Ah, well-- and you get humidity with that heat, too. Seriously, 85F is a normal day around here in the summer, but since there's no humidity to speak of, that temperature does seem to be a lot less, subjectively.
We get little to no rain whatsoever between May to September; most roofing work is done in August because there is, statistically speaking, no chance of rain dropping into an open house. There are no green hills to be found here after May...
So, even though it may be 79F in my hometown today with some clouds moving from left to right, the humidity is 16%-- which isn't enough to work up any kind of sweat at all. Our winters are considered weirdly wet if we get more than one incident of rain every 2 or so weeks.
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Date: 2006-03-23 09:57 pm (UTC)We get little to no rain whatsoever between May to September; most roofing work is done in August because there is, statistically speaking, no chance of rain dropping into an open house. There are no green hills to be found here after May...
So, even though it may be 79F in my hometown today with some clouds moving from left to right, the humidity is 16%-- which isn't enough to work up any kind of sweat at all. Our winters are considered weirdly wet if we get more than one incident of rain every 2 or so weeks.