winter temperature is 73 F Dont know how you all survive without air con
@GenX1964
@GenX1964 2 года назад
Friday, July 30, 1999 Chicago. It was 105° F / 41C and I played golf after work. Nobody was on the course and I shot 40 for 9 holes and to this day it is by far my best round. It fealt like I was walking on water. For some reason I was adapted to the heat that day and it really wasn't that bad. Just a weird day. Not sure I could handle it today. P.S. We've had just an average summer temperature-wise and rain-wise in Chicago this summer of '22. Nothing too extreme.
@jeffmorse645
@jeffmorse645 2 года назад
I live in the inland part of Northern California and its hot here all summer. Generally between 35C to 40C every today. Our forecast today is 41C and is expected to hit 43C this weekend. Thank goodness almost everything here is air conditioned. The funny thing is California has microclimates and right on the coast it's very mild. San Francisco should only be 23C today.
@scottfree641
@scottfree641 2 года назад
99 degree's , heat wave in the UK? That 's late spring weather in my state. That's great weather to grab your beer and your innertubes and float down the river Shannon make a day of it. OR the river trent
@olpossum
@olpossum 2 года назад
In July we had a record heatwave this year in San Antonio, TX. 28 days out of the month we were 100F or over (or 37.77c for you Celsius types). Even with AirCon it was brutal..especially when you get the electric bill!
@narnian19
@narnian19 2 года назад
So I live in the great and sometimes worst state of California. Southern California has some of the most brutal heat waves imaginable. I remember back in 2004 while at a high school event one Saturday, the base temperature in the area was 110°F. Sadly, there were also wildfires going on all around, and that drove the temperatures up towards 120°F. We were at a school in Orange County, and were advised to keep hydrated at all times due to the heat. I witnessed two people get taken away in ambulances and a fellow student from my school experience heat exhaustion. Little did I know that a short 20 mins later, I too would be over heated and going through it as well. After that year we had cooler, yet still hot, weather when we returned to compete at that school the following years I was in school.
@jtb8
@jtb8 2 года назад
Hi depending on what size fan you have you can make things a little bit better for you. You can get a big bowl and put cold water in it tap water and put a bunch of ice in it, And set it in front of the fan so that the fan is blowing air across the bowl of ice water on to you. Or the area where you are lying down or sitting you will notice a big difference. Because the fan will be blowing cold air your way. In New York when I was a little this was known as the poor man's air conditioner.
@donnaduffey3356
@donnaduffey3356 2 года назад
I'm in Southern ohio. It used to be the norm where it would be 110f/45c every day for 6 weeks. The last time i ran away to Ireland for the summer
@vk33771
@vk33771 2 года назад
I'm in Texas. The hardest part of extreme hot and cold consecutive days is keeping my chickens, sheep and donkey alive and healthy. Add the drought into the mix and it's really stressful.
@spaceshiplewis
@spaceshiplewis 2 года назад
This is is another reason why we love our cars and our garages. You can avoid being technically outside if get into your car in the garage and then drive to work and park in a multistory car park and stay inside 4 walls with AC the whole time. No waiting for the bus, train or walking outside ever.
@benwolk6494
@benwolk6494 2 года назад
The most sustained heat I've experienced was in north Georgia, when it reached triple-digits for seven days running. That was three or four years ago, and the summers since then haven't been as severe.
@4theloveoflife
@4theloveoflife 2 года назад
we've had 49 over 100 degree days here so far.. But I live only 40 miles from death valley
@sandrajones8339
@sandrajones8339 2 года назад
We had over 100 degree weather for over 2 months straight! Air conditioners did not work very well! I live in Texas!
@notsofancyqueen4794
@notsofancyqueen4794 2 года назад
During one of the big heat waves it was 105+ in Texas every day for over a month, and I was working in a non air conditioned warehouse. Lol. Worst month of my life
@johnhall4526
@johnhall4526 2 года назад
The majority of factories in the US are not air conditioned. When it breaks the 90 degree barrier here, my and many other workplaces become a giant convection oven set to the Hell temperature.
@johnbuck3374
@johnbuck3374 2 года назад
I'm watching this video in my Garage in Eastern North Carolina where it was 95 degrees Fahrenheit earlier today. Lol
@melindamcquigg4629
@melindamcquigg4629 2 года назад
Hey easy hint to rid of flies.... night time they go to ceiling. Just kill them with swatter lol👍
@davidmcnelley8672
@davidmcnelley8672 2 года назад
Being in Oklahoma temps were over 100 for like a month, riding on my motorcycle felt like someone holding a hairdryer in my face.
@rudybrito5471
@rudybrito5471 2 года назад
Listen I'm a truck driver or lory driver here in the states, the coldest I've been in was -28 degrees and it burns your skin freezes your eyebrows mustache and nose hairs instantly. And the hottest I've been in was 138 degrees in the Mojave desert in California.
@reneehomen2226
@reneehomen2226 2 года назад
I don't know how you guys deal with the Summer without A.C. ??? I'd melt! Today was only 80 degrees Fareheit. Nice relief.
@SellersChantal
@SellersChantal 2 года назад
Not everyone in the US has AC. You may not find it in areas that have mild weather. So when they have heat waves, it’s awful. Even worse are the times people in the desert southwest are dealing with 115° heat and their AC unit breaks.
@28dirtj
@28dirtj 2 года назад
Ive lived in several states, and even been overseas in the middle east. The hottest ive experienced was when i was overseas in Kuwait, it got to 125 degrees and the normal there was around 105 during the summer. The hottest I've experienced in the states, 115-120. In California when i was doing training in Fort Irwin. What people dont know is, the humidity makes it feel like 10 degrees hotter than it really is. When i lived in Iowa, the hottest i experienced was 108 degrees, but 100% humidity. It was miserable. The good thing is humidity means theres moisture which in turns helps keep wildfires on the low side. When its 120 degrees and no humidity, expect some bad fires.
@blizzardwarning5198
@blizzardwarning5198 2 года назад
Common layperson mistake to say it was this temperature and 100% humidity which is really relative humidity. Safe to say that if the humidity (relative humidity) was at 50% with the temperature of 108F it would have felt even hotter than you experienced.
@lynnsoeth5301
@lynnsoeth5301 2 года назад
We've had a horrible hot summer 108 to 112, cooling to 70. AC or not I'm really tired of it!
@davidn3063
@davidn3063 2 года назад
Those temps were not heat indexed- A nice 100F day can feel like 120 with humidity.
@quantumvisualizations
@quantumvisualizations 2 года назад
It's true many in US do not have AC. That being said businesses all over have broken AC units. Supermarkets, banks, dept stores etc schools. And the prices for on peak in calif have gone up 6times more than off peak. My place is 650sq ft my AC is set to 76. It's rarely on. Last summer electricity $35-40 per month. This year $85 per month
@Notsosweetstevia
@Notsosweetstevia 2 года назад
I’m Ohio and we have experienced heat up to 115 F. That combined with 90% humidity. It makes the air hard to breath. Your chest tightens and it’s almost disorienting.
@nopenope4158
@nopenope4158 2 года назад
Red glasses is the REAL SNOWFLAKE 😁
@cutter892
@cutter892 Год назад
It's worse than just heat there is also humidity. I know humidity gets thrown around a lot by us Americans but it is such a huge factor. Imagine it's 90-100 F High 30's to 40's C and on top of that 80+% humidity, basically the air is so full of moister that the sweat on your skin CAN'T evaporate and just pools and runs down you while your constantly coated in a heavy, wet blanket of hot air and no wind, you can not cool down.
@mematoseven8709
@mematoseven8709 2 года назад
When I saw that UK was having record high temperatures, I said a prayer for y'all because I knew y'all don't have air conditioning. In North Carolina, USA, even 80 degrees can be sweltering because of the humidity. We occasionally get to 100+ degrees and that is brutal but again because of our humidity. We have 2 granddaughters in Arizona where a normal summer day can be 110+ but with no humidity it's not the same "hot" as here. Don't get me wrong, it's still hot! But AZ is a desert area.
@barbaraminniear1750
@barbaraminniear1750 2 года назад
Living in Indiana and in 1988 I was pregnant with my son was in the early stages of it and NO A/C and 104 degrees and just fans to keep you cool wasn't fun. Winters we've gotten as low as -32 but -59 with wind chill. I do appreciate a nice sunny warm day like 70 degrees.
@guywiththelongcirl
@guywiththelongcirl 2 года назад
COLLAB IDEA: you could bring up things you think about america or questions youve always wondered and he could answer them. or you could do some type of fun game.
@Parklarblick
@Parklarblick 2 года назад
And just remember that a steak cooked to medium rare is 136-138F. It does get rather toasty over here, though in my neck of the woods it's more of a dense wall of humidity. Not so much dry heat down here lol.
@brendahere
@brendahere 2 года назад
Put ice in a cooler and blow a fan across it. There is more involved than the temp level. I would rather be out side at -10 degrees in the winter in Minnesota than 40 degrees in the rain in New york.
@Relicali
@Relicali 2 года назад
A great way to estimate Fahrenheit is to think of it as relative to the human body. 0 is too cold for prolonged exposure without layers of clothes and 100 is too hot without a steady supply of hydration. Celsius is relative to water. 0 freezes water. 100 boils. -32 Fahrenheit is 0 Celsius and 212 Fahrenheit is 100 Celsius. I live in Texas. We have long summers and 100+ is a normal occurrence here, sometimes for weeks or over month at a time.
@gregwilliams386
@gregwilliams386 2 года назад
Normally in California there are about 3 straight weeks of 108 degrees Fahrenheit. That's 42 degrees Celsius.
@southernpride1861
@southernpride1861 2 года назад
Where I'm at we had temperatures of 115 to 117 f for over a week and I work out in the heat mowing lawns so we only work until it got too hot and we quit for the rest of the day since I have had a heat stroke a couple times in the heat gets to me too easy anymore and I'm only in my mid 30s I was throwing up and I passed out and and my coworkers saw me laying on the ground passed out and they called the EMS on me then they took me to the hospital where I woke up and I was in there for 2 days which was a high bill you don't want to come here during August to the states or in July that's where it's the hottest this is the hardest we have been in July in August especially in July
@trishafountain5030
@trishafountain5030 2 года назад
Born and raised in Florida, never had ac until I went to college. We were fine
@dogalex63
@dogalex63 2 года назад
Location absolutley affects an individual perspective on hot weather and/or cold weather. Latitude, longitude, areas on the earth relative to global weather patterns allow for for soooo many different opinions but also, just as many variables! UK heat wave was unprecedented for that geographic region which was ill-equipped to deal with the situation. That heat wave, relatively speaking was worse than Texas hot summer day! As someone commented, it's comparing apples to oranges.
@Crab_People
@Crab_People Год назад
Were im from it didn't go below 100 degrees for about 24 days
@flubber1557
@flubber1557 2 года назад
Mother nature doesnt need weapons to kill anyone or even huge storms like hurricanes. I had a pretty bad thunder storm near me recently and someone was crushed by a tree in their car. Instant death blow. I must say I was lucky because I was walking home in that weather. I was a couple blocks away from where the person died when I got home. Its not like i could tell it was gonna rain since it was blue skies when i left work. Be careful when in inclement weather people.
@wendymonares675
@wendymonares675 2 года назад
I live in LA and the hottest weather experience was in 2020 at 120-121° (49°). We were lucky that we had invested in a window AC unit at home. We didn't suffer the sun's personal vendetta on SoCal but when it gets upwards of 90° (32°) 🥵 the heat is reflected upwards and it feels like it's melting 🫠 your eyeballs when you take one step outside.
@kclovelypinky8561
@kclovelypinky8561 2 года назад
I live in wisconsin America and even though we r up higher in the country we have this zone called the temerprat zone which is in spring its a little warm and a only cool out in summer it gets really hot outside like I would say it actually got around 90 f at some point I'm my life even and I'm only 21 years old also in the winter months it gets so cold up here even more so towards more the north but where I live it can get under negative degrees f basically if I was walking outside with a just a coat and no hat or gloves u actually would get frost bite if u stay out there too long it is because wind speeds r crazy in the winter and that what makes it so cold so if u do go out there in thay temp u usually want to wear snowpants u can't really stay outside with just pants on to long cause it's that cold but u also would need gloves or mittens and a warm hat and scarf and warm shoes
@bthsr7113
@bthsr7113 2 года назад
Counting wind chill, we've seen temperatures that were colder than Antarctica during one of the bomb cyclones. The climate is seriously mucked up, and we're in for a wild ride to the bottom if we don't fix it.
@dovahbear0
@dovahbear0 2 года назад
Uh... my 1st week in England it was like 86°? Maybe close to 90°? Getting out of Heathrow ppl walking around sweating and looking like they where about to pass out... I think like 4 ppl died from heat strokes. But meh I just left texas at like 113°
@Brian67859
@Brian67859 2 года назад
It's normally around 95 - 105 throughout July and August in Texas. And every year people here are surprised that it's hot and complaining about their electric bills. Every single year. BTW, everyplace here is air conditioned.
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