gingerautie:

mllemusketeer:

katsdisturbed:

snooziep:

spectralarchers:

rifa:

chaos-dog:

kingjaffejoffer:

imsoshive:

If Canada don’t GET THE FUCK …

lmao

There are now more than 90 people dead. You can bitch and whine that’s it’s hotter where you are, but you have to understand that it’s the elderly, homeless and small children who don’t have air conditioning and are susceptible to health problems. How fucking despicable can you be to just laugh at people dying because temperatures are hotter where you are. Our infrastructure was built to withstand -30 C°, not the heat. It’s not about how Canadians are “weak”, it’s literally just shitty circumstances.

Not to mention that people who are accustomed to cold climates have a physically more difficult time coping with temperatures that their bodies aren’t used to. Also a lot of people who have never had to cope with hotter temperatures aren’t as familiar with heat exhaustion or heat stroke, don’t know how to manage the heat safely , etc!

That last point.

Denmark is currently in its hottest summer ever recorded, and the number of people I’ve talked to who have only now discovered what a heat stroke is amazes me, because I grew up in the South of France where summers are hot as fuck every year – my brother-in-law went out for a bike ride without a hat and with a half a liter of water for three hours and came back and was sick because of it. 

The idea that he’d get sick because of the sun didn’t even OCCUR to him, because in his 30+ years on this green ball swirling through space, it’s never been an issue for him.

In the South of France, most cafés have mist sprayers and all shops / malls are air-conditioned. In Denmark, most cafés do NOT have mist sprayers (but heat lights!) and the shops are not always air-conditioned.

Most of the warehouses have been out of portable air-conditioners and fans on an off since May because people are hot and have no air-condition installed. The buildings are built to keep heat IN. Not out.

No air con, buildings designed to keep heat in, not even ceiling fans, no drinking fountains, windows that don’t open in buildings, and we expect people to work in those buildings, in their full uniform which has no ‘hot weather’ option – I mean what employer is going to provide short sleeves and shorts for that one week every three years where it gets above 25/80 degrees? – windows that don’t open on public transport, and often no shade while waiting for said public transport, we have heaters and insulation and draft excluders, we buy black cars and dark clothes, we buy sunscreen for our holidays in Spain, then forget where we put it, when we find it and apply it we sweat it off again because we’re not used to the heat, we walk places rather than drive and even if we drove, our cars don’t have proper air con and we don’t have covered parking, school playgrounds and public parks have no shade, people don’t have pools so kids play out all summer in the heat. We don’t have ‘American style’ large fridges or freezers with ice makers and they break down when competing with hotter than usual ambient temperature, most of us don’t even own cool boxes – or if we do it’s at the back of the shed full of spiders.

So yes, we have to be told it’s going to be hot. And we have to be warned to check our elderly neighbours and to help them take the blankets off their bed or to swap to a summer duvet, to suggest they have a cold drink instead of a pot of tea and take off their cardigan.

Because we only know people who got sunstroke on their holidays abroad.

And we have never in our lives known anyone who died from the heat.

To anybody who thinks it’s funny when people die, you can go fuck off a tall bridge. 

I live in Phoenix. It’s going to be 115F/46C degrees today. This is nothing unusual for this time of year. And yet every year we lose people to the heat. I can’t imagine what super temps must be like when you are not used to it. England, Quebec, and most of Europe’s home were designed to keep heat in. Not let it out. So instead of giggling like evil children over someone else’s horror, try being a little more understanding at the very least of what they are going through.

^^^ *I live in Actual Hell high-five* 

It’s totally easy to live in 115 – 122 F or 46 – 50 C if you are a) used to it and most importantly b) HAVE AIR CONDITIONING AND INFRASTRUCTURE TO DEAL WITH IT

I will take 115 with air conditioning available over 93 with no air conditioning any goddamn day of the week, even if I have to be outside/working because I can get my happy butt back indoors, cool down with the AC at 75 or even 78, and then pop out again. Without AC you can’t do that and it’s much harder to manage. 

(btw if you’re having trouble sleeping because of heat, roll an ice pack up in a towel and put it at the foot of the bed. Ditch the flat sheet; fitted sheet and a really light duvet is all you should have. I have a silly Transformers one from Target that hardly insulates anything but is just enough weight to make me happy. Drink lots. Go slow. Eat salty things, and don’t just drink water. For those who like skirts, skirts and light dresses are your friends; I have a special selection for IT’S TOO HOT TO CLOTHES days–light, loose, well away from the body and importantly COTTON. Poly knits are murder. You’ll be amazed by how much you cool off by taking your socks off. Damp down the patios under your windows, keep your blinds drawn, limit cooking–rotisserie chicken+ a solution of lemon juice, peel, ginger, sugar and soy sauce, refrigerated is a good meal over rice and with cucumbers in vinegar. Be careful and check on your neighbors.)

In most places where this is an issue people are aware that it’s an issue, that it’s happening more frequently, and that we need large scale infrastructure changes to reduce deaths in the future.

The thing is, for every small thing we can do (eg. adding a maximum working temperature as well as the minimum we already have) there’s several things that are either going to be huge projects taking half a century (rebuild/remodel the majority of residential housing in the entire country anyone) or just aren’t financially viable because it’s not that bad yet, like the uniform thing, or installing air conditioning units in residential areas and schools. And then there are things that are just complicated, like making sure everyone over 65 knows all the “everyone knows” things for living in hot weather when that generation grew up putting a vest on “just in case” of cold weather.

So the “get with the program, global warming is happening you idiots” comments aren’t helpful either. 

Extreme weather. Becoming the new normal.

rjzimmerman:


East Coast: At least 10 million people are at risk this week under flood watches and warnings issued because of heavy rain across the East Coast and Mid-Atlantic. The National Weather Service warned about “potentially dangerous, even life-threatening” conditions over the next few days.

Southwestern US (From WeatherBug)

A colossal ridge of high pressure centered over the Texas over the last week or so will shift into the Southwest, taking the oppressive heat with it. Even still, temperatures across the Lone Star State will soar into the 90s today into the weekend.

The real heat will instead be found across Arizona and California, where daytime temperatures will easily reach the triple digits. Excessive Heat Warnings and Advisories have been issued for parts of Arizona, Nevada and California, and Oregon, including Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles and San Diego, and Portland.

Temperatures in Death Valley, Calif., could get as high as 125 degrees, with lows staying above 100 degrees the entire night. Temperatures in interior southern California will likely reach close to 120 degrees, with highs near 100 even in Los Angeles.

ihadsuchhighhopes:

somecunttookmyurl:

sisterofiris:

leavesofecstasy:

leavesofecstasy:

So this is super cool

Here’s the article (with extra pictures) for those interested!

Pros of the drought: seeing ‘ghosts’ of ancient settlements
Cons of the drought: our crops are literally dying

you know things are fucked when ancestors rise from their dusty graves to ask what the fuck you’ve done to make it this hot

Backup fan obtained!

The similar model in the bedroom decided to start making worrying bearing noises. So, especially with this ongoing heatwave? I figured I should probably go ahead and get another one in case it does conk out.

I can’t sleep without at least a fan in even slightly warm weather, much less with the bedroom staying over 80F again. That’s enough of a sweatbox with a decently working fan, with this island humidity.

These move a surprising amount of air for something that size, and this one was only around £12. No reason not to go ahead and get a backup.

Though, I may set this one up for the kitchen in the meantime. Been using the fan setting on the space heater, which is way better than no air movement when you’re trying to work in there. Not as good a breeze as with a fan intended for the purpose, though.

I am feeling slightly more human this afternoon, at least.

Hadn’t gotten any decent sleep in over a week, with the way our bedroom heats up and holds it. I know I’ve bitched about that before, but between the big window with the sun beating on it all afternoon and the (purposeful) lack of cross ventilation? It’s just not good whenever we do get some hot sunny weather.

There’s also no good way to get a fan in the little top-opening pane to force some ventilation at night. Won’t cool down again for probably a week after the outside temperatures eventually go back down, either. Can’t really try sleeping in a slightly cooler room like I used to now, either, needing the ridiculous pillow nest because trash body.

Anyway, I have never been good at sleeping hot. Never. And it was getting to the point that sweaty zombie meltdowns were starting up, besides just generally not functioning that well on like 4 hours of broken sleep a day. Especially dealing with the chronic pain bullshit.

But, apparently my body decided a reset was overdue anyway. I passed out reading in the bed last night, and slept like a dead thing for about 6 hours. And another 4 hours this morning/early afternoon, the same deal. After that, I’m almost feeling human again! (Surprisingly enough.)

More of the same weather is forecast for at least the next week. Not really looking forward to that. But, I guess I’ll take what I can get.

thebibliosphere:

emily-vole:

thebibliosphere:

unendingballofstress:

thebibliosphere:

revolutionaryshoe:

thebibliosphere:

thebibliosphere:

It is approximately a bajillion degrees outside (90°f) and I regret any and all life choices that lead to me being outside right at this very moment.

I am too Scottish for this nonsense.

We cannae help you fam, we’re dying here. It was 30 degrees at 6.30pm, The grass has gone brown. The Highlands are literally on fire. Nowhere has any air conditioning because of course we don’t it’s f*cking Scotland

We haven’t seen rain in weeks and we’re starting to lose all sense of identity. 

My da’ keeps telling me the garden is on fire, I thought he was kidding.

Ya’ll are weak af

I get these kind of comments are typically jokey, but these are literally dangerous temperatures for people not used to them, and the UK doesn’t typically get this hot for more than a random day let alone weeks. It’s about 20°f hotter than it usually gets in some places for this time of year, so people are a) not used to it b) have no air conditioning and c) no idea how to handle this kind of heat at all and d) you dinnae ken humidity till you’ve felt Scotland in the middle of a heatwave, it’s like wading uphill through treacle, and the air sits in the lungs like swamp water. And I moved to Minnesota for gods sake. We only have two seasons, hell and frozen hell.

So maybe gonnae no wi your non helpful comments when people who never have to deal wi this kind of thing struggle tae deal wi it.

There’s nae gold medal at the end of the suffering Olympics, only gilt.

When we went to the uk there was like, a weather report on the radio and they said it was a heatwave and we were laughing until we thought of the fact that we’d been frozen for half the trip despite it being summer

When etd and I got married it was May, and all of his family brought spring clothes with them, only to wind up buying winter clothes because the Minnesotans thought it was too cold.

Ours is not a hot climate.

Meltdown! Heatwave softens tarmac on Britain’s roads, causing vehicles to sink

anaisnein:

crazyeddieme:

anaisnein:

palpablepurplepotatoperson:

shadowraiku:

thivus:

krinkshame:

unlimited-shitpost-works:

such-justice-wow:

The man dialled 999 after he sank “thigh deep” into the road in the Heaton area of the city and got stuck.Firefighters from Tyne and Wear Fire and Rescue Service had to dig the man out with a hammer and chisel.

He escaped uninjured, apparently thanks to the fact he was wearing “his granddad’s Dr Martens”.A fire and rescue service spokesman blamed the heatwave and warned people to be mindful while walking around.We’ve seen railtracks buckle, threats of water shortages and concerns over pets and the elderly and vulnerable, but there is a new victim of this summer’s heatwave – the roads.

It seems Britain’s roads and pavements are starting to melt after days of top temperatures.

In Newcastle, a 24-year-old had to be rescued by firefighters after he became stuck in melted Tarmac.

The man dialled 999 after he sank “thigh deep” into the road in the Heaton area of the city and got stuck.

Firefighters from Tyne and Wear Fire and Rescue Service had to dig the man out with a hammer and chisel.

He escaped uninjured, apparently thanks to the fact he was wearing “his granddad’s Dr Martens”.

A fire and rescue service spokesman blamed the heatwave and warned people to be mindful while walking around.

Further south in Newbury, Berkshire, a bin lorry got stuck after it appeared to sink into the road.

The lorry’s back wheels sunk into the tarmac and it needed to be removed from where it was stuck on the Old Bath Road using a crane.

Nobody was injured and investigations are underway into why the vehicle sank – with some suspecting it is due to the heatwave.

__________________________________________________________

Americans and Australians who keep saying “It’s not that hot” our damn roads turned to liquid because it’s so abnormally hot

what do yall pave your roads with? chocolate?

What the fuck

God i wish that were me

As a Brit, OUR SHIT IS BUILT FOR COLD, NOT HOT.

Also y’know complaining about the weather is a national pastime soooo

Look, if Minnesota can do swings like this and the state survives, you folks in England should be able to make roads that survive 90 degree heat

The trouble with England is that, in contrast to Minnesota or even the eastern seaboard US, it doesn’t conceive of itself as having extreme weather. It’s like how every winter it snows a little at Heathrow and they lose their shit completely, only even more so. I have spent a ton of time there and my personal experience is that every summer extremely hot and humid heat waves happen, but nobody there thinks of that as a regular thing, it’s always a Freak Event to them, even the 657th time. So private households other than seriously rich people’s never just have air conditioning as a matter of course (even one window unit, forget about central air), and all of the buildings have been designed for coziness in a sleety February and retain heat like a mf, and even the roads aren’t built to heatproof enough specs to sustain temperatures that I have repeatedly experienced there, year after year, even as a frequent visitor. They do suffer more than we do in the same conditions, because they’re not set up for it, because they labor under the delusion that it’s not normal for them. It is. It has been for a while. Maybe this is just the last two or three decades and it’s an early global warming effect, but, like, wake the fuck up, maybe? I am extremely sympathetic. I go through absolute hell every summer. I survive because NYC has accepted what it’s dealing with and interior spaces are kept under reasonable control in summer as well as winter as a matter of course. If anything we have an over-air-conditioning problem, but that’s a separate issue and at least in principle highly manageable. There are a whole lot of first-line measures to be taken against summer hell that England is still leaving on the table.

(I realize air conditioning will fuck up the planet long term but until we achieve fully automated luxury communism globally and can all move to naturally habitable places I’m prioritizing my mental health above worrying about it; also there is plenty of lore about how to use fans properly and swamp coolers and shit that isn’t getting deployed either)

Air conditioning won’t fuck up the planet even a little bit if you power it with nuclear or, really, anything but dead dinosaurs.

yeah, +1 for nuclear. it’s a shame American environmentalists got so traumatized in the 20th century by Cold War dread interacting with a few highly reported bad incidents due to early-technology missteps that they developed a colossal blind spot around this. we should do it like France.

Meltdown! Heatwave softens tarmac on Britain’s roads, causing vehicles to sink