Mini Heat Wave...

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
It's been extremely hot here, which makes it even harder to hide my lust for shirtless construction guys working on the road behind my house. There's like 30 of them, it's not fair.

:lol::lol:Sure, "Don't toy with me Nuggs".............an then she says.........^

Don't keep it all bottled up. LET IT OUT!!!

OPEN the window and SCREAM LUSTFULLY at them.....:blob6:

Mehhhhhhhhhh, could work.
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
18,326
119
63
Prairies: good for spending time in the barcar reading or chatting as you go through them. Or if you drive:

"Lookout for that tractor, Les!!"
"Anna, that tractor's still a day and a half away yet".

Oh yeah, full speed ahead. When it snows hard just keep the telephone poles on the left.....;-):lol:
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,070
10,993
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
We have had our own little heat wave as of late here..


Good for you!!! We've had nine straight months of below average temperatures
so far, with the coldest winter in 30yrs, and the coldest summer (if you can call it
that) since 1911.

It's the end of August, and with the exception of about half a dozen non-consecutive
days....I'm still waiting for summer to start here on the Prairies.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
21
38
kelowna bc
I wish I could ship some of this crappy hot weather to other parts of the country.
Tonight its still warm and the Okanagan Valley is filled with smoke from the fires.
I would like some wind and rain for a few days but that is not likely to happen any
time soon. We have had a lot days with temps well above 35 degrees and its
endlessly hot well into the evening. This is cyclical and how long it will last I don't know. There may be some truth to global warming but it is not always about our
wasteful ways.
 

AnnaG

Hall of Fame Member
Jul 5, 2009
17,507
117
63
It's hot here in the Koots, too. Still waiting for Walter's ice-age. At least here it cools down at night. I remember the Okanagan ..... 42º in the shade during the day and 40º at night.
 

El Barto

les fesses a l'aire
Feb 11, 2007
5,959
66
48
Quebec
Crap , we usually get two to three heat waves a year . We get one for three or four days and what do we do?????
Complain about it. I have heat rash on my back from it , go figure?
 

AnnaG

Hall of Fame Member
Jul 5, 2009
17,507
117
63
Crap , we usually get two to three heat waves a year . We get one for three or four days and what do we do?????
Complain about it. I have heat rash on my back from it , go figure?
We usually get one that lasts about a week. This is #3 so far. Les probably has to go fight fires again, so yes, I complain. I like having the old geezer here, not halfway across the province.
 

mit

Electoral Member
Nov 26, 2008
273
5
18
SouthWestern Ontario
COULD THIS HAPPEN HERE?
SYDNEY (Reuters) - An outback dust storm swept across eastern Australia and blanketed Sydney on Wednesday, disrupting transport and placing health authorities on alert for widespread respiratory illness.

The dust blacked out the outback mining town of Broken Hill on Tuesday, forcing one mine to shut down, and then swept east, shrouding Sydney in a red glow on Wednesday morning.

International flights were diverted from Sydney, ferries on Sydney Harbour were suspended and commuter motorists warned to take care on roads as visibility was dramatically reduced.

Health authorities urged people with asthma or breathing difficulties to stay indoors. The dust set off smoke alarms in some buildings in Sydney's central business district.

"People at risk are children, elderly, pregnant women, people with heart and lung diseases. Dust particles can increase the risk of people with these conditions becoming unwell," said Wayne Smith from the New South Wales state health department.

The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) said a major cold front in New South Wales state caused severe thunderstorms and gale-force winds, which whipped up the dust from the drought-stricken inland and spread it across Australia's most populous state. The 100 kilometer per hour plus winds also fanned bushfires in the state.

"This is unprecedented. We are seeing earth, wind and fire together," said Dick Whitaker from The Weather Channel.

Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth, and the NSW state government recently cut the state's 2009/10 wheat crop estimate by 20 percent because of hot, dry weather across the grain belt.

The country is one of the most vulnerable nations to climate change, but also the world's biggest greenhouse gas emitter per capita as it relies on coal-fired power stations for the bulk of its electricity.

HORROR MOVIE

Sydney residents told local radio that they woke to scenes from a Hollywood disaster movie, while many contacted emergency services fearing a major bushfire in the city.

Karen from Sydney's inner western suburb of Dulwich Hill said she woke up to find the red dust had covered her floors and birds had been blown out of their nests.

"It did feel like Armageddon because when I was in the kitchen looking out the skylight, there was this red, red glow coming through," Karen told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.

The blanket of dust stretched hundreds of kilometers along the coast from Sydney, from the coal port of Newcastle in the north to the steel city of Wollongong in the south, and hundreds of kilometers inland to farming towns like Dubbo and Tamworth.

"In the south, where there are showers, people will find it is falling as mud this morning, but that will help clear the dust from the air," said the BOM spokeswoman.

Steve, who was driving to Tamworth in the northwest, told local radio: "It's almost raining mud. I have a green car and it's now an orange car. The wipers are barely able to cope with all the mud."

Weather officials said the blanket of dust would remain for several hours, until winds eased.
Further cold fronts are expected later in the week and could bring not only more strong winds, with the chance of dust storms, but also snow falls on Australia's alpine region, said weather officials.
(Reporting by Michael Perry; Editing by Michael Urquhart)