- 9 hours
It has been where I’m at, we are getting our first real hot weather of the summer just now, approaching 90 degrees. It was highs in the 60s for over a week, after the coldest winter in recent memory.
- 4 hours
Lmao we aren’t even halfway through summer and we’re already demolishing temperature records across the northern hemisphere. Winters getting colder, summers getting hotter
Check out the average temperature of the planet during your region’s coldest winter in recent memory. It was above average. If you experienced record setting lows, how damn hot must the rest of the planet have been for it to be above average overall?
- 54 minutes
The average temperature hasn’t changed where you’re at, but this was the coldest winter in recent memory?
- 30 minutes
Do you want me to explain how maths work? I charge 50 an hour for tutoring people I don’t like, send via paypal Iwill walk you though it>
- 20 minutes
Let me walk you through the maths. If the 2025–2026 winter was the coldest winter in recent memory in your region, then the temperature during winter was below average. For the average temperature to remain constant, while having a below-average winter, the rest of your year must be hotter than average.
Unless you meant that this summer specifically has an average temperature for your region, in which case (as I said in a previous comment), that highlights how damn hot the rest of the world is, considering the planet as a whole has been consistently above average throughout the last year.
Instead of charging you for this tutelage, I’ll simply ask you to donate $50 to a charity of your choice
- 13 minutes
I’m not reading that drivel, you are willfully ignoring what I said and it’s a fool’s errand to continue as such. Go tell someone that doesn’t know your nature.
- 7 hours
we are getting our first real hot weather of the summer just now,
My friend, it’s not even July yet. You’re acting like we’re halfway through August and it’s just now starting to get hot. The summer has just started.
Maybe I’m wrong, but I’m getting subtle climate change denial vibes from this comment. If that’s the case, you should just go ahead and fuck yourself.
- 12 hours
Maybe an island will blowup somewhere and we will have another mini ice age. What’s Krakatoa up to these days?
- 9 hours
Funny you mention that, the nuclear energy industry is two steps ahead of you, one of those steps being paying off the administration in the US to kneecap regulators of nuclear energy.
- 12 hours
On the bright side, if the AMOC shuts down, which early indications seem to say it might be, you’ll also have way colder winters in Europe to balance things out. I guess that should also get the eastern seaboard of the US hotter as well? So fun for everyone!
- Lantsu@sopuli.xyzEnglish11 hours
It was so funny when the latest “Amoc might shut down” articles came out and my country’s news outlest had a vey panicky contest on who can find most scientist to claim that “all is okay and it will never ever shut down!!” All is fine, just continue your consumings. Buy that new car, go on that vacation, you deserve it buddy! Let’s spend money!
Washedupcynic@lemmy.caEnglish
1 dayIn the past, during the month of June, I was able to manage to keep things cool by keeping the blinds and windows shut during the warmest parts of the days then around 9 pm, opened up all the windows and used cross ventilation/fans to pull cool air in and pull the hot air out. My wife was begging me to put the AC up at the end of May this year.
Well its fine. The people in charge will fix this.
- 17 hours
I finally gave into her about a week and a half ago. Was trying to put it off because energy costs are too damn high
Daftydux@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish
12 hoursI remember one year we parted every night of September because it just kept being hot.
Thank god those days are over. Everything about it was pretty miserable.
- 1 day
The interesting thing about the summer where I live right now is that we are actually far cooler than any summer recently. Last summer we hit 40 plus days of 100° or more. The Summer before that we are over 20 days of 100°. Not saying that we won’t get there yet but, we have yet to even hit 100° and I’m not sure we’ve even hit in the '90s for more than a couple of hours. At the same time the entire state is on fire because we also had one of the most mild winters with the lowest amount of snowfall in recent records. So yes climate change is real and doesn’t always mean hotter weather sometimes it means fucked up weather. For example Idaho Montana and Wyoming all have snow warnings for this week including possibly up to 2 ft of snow in Montana 10 inches of snow in Wyoming and 8 to 10 in of snow in Idaho. Last week there was a snowstorm in ice flows going down Nampa Idaho. So heat doesn’t the only worry here.
- 9 hours
Snow just in the mountains surely? Every 1,000 feet of elevation gain the temperature generally drops 3.5 degrees.
Above 6k feet in the western side of the north cascades the growing season doesn’t start until well into august and half through september, and there is still snow in parts. But they get monster snowfall on the wet side of the mountains there.
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
1 dayel nino is fucking the weather pattern. last one i remember this weird was in 1995 or 1996. I expect massive floods next winter.
i did whitewater rafting guiding back then (South Fork, American, California) and the houses along the river i guided were in different spots when we were learning the river after the bad flood year in the 90s. Which i think was 96 and right after el nino. we had been doing the chris farley joke right up until the flooding and seeing the houses moved like, a few hundred feet really put it into perspective. We figured they had been on pier foundations or something and the floodwaters just picked them up and carried them downstream a little.
- 18 hours
This el nino is literally breaking all records or expectations. We haven’t had anything even close to this strong since 1877, the year without a winter, when an estimated 50 million people (3% of global population at the time) died from famines and heat stress. This is much stronger than scientist think even that was. It’s so ridiculously above any prediction of what was even possible that they don’t know how to describe it.
There are already crop failures reported and the Midwest looks ripe to turn into a dust bowl again.
There will be extreme weather the world over this year and next, no doubt. I expect massive famines in much of the poorer parts of the world but even greatly affecting food prices in the west and China.
It is completely impossible to overstate just how devastatingly bad every new piece of data is looking.
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
18 hoursAnd a trade war clogging up phosphate shipping (I don’t know if it happened, but the timing was right and that’s a major route) definitely helped. I recommend everyone learn to grow their own food. I have a good guidebook if you’ve got like half an acre and enough room to dig furrows (G, author of the guidebook, insisted that was how to do it and he grew the best watermelons I ever et. Size of my thigh. Been gone a couple decades and I’ve still been looking for watermelons that delicious) between the rows.
If you have a patio/balcony for your outdoor space instead of a yard, square foot gardening is the way to go.
- 12 hours
Yeah every fertilizer plant in Bangladesh and most in India were shut down earlier this year due to the closing of the straight. They may have reopened by now, but they lack of production could have impacts. Stores of fertilizer were used up to compensate and with heat/water stress, you need more fertilizer.
There is still time to plant things if you can. Do some research to make sure you can harvest in your climate zone (and the zones have been updated now as well in the last few years)before the frost arrives, if it ever does. Be prepared to baby your garden to make sure it doesnt scorch in the heat.
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 hoursThey have those mesh whatsits you can make a sunshade out of and turn full sun into partial sun. This summer’s “argument” is whether we build a hoop house (hoop house fuck i love saying that. maybe if i stop having so much fun saying hoop house it will help my argument) over the garden.
- qwestjest78@lemmy.caEnglish2 days
What’s funny is thinking about all the people that used to try to say that climate change won’t happen for hundreds of years.
Shows you how much those people knew.
I mean, those are the same people who say “we had warm days during summer back then, too”
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
1 dayMy favorite type of climate change my local county did to itself (we made the streams and canals flow better so we don’t flood. A lot of it was litter removal. Damn project took decades and will need maintenance) like, it doesn’t have to be bad,
rbos@lemmy.caEnglish
2 hoursSo instead of the historical flooding and deposition of sediment, the flood water goes downstream? I don’t know if that’s necessarily better, as described. Flood water needs to spread out, slow down, and soak in. Else it creates worse problems elsewhere.
I think in Europe the penny is finally starting to drop and people will start buying ACs soon… hopefully
- 9 hours
More AC hopefully? AC is a lousy way to cool, it’s a major driver of climate change, and turning cities into heat islands.
The ground is cool year round, and a cooperative heat exchange could serve multiple residences. There are better ways.
- 7 hours
Yeah, ground source heat pumps are pretty awesome and are being installed with many new buildings and renovations around here.
But that’s also AC, right? Just powered by different (better) tech.
I definitely agree that ground source heat pumps are better but they are also very expensive and basically only worth it if you replace a house’s entire heating with it. Using some crappy mobile AC unit is an acceptable interim solution just to allow me to sleep at reasonable temperatures for the next few summers.
- 1 day
Yeah AC will save all the problems caused by heatwaves. Because we’ll be able to AC all outdoor crops, cattle, also the poor will be able to use AC, to avoid the heat dome effect we’ll AC entire cities…
- 14 hours
Yeah we’ll also probably get the malaria mosquitos and other bearers of tropical diseases here.
Not to say that we should have ever gotten this far or that we’re doing enough to stop climate change or that this is the only problem caused by climate change, but we are where we are and heatwaves kill and AC helps and, at least where I live, we have not done nearly enough to prevent these deaths thus far imo.
- 9 hours
Where are you at? Because hard winter weather hasn’t gone away, and that’s what keeps those tropical/subtropical diseases from traveling north. We got like 3 or 4 polar inversions in the contintental US just this winter, and at least one for years going back.
Those diseases aren’t moving anywhere near us here, if you are right on the coast maybe as the ocean keeps it warmer in cold fronts, Washington DC was a malarial swamp since before we built the capitol there, but that’s the farthest north of any malaria I’ve heard of in the US.
- 7 hours
Switzerland. The first tiger mosquito was spotted in Ticino in 2003 and they are established there now. In other parts of Switzerland as well.
And at least by how it feels, our winters have been getting milder as well.
- 14 hours
AC is the cheap « oh we didn’t do shit so now let’s take the quickest solutions regardless of cost, externalities etc… »
ACs help, sure, so would adding vegetations around houses/buildings, using higher albedo roofs, having fucking blinds on the windows, not building skyscrapers out of glass that are essentially giant greenhouses…
But that requires planning and not voting for the destruction of the government’s competence soo…
- 9 hours
Newer buildings are often built with windows oriented to miss the summer sunshine but get hit by the winter sun, one of my old apartments was built like that, and it was a world better than other old apartments, especially the ones that are like 80 years old, which get hellishly hot in the summer.
- 14 hours
Yeah, but let me tell you, even if you have plenty of vegetation around the house, a well-insulated roof, windows that you open during the night and outside blinds you close during the day, this heatwave has been unbearable.
I think we use the less energy-intensive tools at our disposal pretty effectively around here actually. As an example, my university’s main building has also managed to remain somewhat bearable with minimal AC, somehow.
The problem is that these things are beginning to not be enough anymore. I’ve been going through my personal hell on earth with this heatwave for the past weeks despite using all of the techniques that don’t involve heat pumps, which is also why I feel so strongly about this. I simply can’t see another way out in the short to medium term.
- 9 hours
Try swamp coolers, especially when it is less humid, a wet blanket over a window with air blowing in, put the bottom of the blanket or beach towel in a pot of water, the evaporation creates a cooling effect.
- 14 hours
We’re going to use heatpumps/AC that’s not the thing that pisses me off. The thing that pisses me off is the reaction from so many people in France is “oh we need AC now” and not “why the fuck did we wait so long to give a shit about climate change and why is nobody talking about reducing emissions still ?”
- 14 hours
Oh yeah, that’s totally fair. I’m also still sour about the two perfectly good climate change laws that were rejected in referendums in Switzerland. This is where that gets us. I hope populism dies and all the oil barons burn in this world’s last oil fire.
And I want to watch the spectacle from an ACd room, ideally.
- jnod4@lemmy.caEnglish1 day
What’s the point of buying an AC if the majority of jobs in Europe are logistical or manufacturing without AC. That’s where workers will die
Take it easy friend, there will be other workers to take their place! Don’t blow it out of proportion.
/s duh
I mean you can have AC there too. And the EU should be capable of regulating max temperatures into existence. If they are able to regulate big tech, they should be able to do this as well (i hope). Also, manufacturing and logistical jobs are not even close to a majority of jobs in the EU.
- 1 day
With a Super El Niño brewing right now, I wouldn’t bank on next year being cooler… 🫤
- 2 days
While this data is presented by a company selling apartments across the globe and the text is written to explain how much travel destinations change over the coming decades, the data in it gives a clear overview of changes in 85 different cities. Anyone living in any of those 85 cities can use it to see how fucked you might be in the near and not so near future: https://www.nestpick.com/2050-climate-change-city-index/
Little spoiler: you’ll be at least a little fucked no matter where you live.
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
2 daysI’m starting to thank my foresight (it was a whoopsie) when I moved to Texas for a few years for education. It was hot and humid. Worst I remember was 116°F and 100% humidity. And I had to work outdoors that afternoon. Kind of like how after hypothermia nothing seems cold, I ain’t felt hot in days.
- 9 hours
116 seems unbearably hot. I would add others have pointed out with the temp and humidity people cite the high numbers, but they don’t peak together, if they did, people would be dropping dead at 116 and 100 percent humidity
106 is the hottest I’ve ever experienced, high humidity. We haven’t broken 100 degrees in years and years here,
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 hoursI had to take a lot of breaks and I probably drank 3 gallons of water that day. It was rough. July… 2010 i think if you want to look up the historical records since apparently nothing i say on here is true









