It's humidity and temperature that's the problem. Somewhere dry and hot is bearable.Always found Greek islands bearable, now in Kent it is ****ing horrible, sweaty and not sleeping.
We'd get that in the Middle East and the bonus was humidity that made you want to top yourself.
It's humidity and temperature that's the problem. Somewhere dry and hot is bearable.Always found Greek islands bearable, now in Kent it is ****ing horrible, sweaty and not sleeping.
We'd get that in the Middle East and the bonus was humidity that made you want to top yourself.
In 1999 I was working between NYC and the U.K.
In February I was stood outside of Madison Square Gardens waiting for a taxi and preparing to die in the coldest snow storm I'd ever experienced.
5 months later in July and it was hot as hell, people were bathing in the fountains.
Their climate is ****ed up.
The strangest thing about NYC is that you can get a train to a place called Tarrytown.One of the most surprising places for humidity is New York, I lived in Brooklyn for for a while and people there told me that it gets hot in summer. I remember thinking 'London gets hot in summer, no biggy'. But New York suffers from high humidity. In the City it is ****ing unbearable because it is so built up and the concrete seems to radiate heat. Just out on the coast near Rockaway there are hurricane warning systems and mandatory evacuation areas, so it's an indication of the tropical storms that travel up the coast from Florida and the Bahamas.
Where I live you get " Chinook winds " and it can be 15 degrees Celsius on a winters day and an hour later it can be a minus 15 Celsius when the Chinook winds stop .In 1999 I was working between NYC and the U.K.
In February I was stood outside of Madison Square Gardens waiting for a taxi and preparing to die in the coldest snow storm I'd ever experienced.
5 months later in July and it was hot as hell, people were bathing in the fountains.
Their climate is ****ed up.
We'd come back here for the summer. I have a pal who goes to Dubai on holiday in AUGUST! Nutter.Never go to the Middle East in summer. The heat is intolerable and apart from that there's nobody there. They've all ****ed off!...
In Rochester there is an area called Troytown. Never seen Noddy though.The strangest thing about NYC is that you can get a train to a place called Tarrytown.
As we all know, anywhere called Tarrytown must be fictional.
The strangest thing about NYC is that you can get a train to a place called Tarrytown.
As we all know, anywhere called Tarrytown must be fictional.

I've got cousins who live in snowbound Canada. The winter pictures they send are mental.Where I live you get " Chinook winds " and it can be 15 degrees Celsius on a winters day and an hour later it can be a minus 15 Celsius when the Chinook winds stop .
The thing that got me about New York was taking the subway out to Coney Island and passing places called Avenue X and Avenue Y. Serious lack of creativity![]()
The Rocky Mountains in winter are magnificent , I live in the foothills and the Chinook winds come through the mountains ,at times, 100 miles an hour( a normal Chinook is about 100 kilometres an hour ) ...and try roofing in it and put a warranty on the roof .I've got cousins who live in snowbound Canada. The winter pictures they send are mental.
About as creative as 1st Avenue, 2nd Ave, etc.
It's the grid system of Manhattan, especially.
Never go to the Middle East in summer. The heat is intolerable and apart from that there's nobody there. They've all ****ed off!...
One of the most surprising places for humidity is New York, I lived in Brooklyn for for a while and people there told me that it gets hot in summer. I remember thinking 'London gets hot in summer, no biggy'. But New York suffers from high humidity. In the City it is ****ing unbearable because it is so built up and the concrete seems to radiate heat. Just out on the coast near Rockaway there are hurricane warning systems and mandatory evacuation areas, so it's an indication of the tropical storms that travel up the coast from Florida and the Bahamas.

The hottest place I have ever been is Death Valley in California. It was 128 deg, not sure what that is in old money, but it was ****ing unreal. It was windy too, a hot dry wind that hurt when you breathed it in.