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Posted by Kay Lancaster on June 22, 2009, 10:42 pm
show/hide quoted text
> That is such a good point, Sharon. Beverly is probably used to
> humidity, as people in Oregon have moss growing on the northern side and
> their feet have webbed toes. But they don't get heat. The combination
Actually, it's usually a little humid here, with relative humidity
averageing about 62% at 10 am and 45% by 4 pm in July -- we just don't
get a lot of rain to go with it -- usually 1.5" in June, 0.6" in July,
1.1 in August.
Mid July temps about 80 during the day and 60 at night. And yes, 85 counts
as horrible and 90 as blistering here. ;-) Pretty much a mediterranean
climate.
And yes, I'm sitting here in jeans and a long sleeve t and feeling a little
chilly at the moment. Flannel nighties are year-round here, imho.
Kay
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Posted by BEI Design on June 23, 2009, 1:07 am
Kay Lancaster wrote:
show/hide quoted text
> On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 12:59:30 -0700, Pogonip
> > That is such a good point, Sharon. Beverly is probably
> > used to
> > humidity, as people in Oregon have moss growing on the
> > northern side and their feet have webbed toes. But
> > they don't get heat. The combination
> Actually, it's usually a little humid here, with relative
> humidity averageing about 62% at 10 am and 45% by 4 pm in
> July -- we just don't
> get a lot of rain to go with it -- usually 1.5" in June,
> 0.6" in July,
> 1.1 in August.
> Mid July temps about 80 during the day and 60 at night.
Ahhhhh, perfection.
show/hide quoted text
> And yes, 85 counts as horrible and 90 as blistering here.
> ;-) Pretty much a mediterranean climate.
> And yes, I'm sitting here in jeans and a long sleeve t
> and feeling a little chilly at the moment. Flannel
> nighties are year-round here, imho.
Jeans, short-sleeve T-shirt and light weight cardigan here.
But cheer up, they say it'll be in the 80s mid week. ;-)
Beverly
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Posted by Emily Bengston on June 23, 2009, 9:27 am
On 6/23/09 12:07 AM, in article h1pnsi$bla$1@news.eternal-september.org,
show/hide quoted text
> Kay Lancaster wrote:
>> On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 12:59:30 -0700, Pogonip
>>> That is such a good point, Sharon. Beverly is probably
>>> used to
>>> humidity, as people in Oregon have moss growing on the
>>> northern side and their feet have webbed toes. But
>>> they don't get heat. The combination
>>
>> Actually, it's usually a little humid here, with relative
>> humidity averageing about 62% at 10 am and 45% by 4 pm in
>> July -- we just don't
>> get a lot of rain to go with it -- usually 1.5" in June,
>> 0.6" in July,
>> 1.1 in August.
>>
>> Mid July temps about 80 during the day and 60 at night.
>
> Ahhhhh, perfection.
>
>> And yes, 85 counts as horrible and 90 as blistering here.
>> ;-) Pretty much a mediterranean climate.
>>
>> And yes, I'm sitting here in jeans and a long sleeve t
>> and feeling a little chilly at the moment. Flannel
>> nighties are year-round here, imho.
>
> Jeans, short-sleeve T-shirt and light weight cardigan here.
> But cheer up, they say it'll be in the 80s mid week. ;-)
>
> Beverly
>
The high has been above 95 degrees here in Houston for over 2-weeks with
only a trace of rain all month. The average June rainfall is 4.3 inchs with
a daytime high of 92. We may get a bit of rain later this week, hopefully.
Emily
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Posted by Sharon Hays on June 23, 2009, 7:46 am
Kay Lancaster wrote:
show/hide quoted text
>> That is such a good point, Sharon. Beverly is probably used to
>> humidity, as people in Oregon have moss growing on the northern side and
>> their feet have webbed toes. But they don't get heat. The combination
>
> Actually, it's usually a little humid here, with relative humidity
> averageing about 62% at 10 am and 45% by 4 pm in July -- we just don't
> get a lot of rain to go with it -- usually 1.5" in June, 0.6" in July,
> 1.1 in August.
>
> Mid July temps about 80 during the day and 60 at night. And yes, 85
> counts
> as horrible and 90 as blistering here. ;-) Pretty much a mediterranean
> climate.
>
> And yes, I'm sitting here in jeans and a long sleeve t and feeling a
> little
> chilly at the moment. Flannel nighties are year-round here, imho.
>
> Kay
LOL I would LOVE that temp. Remember, I'm in northwestern Arkansas. If
you use a ruler on the map, I'm just about even with Nashville, north/south
wise anyway. My sister lives further east of Nashville, in TN but again
about even north/south. She gets my weather about 2 or 3 days after I get
it. So I'm guessing that Nashville will be getting the hot and humid we
have.
Brace yourself. It was 96* here yesterday with a heat index of 100*+. At
10:15 last night when the weather guy came on during the news, it was still
86* with 77% humidity. Isn't that lovely?
Now, that is above normal. Usually this time of year we are about 10*
cooler than that. We don't usually get this hot till late in July.
Sharon
---
Never try to teach a pig to sing. It's a waste of time and just annoys the
pig.
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Posted by Juno B on June 23, 2009, 11:53 am
Sharon Hays wrote:
show/hide quoted text
> Kay Lancaster wrote:
>
>>> That is such a good point, Sharon. Beverly is probably used to
>>> humidity, as people in Oregon have moss growing on the northern side and
>>> their feet have webbed toes. But they don't get heat. The combination
>> Actually, it's usually a little humid here, with relative humidity
>> averageing about 62% at 10 am and 45% by 4 pm in July -- we just don't
>> get a lot of rain to go with it -- usually 1.5" in June, 0.6" in July,
>> 1.1 in August.
>> Mid July temps about 80 during the day and 60 at night. And yes, 85
>> counts
>> as horrible and 90 as blistering here. ;-) Pretty much a mediterranean
>> climate.
>> And yes, I'm sitting here in jeans and a long sleeve t and feeling a
>> little
>> chilly at the moment. Flannel nighties are year-round here, imho.
>> Kay
>
>
> LOL I would LOVE that temp. Remember, I'm in northwestern Arkansas. If
> you use a ruler on the map, I'm just about even with Nashville, north/south
> wise anyway. My sister lives further east of Nashville, in TN but again
> about even north/south. She gets my weather about 2 or 3 days after I get
> it. So I'm guessing that Nashville will be getting the hot and humid we
> have.
>
> Brace yourself. It was 96* here yesterday with a heat index of 100*+. At
> 10:15 last night when the weather guy came on during the news, it was still
> 86* with 77% humidity. Isn't that lovely?
>
> Now, that is above normal. Usually this time of year we are about 10*
> cooler than that. We don't usually get this hot till late in July.
>
> Sharon
> ---
> Never try to teach a pig to sing. It's a waste of time and just annoys the
> pig.
Any one who wants rain is welcome to mine. I'll send it express mail i
f you want.Here in the Hudson Valley we've had enough rain to last for a
very long time. I feel like I'm living in a jungle.
Juno
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> humidity, as people in Oregon have moss growing on the northern side and
> their feet have webbed toes. But they don't get heat. The combination