Ha ha.Last October, we took a vacation to New Orleans. The week prior, we started monitoring the forecasted weather - low to mid 90's - shouldn't be too bad. Boy were we wrong! I've never seen heat/humidity like that.
Go Downstairs in the morning & the hotel lobby windows are all wet... Did it rain last night? Then we go outside & BAM! The heat & humidity just slugged us. We'd be out walking & some of the cars driving by are all wet(?). Yet there wasn't a cloud in the sky. I finally figured it out - insane heat/humidity & condensation. Those "wet" cars had really good A/C cranked. Never seen anything like it, before or since.
We quickly wised up & got out early, came back & hibernated in the hotel during the afternoon, then went back out at night lol.
I can't imagine what 101.5 is like...
Be safe.
Exactly the same here Brian. Went to Turkey one July about 25yrs ago. (I need my head examined for agreeing to that). It was +100F every day for the two weeks we were there. One day it hit 115F....stayed at the hotel that day, and never left the shade by the pool. It wasn't that humid....but baking hot. Miserable.We quickly wised up & got out early, came back & hibernated in the hotel during the afternoon, then went back out at night lol.
I can't imagine what 101.5 is like...
I went to school in Scottsdale in '77. I was 15, didn't notice the heat, as I had lived in the Middle East four years prior.103 here in the mountains of Arizona yesterday. No humidity to speak of even though we are in the monsoon season here, high pressure ridge keeping the moisture away. But due to the altitude (around 5600) the sun it just brutal.
Our daughter lives near Phoenix they were 115.
Actually, been there, tried that. And spent a month in Cottonwood to check it out. Too dry for both my wife and I. I'm happy having learned to sit and stew. Keeps me able to actually do some work in these hot, humid conditions. Especially work like grilling/smoking.Try Phoenix, its a dry heat.......
I run in the evenings. I usually try and wait for the temperatures to cool off like 6:00 or 6:30. Sometimes it's really hot still, Hi 90s. And sometimes it has rained briefly and the humidity is 100% and sweltering. But you got to do what you got to do@MartinB , @Teddy J. and @Brian_D -- you got that right. Our family moved to NC when I was 16 in 1961. It took me years to acclimate to be able to handle the temp/humidity. Now I still try to spend most of my time outside regardless of weather -- too easy to lose that adaptation. Today is our first break in about a week from highs in the 90s, heat index in mid-100s. Took my dog for a walk at 84* one evening and was dripping wet within 150 feet to the gate. Oddly enough, by staying acclimated, I still enjoy this crazy weather.![]()
The way I look at it, you're going to sweat and (probably) take a shower anyway, so why hold back. The main thing is you don't move from AZ or CT and try that. Not the same without acclimatization.I run in the evenings. I usually try and wait for the temperatures to cool off like 6:00 or 6:30. Sometimes it's really hot still, Hi 90s. And sometimes it has rained briefly and the humidity is 100% and sweltering. But you got to do what you got to do
So is an ovenTry Phoenix, its a dry heat.......