Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   Weather Talk (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/weather-talk-515/)
-   -   Hot, hot, hot! (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/weather-talk-515/hot-hot-hot-266975/)

fw102807 07-03-2018 01:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1558786)
I moved to Florida because that is were The Villages is located.

:beer3:

Another brilliant reason :clap2:

tomwed 07-03-2018 01:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewilson58 (Post 1558786)
I moved to Florida because that is were The Villages is located.

:beer3:

I agree. This would work in any snow free state.

Wiotte 07-03-2018 01:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tomwed (Post 1558792)
I agree. This would work in any snow free state.



May I add snow free & State Income tax free.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Abby10 07-03-2018 02:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EPutnam1863 (Post 1558738)
Why won't Floridians share honest comments with Northerners in July but laugh at them in January?

Just looking over the responses to this thread, it doesn't look like many villagers mind the heat. In fact, I would say their comments reflect mostly a happiness to be in TV no matter the time of year. Not sure what you see as dishonest?

If the heat bothers you so much, maybe some reverse psychology would work here. While they laugh at you in January, you can just laugh at them in July......that way everybody's happy!

Wiotte 07-03-2018 02:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Abby10 (Post 1558817)
Just looking over the responses to this thread, it doesn't look like many villagers mind the heat. In fact, I would say their comments reflect mostly a happiness to be in TV no matter the time of year. Not sure what you see as dishonest?



If the heat bothers you so much, maybe some reverse psychology would work here. While they laugh at you in January, you can just laugh at them in July......that way everybody's happy!



They can laugh all they want, I love heat. No one likes snow, ice, freezing rain and if you do you also remember your first nose rub.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

fw102807 07-03-2018 02:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wiotte (Post 1558819)
They can laugh all they want, I love heat. No one likes snow, ice, freezing rain and if you do you also remember your first nose rub.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

:agree:

Nucky 07-03-2018 02:25 PM

Snow and Shrinkage. No-Goodski!

Wiotte 07-03-2018 02:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nucky (Post 1558822)
Snow and Shrinkage. No-Goodski!



Aren’t the Irish pre-shrunk ?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Abby10 07-03-2018 02:40 PM

A few years back, my husband and I purposefully spent the full month of August in TV. We wanted to see what it was like and to determine for ourselves whether it would be tolerable or not. Maybe we hit a good year, I don't know, but we found it tolerable and many days even comfortable. If we were outside during the middle of the day, we either stayed in shaded areas or under patios/lanais with fans. The evenings cooled down some and there always seemed to be a breeze. It felt to me as if between the sandy soil and very hot sun, it actually burned off the humidity somewhat. Does that make sense? Not so here in the mid-Atlantic at all. When it's hot it is stifling and although the temp may go down in the evening it still feels like a steam bath when you walk outside. And it can last for days, sometimes weeks at a time. The humidity and resultant heat index is so high it truly is intolerable. I attribute it here to the very damp soil (a lot of clay) and the overwhelming number of deciduous trees, not to mention the congestion and other things already mentioned by others on this thread. Unless we have a very dry summer up here, it always feels somewhat damp. Mix that with heat and that's what I call uncomfortable.

And let's not even discuss utility bills. The size of my house up north is not triple the size of my house in Florida but the utility bills sure are! Not happy about that at all!

Wiotte 07-03-2018 02:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Abby10 (Post 1558825)
A few years back, my husband and I purposefully spent the full month of August in TV. We wanted to see what it was like and to determine for ourselves whether it would be tolerable or not. Maybe we hit a good year, I don't know, but we found it tolerable and many days even comfortable. If we were outside during the middle of the day, we either stayed in shaded areas or under patios/lanais with fans. The evenings cooled down some and there always seemed to be a breeze. It felt to me as if between the sandy soil and very hot sun, it actually burned off the humidity somewhat. Does that make sense? Not so here in the mid-Atlantic at all. When it's hot it is stifling and although the temp may go down in the evening it still feels like a steam bath when you walk outside. And it can last for days, sometimes weeks at a time. The humidity and resultant heat index is so high it truly is intolerable. I attribute it here to the very damp soil (a lot of clay) and the overwhelming number of deciduous trees, not to mention the congestion and other things already mentioned by others on this thread. Unless we have a very dry summer up here, it always feels somewhat damp. Mix that with heat and that's what I call uncomfortable.



And let's not even discuss utility bills. The size of my house up north is not triple the size of my house in Florida but the utility bills sure are! Not happy about that at all!



As temperature increases, relative humidity decreases.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

tuccillo 07-03-2018 03:30 PM

Humidity (relative) is a fairly useless quantity. Dewpoint is a much more useful quantity. It is a measure of the actual amount of moisture in the air. If the dewpoint is in the mid to upper 70s it is pretty miserable. Dewpoints in the mid 50's is pretty nice. You can have high relative humidities with low dewpoints and it feels pretty nice. Once the temperature climbs into the mid 90's you will hardly ever see relative humidities over 50% but I can assure you that 95 with a relative humidity of 50% is pretty nasty weather.

A little tidbit of information for golfers. Golf balls fly further (marginally) when the air is muggier than when it is dry, assuming the same temperature.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Abby10 (Post 1558825)
A few years back, my husband and I purposefully spent the full month of August in TV. We wanted to see what it was like and to determine for ourselves whether it would be tolerable or not. Maybe we hit a good year, I don't know, but we found it tolerable and many days even comfortable. If we were outside during the middle of the day, we either stayed in shaded areas or under patios/lanais with fans. The evenings cooled down some and there always seemed to be a breeze. It felt to me as if between the sandy soil and very hot sun, it actually burned off the humidity somewhat. Does that make sense? Not so here in the mid-Atlantic at all. When it's hot it is stifling and although the temp may go down in the evening it still feels like a steam bath when you walk outside. And it can last for days, sometimes weeks at a time. The humidity and resultant heat index is so high it truly is intolerable. I attribute it here to the very damp soil (a lot of clay) and the overwhelming number of deciduous trees, not to mention the congestion and other things already mentioned by others on this thread. Unless we have a very dry summer up here, it always feels somewhat damp. Mix that with heat and that's what I call uncomfortable.

And let's not even discuss utility bills. The size of my house up north is not triple the size of my house in Florida but the utility bills sure are! Not happy about that at all!


fw102807 07-03-2018 03:37 PM

It is hot, you either like it or you don't. I love it here but have friends who would be miserable because for some very strange reason I will never understand they like the cold.

EPutnam1863 07-03-2018 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tuccillo (Post 1558885)
Humidity (relative) is a fairly useless quantity. Dewpoint is a much more useful quantity. It is a measure of the actual amount of moisture in the air. If the dewpoint is in the mid to upper 70s it is pretty miserable. Dewpoints in the mid 50's is pretty nice. You can have high relative humidities with low dewpoints and it feels pretty nice. Once the temperature climbs into the mid 90's you will hardly ever see relative humidities over 50% but I can assure you that 95 with a relative humidity of 50% is pretty nasty weather.

A little tidbit of information for golfers. Golf balls fly further (marginally) when the air is muggier than when it is dry, assuming the same temperature.

Who cares about index, etc. etc.? When it is hot, it is hot. When it is humid, it is humid. When it is hot and humid, it is hot and humid, and analyzing it all won't help make it cooler.

EPutnam1863 07-03-2018 03:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fw102807 (Post 1558788)
Another brilliant reason :clap2:

If The Villages were in North Dakota, would you have moved there?

JSR22 07-03-2018 04:01 PM

ND
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EPutnam1863 (Post 1558894)
If The Villages were in North Dakota, would you have moved there?

Not a chance that I would have moved to ND. I love FL it is sunny year round. When it is hot I go into my pool and read.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:16 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.