WEATHER Relentless heat wave about to bake most of the country for multiple weeks.

mzkitty

I give up.
Cold baths. Not showers, if you don't have AC:

heat 1.PNG

July 10, 2020

A punishing and relentless heat wave is just getting underway in the South, with some spots forecast to peak above 110 degrees starting this weekend. But the heat will not stay in the South; next week it is forecast to move north and east, spreading 100-degree temperatures across the Ohio Valley and into the Mid-Atlantic.

The National Weather Service is forecasting 75 or more record-high temperatures to be approached or broken from Friday to Tuesday alone, and that number is likely to grow significantly into next week. Early next week a few cities in the Plains states may even flirt with their all-time record highs. However, when all is said and done, the bigger story will likely be how long this heat wave lasts.

Jeff Masters, Ph.D., founder of the popular site Weather Underground and a regular contributor to Yale Climate Connections, says what concerns him most is the prolonged exposure to the heat. "The heat wave will be very long-lived, lasting multiple weeks in some areas with only a few days of near-normal temperatures during that span. This will increase the odds of heat illness and heat-related deaths."

Amarillo, Texas, for example, is embarking on a 10-day stretch of 100+ degrees Fahrenheit, with some days near 110. That's 10 to nearly 20 degrees above the average high temperature of 92.

In the past few years these massive heat outbreaks have become commonly known as heat domes — sprawling areas of high pressure bringing hot and dry conditions for days. Heat domes are best seen in the upper levels of the atmosphere. In the image below, a big mountain of warm air builds and expands, reaching historic heights in the southwestern U.S..

The bigger these heat domes grow, the hotter and longer-lasting heat waves become. And this will be a big one. More than 80% of the nation — 265 million people — will sweat through highs above 90 within the next week. Another 45 million will suffer through triple-digit temperatures.

The core of the heat this weekend will build across the western lower Plains and the Southwest.

Most of Texas and Oklahoma will top 100 degrees on Saturday, with the Red River Valley area of northwest Texas and southwest Oklahoma topping out at 110. When humidity is factored in, it will feel like a sweltering 110 in Dallas and Oklahoma City during the afternoons.

heat-saturday-copy.jpg
CBS News
The National Weather Service has issued an Excessive Heat Warning for inland Southern California, southern Nevada and the southern half of Arizona from Saturday through Monday for a very high risk for heat-related illnesses such as heat cramps, heat exhaustion and heat stroke.

In Phoenix, Arizona, the mercury is forecast to reach 116 or above on Sunday, which would break a record set in the late 1800s. The all-time record in Phoenix is 122. Nearby in Lake Havasu the temperature on Sunday may reach 120.

Early next week the heat dome will shift east and north. Early indications from the models show the heat spreading into the central Plains and Mississippi River Valley. By Tuesday, widespread afternoon highs are forecast to reach 110 to 115 in much of Kansas, Oklahoma and north Texas.


Temperatures like these may come close to the highest temperatures ever experienced in this area, but in most cases they will probably fall just short of breaking records. The vast majority of all-time records in the Plains, from Kansas south through Texas, are scorching — ranging from from 112 to 120 degrees.

heat-tuesday-copy.jpg
CBS News
While this heat wave will be severe, it likely won't surpass the heat waves of the hottest period for much of the U.S., the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s. The image below shows the highest daily maximum temperatures across the Plains in red and the highest daily minimums in orange. The heat in the 1930s is far and away the warmest period.

Nearly 50% of the all-time heat records in the contiguous U.S. were set in the 1930s and still have not been beaten today. That's because of intense irrigation across the central states; the moisture has a substantial cooling influence. As a result, the region is one of the few places on Earth not exhibiting an increasing trend in heat waves. It is a testament to how influential humans have become in shaping the climate system.

But that influence goes both ways. Despite the cooling effect of irrigation, 2012 did manage to narrowly surpass 1936 for the warmest July on record. And with the heating influence of greenhouse gases building up in our atmosphere, Masters says it's just a matter of time before 1930s heat records tumble.

"Another decade of global warming, combined with natural variability, should produce a July heat wave in the U.S. capable of beating most of the Dust Bowl extreme temperature records," he said.

Meteorologist Bob Henson, a longtime colleague of Masters at Weather Underground, says he doesn't expect "a raft of all-time or even monthly records, given the high bar of the 1930s and some recent years, like 2012. But I would expect at least a few, as well as some records for consecutive 90/95/100F temps." Henson feels this month could end up being "one of the hottest U.S. Julys on record given the breadth and duration of the expected heat."

That's because the heat wave forecast for the Southwest and Plains will not stay anchored in place. Due to a west-to-east steering flow across the country, a piece of this sweltering heat will break off and stream east roughly along I-70 from St. Louis to Indianapolis and Pittsburgh to Washington, D.C. All of these cities may reach or surpass 100 degrees mid to late next week.


And the extreme heat is likely not going away anytime soon. Long-term computer model projections point to a continuation of heat into the end of July.

More charts & stuff here:


 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
It’s 101 here right now. Going to be hotter than that for at least 10 straight days. Of course, that’s a “normal July” here. There’s been a good breeze blowing over the past week. As long as the air is moving, it’s bearable. I have my secondary portable a/c going in the bedroom as of an hour ago. The dehumidifier is going full bore in the living room, even though it pumps heat into the house.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Our 10 days of highs above 95 degrees just broke... we were blessed with 1 1/2" of badly needed rain and it's currently 67 degrees! Feels wonderful! Mostly, though, it's just felt like a good old fashioned summer... yesterday was the first day it really felt uncomfortable, and got up to 80 in the house... the humidity was around 65%. Mostly, even though it's been very hot, the humidity has been staying around 40%, and it's been bearable.

Summerthyme
 

Wyominglarry

Veteran Member
Wyoming has record heat too. It touched 100 today and again tomorrow. No rain for over a month and red flag warnings statewide. It is going to be a brutal summer.
 

Faroe

Un-spun
Miserable here, IIRC, 106F today. Feels like stepping into a hair dryer.
Sonoran gopher snake has spent the past week draped in and around her water bowl. I turned off everybody's heat, and mostly cut the plant lights. Not much else I can do for them. We have swamp cooler for AC - mid to high '80's inside.

The outside pens have been getting hosed down 2X per day.
 

The Cub

Behold, I am coming soon.
Via John Leary (yet to be approved by the Church)​



January 21, 2015:
Jesus said: “My people, you have variable jet stream patterns that appear to bring precipitation over the same areas. You have seen unusually heavy snow or rain, as in Buffalo, N.Y. with seven feet of snow. You also have seen droughts in California. When you see low pressure going over the same area for days, or high pressure consistently in another area, this is a sign that your weather is being manipulated by man-made machines as the HAARP machine. These microwave machines can control jet streams to create floods, droughts, as well as high winds in tornadoes, hurricanes, and typhoons. You have seen many typhoons in the Pacific Ocean that have ravaged the Asian countries. Even in the winter you are seeing such storms in the Philippines. These weather-making machines can cause serious harm to countries where they are used. This is a dangerous tool that the one world people are using as a means of blackmail for their agenda. Only your internet will carry stories about the HAARP machine and chemtrails. These stories are not broadcast, and are censored from your controlled media. Be watchful of your weather events and earthquakes, as they can be manipulated to cause many disasters. Pray for My intervention into the one world people’s plans, as their reign will be brief, before I will bring My victory over all of them.”



www.johnleary.com
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
Dennis, Just about the same over here in Louisiana. We had a good bit of rain last week, which DH promptly caught as much of it as he could to fill up his increasing number of 275-300 gallon tanks. Now no rain in sight and upper 90's with the heat index accordingly. Its the usual annual dog days and it won't let up until the later part of September.

San Antonio gets hot as hell in the summer. Good luck on that.

God is good, all the time.

Judy
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
The Dallas heatwave of 1980:

It was 40 years ago that a 42-day string of 100 degree days — the longest heat wave by far in the region’s history — was broken. For one day. More triple digits followed, and when autumn mercifully arrived, temperatures had hit the century mark 69 times.

The family lived in the Dallas area thru these 100+ degree days. The heat finally broke as it has always done.

Texican....
 

Walrus Whisperer

Hope in chains...
It's 104 right now here. It fries your eyeballs to go outside. It would be hell on Earth without a working cooler inside.
Been throwing buckets of water into chickens areas , gonna put a mister on the young pullets, old ladies already have one. They love standing in the mud. I would too if I had to be outside all the time. It's very dry, hadn't rained in I don't know how long, prolly won't until maybe Sept. The cat goes outside and I don't see him until 10 pm when he wants in, don't know where he spends his days, I assume under a bush that'd been recently watered.
 
Last edited:

mzkitty

I give up.
Last summer here was brutal from May onward. This summer not bad. You know, the weather here isn't always sunny. It's cloudy quite a bit.

Upcoming for St. Pete for the week. Not bad compared to the rest of you. I still can't go walking around in it though.

1594513095990.png
 

raven

TB Fanatic
I decided to sell my 2003 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SE 6sp. The guys are drooling all over themselves over it.
Its a primo 5thgen and there are a million mods out there for em.
So, I decided to get that dam airbag recall taken care of and recharge the A/C cause it wasn't working.

They finished the airbag this morning and told me the estimate on the A/C . . . thousand bucks.
I said No f.ing way. And went to pick it up. Dealer is an hour from the house.
Heat index was 110.
Thought I was gonna die.
Clothes were soaked right down to my underwear.

Made an appointment with a local shop that promised half the price.
They can get to it . . . in 2 weeks, F***

(Left the Altima Coupe to get the airbag recall fixed on it . . . and its A/C is out too . . . but I won't be picking it up later than 9AM)
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Two years ago, I took the Aurora in for a/c repair. I got the compressor from RockAuto.com. It was OEM, same model as the one on the car, and new, not a rebuild. Cost was $175. Even with that, the total repair cost for the a/c was $1200. I paid it gladly. The car only has 75,000 miles on it (I bought it new off the lot in 1998) and I know it’s entire history. The car looks showroom new. I needed the a/c working.
 
Last edited:

Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It was a little warmer here Summerthyme; for at least two weeks - going on 3 I think. I've been a limp noodle; fortunately LOTS of things needed doing indoors.
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
This heat wave has more to do with atmospherics and it's not global warming or the rebranded name climate change.
some years back when it became apparent we were slipping into a major solar minima there was some research going on with past solar minima's and such hot spells and even extreme droughts will happen while winters start to come earlier, longer and at times colder.
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
The Dallas heatwave of 1980:

It was 40 years ago that a 42-day string of 100 degree days — the longest heat wave by far in the region’s history — was broken. For one day. More triple digits followed, and when autumn mercifully arrived, temperatures had hit the century mark 69 times.

The family lived in the Dallas area thru these 100+ degree days. The heat finally broke as it has always done.

Texican....

I was there
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Just had a million dollar rain. The corn crop is very happy right now.

I've shifted to August projects, things that can be done inside. I think a lot of my outside work will have to wait until September.
I wish mine could! Picked blueberries today... the first gallon of many. Need to pick peas tomorrow... probably will only be one or two pickings because of the heat... fortunately, we still have 2 gallons in the freezer of last year's bumper crop. Once they're done, I've got to get the weeding caught up... the plants look great- super dark green and lush (chicken manure beats anything for great gardens! ), but the corn and beans need hand weeding. Need to till between the corn rows, too, but the damned tiller parts (blew out the back end shaft and seals) didn't come as promised yesterday... or today. Post office is getting more useless all the time.

At least the 135 CornishX chickens are in the freezer, and heading out to the customers' tomorrow. The next 100 chicks aren't coming for 10 days, which gives me that much time to figure out where the 27 chicks I just hatched can be put! I promised our mail lady I'd hatch a dozen chicks for her, for the end of July... she wanted 6 pullet chicks , but wasn't going to be back from vacation until July 21st. It all would have been fine, until my only adult rooster dropped dead June 5th.

Hens will produce fertile eggs for about 3 weeks after mating, so I pushed it as far as I dared, but I filled the incubator June 20th, figuring my hatch rate would be lower than usual. Somehow, I wrote the date wrong... as June 26th... so Wednesday, when I heard cheeping from the incubator (which still had the egg turner inside) I was shocked. There was a single, vocal blue chick perched on the eggs in the Turner, fully dry- and even by the new, "revised" (correct) date, a full 48 hours early. Uh, oh...

I figured I was screwed, especially as there was no sign of any other eggs pipping, but I quickly removed the egg turner (breaking every rule of successful hatching, which insists you don't move or disturb the eggs the last 48 hours, and you NEVER open the incubator and let the temps and humidity drop!). Yesterday afternoon, I heard more cheeping, and it looked like I might have as many as 10 live chicks... an absolute miracle.

This morning, I set up the pen, and opened the incubator... and transferred 27 healthy chicks to the pen! Good grief! And when I went to dump the "dead" eggs and clean the incubator this afternoon, there were at least 5 more live chicks partially pipped... unreal. I left them in the eggs... survival if I tried to help them from the shell is always low (although we've found that more survive than the experts claim)... and I've already got about 30 more egg layers than I need, even if I cull every current laying hen this fall.

It looks like I won't be buying much dog food this winter!

Summerthyme
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Hey summer, if you wanted to send me some of those peas, I’d be happy to reimburse you! I haven’t had garden peas in going on 15 years.
 

Walrus Whisperer

Hope in chains...
What I hate is the city water supply 5 ' underground gives water that's slightly warm, can't even get a cool drink. I keep bottles in the fridge of tap water, sure is nice to have it when coming in from Frying in the outdoors
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
Summer, my two big outdoor projects are sanding/painting the deck and putting in a dry well at the edge of the yard. I think those can wait until temps are back into the 70s.

Good deal on the new little chicks! Sounds like you'll be in good shape for this fall.
 
Top