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    32 commenti

    1. Different_Lychee_409 on

      Its the humidity and our housing not built to handle heat.

    2. RYPIIE2006 on

      can they use proper measurements instead of their idiotic “but it measures how it feels!!1!1!!” bullshit

    3. Dependent-Library602 on

      This time of year is when I’m glad to have a north-facing property. It means it’s cold and dark for much of the year, but right now, it’s a pretty comfortable temperature inside, even at night.

    4. chocobowler on

      90 and 120, are 32 and 49 in normal temperature measurements (c) in case anyone else was wondering

    5. No_Suit_9511 on

      Americans crank the AC so high you need a sweatshirt to go grocery shopping in July.

      Then they come here, get slapped by 90% humidity, and say, “Wow, it’s hot out!” as if nature’s the weird one.

    6. Necessary-Nobody8138 on

      It isn’t unusual for the UK- well, SE England, to reach 30C. It’s summer!!!!!

    7. smartypants881 on

      Similarly I’ve seen Canadians say that -2 here feels like -20. As others have said I think it’s the humidity and housing.

    8. Ruby-Shark on

      In the immortal words of Peter Kay “Have a Solero and shut the fuck up!”

    9. Another quirk of British media, using Fahrenheit instead of Celsius… Just because the bigger number gets clicks 😂

    10. Great-Pineapple-3335 on

      People often say it’s because of the humidity, but why do I never feel the same mugginess that I do stepping off a plane in the tropics

    11. Dragoneer1 on

      meanwhile in norway its fucking freezing which is kinda absurd considering we are right next door

    12. Then-Attitude-6773 on

      people are overreacting so much it’s hardly that hot

    13. Bilbo_Buggin on

      I like seeing the sun, and I like the heat to an extent. What I don’t like is the fact my flat retains the heat and becomes unbearable. My workplace is the same, and I’m pretty sure many other buildings are too.

    14. Marco0798 on

      Pussies, this shit hasn’t even started… most of the hot days have been decent so far..

    15. Turbulent-Pilot-1436 on

      Remember back in the day both my grandparents houses would have ceiling fans on the big lights. Why don’t we do this anymore? We clearly need them in the summer

    16. MewMeowHowdy on

      American living in UK for the past three years – yeah, the English summers are just *hot*.

      It’s definitely lack of AC in most houses and, in my case, no car to blast AC in so I’ve got to walk in the heat to work. 

      I think sometimes there’s very little transition to summertime here, as well. This year especially, it seems like we skipped spring entirely and just went to summer.

      That being said, the US summers are wild as well. Southern states like Georgia and Texas experience temperatures so high that their plastic trash cans start melting and you can fry an egg on the pavement. My parents live on the east coast and sometimes shower thrice a day because they just *sweat* as soon as they step outside.

    17. DefinitelyARealHorse on

      Thing is, 32°C is the ambient outdoor temperature.

      If you’re in an office, in a heavily insulated building, with little ventilation, no air conditioning and a dozen other people and their computers emitting warmth, it can very easily get above 40°C.

    18. Novel_Passenger7013 on

      As an American in the UK I honestly think it’s the lack of respite. I’m from the Midwest and we had hot, humid summer days. The summer was longer and warmer than what we get on the southern edge of the Midlands, where I live now. But it didn’t feel as oppressive.

      The problem is, in the UK, there is no escape. The houses don’t have AC and they are all brick and cinder block, so they don’t cool down enough at night. You get in your car and the AC doesn’t work nearly as well or as fast as it would in an American car. You go to work and it’s hot. You go to the shop and it’s hot. All those places would be climate controlled in the US.

      When you don’t get a break from the heat, it makes it that much harder to deal with.

    19. bananabastard on

      I was in Thailand when it was around 12 degrees before, and it felt like 0 degrees.

    20. ToxicHazard- on

      Just got back from Greece who have just had a heatwave – it was 35°C at peak for most of the week.

      When we landed in the UK it was 27°C – I have been significantly more uncomfortable here

    21. DifficultCurrent7 on

      I love some “Ooh its too hot!” Banter but please,people, check on your elderly neighbours, your parents,  anyone vulnerable. 

    22. DistributionFun6280 on

      Using these past couple of days and calibrated airport measuring equipment to measure the temperature and dewpoint when at maximum temperature:

      Location | Temperature | Dew Point | Relative Humidity
      —|—|—-|—-
      Heathrow | 28 | 11 | 35%
      Manchester | 27 | 9 | 32%
      Newcastle | 21 | 12 | 56%
      Birmingham | 29 | 11 | 33%
      Bournemouth | 26 | 13 | 45%
      Bristol | 28 | 13 | 40%

      It’s really not that humid.

      I read other comments of people saying humidity reaches 90%. At high temperatures, it certainly does not.

      Humidity in the UK is on par with most other European nations. It’s far from exceptional.

    23. BusyBeeBridgette on

      Hurrah for high humidity and having infrastructure built around average to colder temperatures.

    24. cuntybunty73 on

      I was fucking melting last night at 24 degrees in Exeter ffs and it’s about the same back home in Plymouth 😭 as a a pale skinned ginger woman I fucking hate the hot weather 😭

    25. Serious_Question_158 on

      “expat”. The word is immigrants. Or is that word only used for non whites?

      Edit: lmao, downvotes by white immigrants

    26. martymcflown on

      LA current humidity is 88%, NY is 65% (lower than London at 52%). It really isn’t the humidity, at all. It’s simply the lack of quality AC inside buildings.

    27. GambuzinoSaloio on

      Portuguese here. Heatwaves in the UK can indeed be difficult. Had to deal with one a couple of years back when I was in Southampton. Houses in the UK are simply not built to deal with excessive heat.

      That’s not to say that around here summers aren’t super hot either, but we’re better equipped for that lol.

    28. Lost_Suspect269 on

      It’s literally because our buildings are made to keep the heat in, where as in hot country climates their buildings are more open.

    29. Hefty_Tradition_5011 on

      I feel like we’re massively over exaggerating the heat, it’s hardly unbearable. I actually think it’s quite nice.

    30. Sinocatk on

      People should have a look at a chart of wet bulb and dry bulb temperature. 32 degrees with relative humidity of 30% is fine, with humidity 90% not very nice.

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