Jul. 11th, 2007 03:30 pm
Superfry, part deux
OK, to give you an idea...
Current temp for my zip code right now is 96F, according to weather.com. This breaks the all-time record for this date by 11 degrees. It breaks the all-time record for July by three degrees. And it is just two degrees cooler than the all-time record, period, which was set in 1955. It is also about 20 degrees warmer than our average highs for the entire summer.
Oh, and the humidity? Is about 25%. This is not the dry, baking heat of the Southwest, in which one can sweat to cool off. This is more like being in Florida. Only without the pools and AC everywhere.
I'm not leaving the house today. Especially not since my car has been sitting in the driveway (since there's apartment stuff blocking my parking space in the garage.) Even with the AC, it's still warmish in here just from the sun coming through the windows.
Ugh.
Current temp for my zip code right now is 96F, according to weather.com. This breaks the all-time record for this date by 11 degrees. It breaks the all-time record for July by three degrees. And it is just two degrees cooler than the all-time record, period, which was set in 1955. It is also about 20 degrees warmer than our average highs for the entire summer.
Oh, and the humidity? Is about 25%. This is not the dry, baking heat of the Southwest, in which one can sweat to cool off. This is more like being in Florida. Only without the pools and AC everywhere.
I'm not leaving the house today. Especially not since my car has been sitting in the driveway (since there's apartment stuff blocking my parking space in the garage.) Even with the AC, it's still warmish in here just from the sun coming through the windows.
Ugh.
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Two suggestions, from my Montreal experience:
First, close the curtains or shades or venetian blinds, if not entirely then at least partially - this will help to block the sun's warming effect on your rooms.
Second, and especially if you have one room you need to keep cooler than others (b/c of computers, etc.), invest in a dehumidifier - they're nowhere near as expensive as A/C, but serve to pull the moisture out of the air in the rooms they're kept in, and actually that helps them to function much like an A/C. Plus, the water that gets pulled out of the air is filtered and becomes, honest-to-god, pure - and usable. Well worth it!
Other than that, seeing that we're having the same weather here as you are there at the moment - our high today was 30C (86F) with a humidex around 40C (104F) - I'll just say hang in there, kid, it'll break someday!
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