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Ugh... it's disgusting outside.

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I sat outside on the patio yesterday. It took about 15 minutes before my shirt was drenched with sweat. I should not have tried to go outside.

Are you kidding? Its great outside!

Sunday I went down to Town Lake and ran 4 miles on the trail at 4PM. Not many people out there (on the trail, most were canoeing) and when I was done I just had a fine layer of sweat, nothing too profuse though.

Today I'll be out at the lake just soaking up this nice warm weather.
 
Yes, you just about can't drink enough water to stay hydrated and need to take breaks if out in it. And if you stop sweating or are pale, get yourself to the emergency room/call 911 - you're in trouble.

Back in the fall of 2000, I was walking around campus and started to feel a little dizzy. I stepped into the business building and sat down on a couch and drank from the water fountain. After I sat down I began sweating like crazy. I kept getting up to drink more water and sitting back down. After about 30 minutes, I felt better. I decided to skip the rest of my classes and go home.

Turns out the high that day was 112, all time record in Austin. After reading about the warning signs of heat stroke, it seems like I was in the very early stages of it.

These days, especially as I have become more active outdoors, I always carry a camelbak around filled with water. I refill it at any water fountain I come across. I keep a spare insulated camelbak in my car as well.

When the weather gets hot, you can never drink too much water.
 
High of 81 today with next to no humidity ever. I had the whole house fan on last night and was freezing. When it's this cool, it kind of makes having a pool useless...
 
you must be living in the death valley. I'm here in OKC and it's been 100 or above for the last 19 days. I'm so damn nervous about looking at the electric bill this month and next. One thing I always wonder how the heck did people survive back then when they came out here to settle the West. AC's really turned us into sissies🙁

It wasn't as hot back then?
 
Back in the fall of 2000, I was walking around campus and started to feel a little dizzy. I stepped into the business building and sat down on a couch and drank from the water fountain. After I sat down I began sweating like crazy. I kept getting up to drink more water and sitting back down. After about 30 minutes, I felt better. I decided to skip the rest of my classes and go home.

Turns out the high that day was 112, all time record in Austin. After reading about the warning signs of heat stroke, it seems like I was in the very early stages of it.

These days, especially as I have become more active outdoors, I always carry a camelbak around filled with water. I refill it at any water fountain I come across. I keep a spare insulated camelbak in my car as well.

When the weather gets hot, you can never drink too much water.

Sounds like it. The dizzy is the first sign/heat exhaustion and should alert you to take action immediately like you did (get cooled down, drink plenty).

<removed> the stop sweating means the body would rather conserve water than cool down. If you get to this point you are in a life threatening medical emergency.

-edit-
Remembered wrong, the pale is for the other hypothermia (via cold). Hyperthermia (heat stroke) is actually dry red skin is a huge warning and means seek attention now. Thanks google.
 
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News says a high of 101 here today w/heat index of 105-110. And I have a black car w/black interior...........

Maybe I shoulda put dinner in there and let it cook all day lol.
 
It's been so humid here I haven't turned in a/c off at nights like I usually can. 10-11pm still feels icky. Currently 90f feels like 100f, bleh. I find it harder to go hard outside in temps like this when i often have lower blood pressure and the heat just dilates me further. Still I make do and it doesn't generally stop me, although I'll be completely wet with sweat.
 
Winters are great, does not stay below freezing for long, so hardly any accumulated snowfall or ice. Air Conditioning is a wonderful thing.

Mine's having a hard time keeping it below 73, set for 70. Last night had the ceiling in the bedroom on high for probably the first time.
 
Winters are great, does not stay below freezing for long, so hardly any accumulated snowfall or ice. Air Conditioning is a wonderful thing.


See? You are crazy. Snow? Ice? Fuck that.

It rains sometimes in the winter here. No snow. No ice.


It's not a question of choosing either a crappy cold miserable winter, or a sweltering horrible hot disgusting summer. Avoid both, and have pleasant weather year-round.
 
It's like 83 here and somewhat humid ....
That said, it was worse yesterday. And it's very uncomfortable in the sun if there's no shade.

Yesterday flash storms ripped through the region, lots of trees down, stoplights not working, and something like 500,000 people still without power (originally was around 850,000)

I can't wait for fall!!!!



See? You are crazy. Snow? Ice? Fuck that.

It rains sometimes in the winter here. No snow. No ice.


It's not a question of choosing either a crappy cold miserable winter, or a sweltering horrible hot disgusting summer. Avoid both, and have pleasant weather year-round.

Why do you associate "crappy" or "miserable" with cold winters?
Cold is nice.
Snow is awesome.
Winter is wonderful!
 
See? You are crazy. Snow? Ice? Fuck that.

It rains sometimes in the winter here. No snow. No ice.


It's not a question of choosing either a crappy cold miserable winter, or a sweltering horrible hot disgusting summer. Avoid both, and have pleasant weather year-round.

Agreed. It is in the mid 70s here today and down in the low 60s at night. Perfect!
 
Why do you associate "crappy" or "miserable" with cold winters?
Cold is nice.
Snow is awesome.
Winter is wonderful!

A) I'm a weather wimp and will cry like a little girl if it's too chilly outside.
B) I'm a bicycle addict. It's not fun riding a bike in snow and ice.

I do enjoy visiting snow and ice and going snowboarding every year.
 
Dam...my car said it was 96F in boston. I walked outside...from my car door to my front door, I was already sweating like a beast...
 
Think we hit 90F yesterday. It's about 80-something today. It's been in the 80 F range for the past week or two, so starting to get used to it.

Taking my shirt off does in fact help...
 
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