Welcome to the terrordome |
Nice |
Damn take me back to 1990 |
My forecast says a high of 91 today (Rockville). Not exactly a news story for summer in Washington. |
The forecast next weekend is what they’re talking about. |
Seems like last week it was next week too. |
A week of temps in the upper 90’s-low-100’s is NOT EXTREME weather for our area. It’s a totally normal seasonal pattern that should happen every year. JFC you people are dense. |
That just means it's creeping even slower than expected. Bad, very bad. It's a dome of heat death that is just crawling and settling. It's probably expanding as well. |
Camping on the Pax? Yuck. Gross. Mud, muck, mosquitoes and deer flies (this time of year). Summertime is for the upper Potomac. Nice clean rock and gravel bottom, gin clear water, plenty of islands to camp on. The patuxent is freaking nasty. Muddy water. Muddy shores. Mosquitoes everywhere. Deer fly season right now. Pax is ok in the fall after the first frost or early spring if the wind isn’t up. But in summer it’s disgusting. |
“heat death”…. Do you even hear yourself? SMH. |
Derecho was a frontal boundary between two different weather systems. We’re talking about localized convective thunderstorms. Please learn the difference and try to keep up, ok? |
Oh yeah, you're right. I should have included an illustration for the slow ones: ![]() |
You commie SOB’s always bleat out “weather is not climate” when conditions don’t suit your narrative - like really cold temps in the winter or cool patterns in the summer. But then when it’s hot in the summer, you’re right back to screeching about the end is upon us because of climate change. It’s so predictable and tiresome. |
Which would be ironic since entropy = eventual absence of any heat. You’re not nearly as clever as you think you are. |
It keeps wavering back and forth between topping out at 96 or 97 (unpleasant but fairly common every summer) and exceeding 100 (I saw one forecast for Saturday being 103... not heat index, the actual temperature).
From what Capital Weather Gang says, the more humid it gets, mercifully, the less chance we have at getting over 100 degrees. It takes more energy to heat moisture saturated air, and more humidity earlier in the day increases the chances of clouds and possible storms to cool us off before the hottest part of the day (around 4pm). But it will feel like a sauna. So pick your poison. |