I am not a fan of Summer but I have it better for most people because I live 20 minutes away from the beach. Also, summer time = baseball time.
There are a lot of things that we don't do here that are typically done as a rule in hotter/colder places, specifically because we have very wild temperature variation and usually extreme cold/heat don't stick around for longer than a week at a time. Some people will use steering wheel covers, but at least in my experience it's not commonplace (and I honestly don't even know what a sunshield is); by a similar token, basically the only buildings in the state that have any sort of central air conditioning are large stores/corporate buildings. I wouldn't doubt that they exist somewhere, but I don't think I've ever seen a home or apartment building that had central air.Lil devils x said:You do not have your steering wheel covered? Maybe since I live in Texas, this was just something I thought everyone did. My steering wheel, seats and car are not usually very hot, but I have those all with covers that prevent that and use a Sunshield for the windshield when parking in the sun. That also helps with keeping everything looking new and smelling fresh (Especially helpful when my niece and nephew are in my car throwing popcorn and spilling drinks) since they can be removed and cleaned easily.shrekfan246 said:I'll take dealing with ice over a steering wheel that's practically melting any day of the week, to be honest.DanielBrown said:I used to say that it's easier to get warmer in the winter than cool in the summer, but as an adult who drives a car I've changed my mind. The heat can be annoying as fuck, however it doesn't even come close to the pain of standing in the snow, in at least -10C, trying to scrape the ice from the windows of the car and no matter the time it's constant, complete darkness.
Plus, in the summer heat a car basically just becomes a large, portable oven, and at least here in Vermont there seems to be an overabundance of cars that have sub-par air conditioning and fantastic heaters.
Move to literally anywhere in the US.Pluvia said:I'd love to live somewhere that a complaint could be "It's too hot outside".
Could you imagine that? You'd go outside and it'd be warm! Even our hottest requires at least a shirt and a t-shirt.
I'm in one of the northern-most states and we've already had near a solid week of 30+ C weather, coupled with 70-90% humidity. Thankfully it's cooled off a bit again for this week, but I don't think that bodes very well for what the end of this month/July are going to be like.
Hospitals of course have heat and air, though I would think not having Heating and air conditioning widely available would be difficult for those patients to go home that have to be kept at around 20C-24C for their health. Certain conditions the patients will need to maintain within certain temperatures or it can become life threatening for them very quickly. Hopefully at least all apartments and homes have access to at least window units.shrekfan246 said:There are a lot of things that we don't do here that are typically done as a rule in hotter/colder places, specifically because we have very wild temperature variation and usually extreme cold/heat don't stick around for longer than a week at a time. Some people will use steering wheel covers, but at least in my experience it's not commonplace (and I honestly don't even know what a sunshield is); by a similar token, basically the only buildings in the state that have any sort of central air conditioning are large stores/corporate buildings. I wouldn't doubt that they exist somewhere, but I don't think I've ever seen a home or apartment building that had central air.Lil devils x said:You do not have your steering wheel covered? Maybe since I live in Texas, this was just something I thought everyone did. My steering wheel, seats and car are not usually very hot, but I have those all with covers that prevent that and use a Sunshield for the windshield when parking in the sun. That also helps with keeping everything looking new and smelling fresh (Especially helpful when my niece and nephew are in my car throwing popcorn and spilling drinks) since they can be removed and cleaned easily.shrekfan246 said:I'll take dealing with ice over a steering wheel that's practically melting any day of the week, to be honest.DanielBrown said:I used to say that it's easier to get warmer in the winter than cool in the summer, but as an adult who drives a car I've changed my mind. The heat can be annoying as fuck, however it doesn't even come close to the pain of standing in the snow, in at least -10C, trying to scrape the ice from the windows of the car and no matter the time it's constant, complete darkness.
Plus, in the summer heat a car basically just becomes a large, portable oven, and at least here in Vermont there seems to be an overabundance of cars that have sub-par air conditioning and fantastic heaters.
Move to literally anywhere in the US.Pluvia said:I'd love to live somewhere that a complaint could be "It's too hot outside".
Could you imagine that? You'd go outside and it'd be warm! Even our hottest requires at least a shirt and a t-shirt.
I'm in one of the northern-most states and we've already had near a solid week of 30+ C weather, coupled with 70-90% humidity. Thankfully it's cooled off a bit again for this week, but I don't think that bodes very well for what the end of this month/July are going to be like.
Only if we buy them ourselves, unless that's what you mean. And actually, in the apartment I currently live in, there's only one window which can actually fit an air conditioning unit, at least without a lot of user-end tweaking.Lil devils x said:Hopefully at least all apartments and homes have access to at least window units.
Yes, in most circumstances one pays for their own air conditioner or heater if it is a portable unit or does not come with the home or apartment. There are circumstances where insurance, medicaid, or charity assistance programs will pay for units if it is deemed medically necessary in most areas. In Texas, for example,they have heating and air conditioning available through charity programs even without it being deemed medically necessary by a physician due to the harsh drastically changing environment here since that is common knowledge that it is necessary. There are deaths every year regardless due to air conditioning going out so it is something that is not really considered optional here.shrekfan246 said:Only if we buy them ourselves, unless that's what you mean. And actually, in the apartment I currently live in, there's only one window which can actually fit an air conditioning unit, at least without a lot of user-end tweaking.Lil devils x said:Hopefully at least all apartments and homes have access to at least window units.
South-Central Texan here and I'm sitting at about 36C (Actually 95F because Murica.) right now. It's expected to get even hotter because it's Texas of course it's expected to get even hotter. Strings of days with temps over 100F (And sometimes up to 110F/43C) are pretty common for our summers. Everything worth doing has to be done in the early morning or after sunset, and good luck driving your car if you don't put any sort of cover on it. The city I live in usually sets up water stations for pedestrians and homeless people during the peak months so that they can fight heatstroke, and we live in a nearly constant state of drought (Although this summer and the last one were unusually wet.)DanielBrown said:I used to say that it's easier to get warmer in the winter than cool in the summer, but as an adult who drives a car I've changed my mind. The heat can be annoying as fuck, however it doesn't even come close to the pain of standing in the snow, in at least -10C, trying to scrape the ice from the windows of the car and no matter the time it's constant, complete darkness.
Fortunately as a Swede we got neither extreme winters nor summers. Last year I think we had the shittiest summer ever, while central-Europe broke a few heat records. I was actually down in Austria at the time and we had 36C at 9 pm. It was like walking out into a sauna, and I hadn't experienced such heat since I was around six years old and at a family vacation to Mallorca. It felt really good. This year we've already hit ~30C, so who knows what's coming.
There's a video somehere of a guy pouring molten lead into a fire ant nest in Florida.Barbas said:We had trouble with a nest of those flying things in the cracks between the paving stones in the backyard last year. I boiled a full kettle of water and poured it over them, then repeated. Dealt with them nicely.Dr. McD said:ANTLIONS!
Thank you. I shall put it to good use.LegendaryGamer0 said: