Is it dry?

<p>I am in Chicago, and it has been hot and humid all day - and raining. A few hours ago, we had pouring rain and hail, and, as soon as it came, it stopped. There's Chicago weather for you.</p>

<p>The humidity reader on the piano reads 73%. Humid. Humid. Humid.</p>

<p>i think us Seattlites may have it hte best right now.
70 degrees F, sunny skies, patchy clouds, 50% humidity. right in my comfort zone.</p>

<p>At least we're not in Phoenix, where it never rains. </p>

<p>Good news, though, is that it's going to cool down the the low to mid 80s tomorrow and through the weekend (expected rain).</p>

<p>^ I hope its like that when we start school</p>

<p>my AC didnt' work for a week when the summer started, when it was in the high 90s...I wanted to just die</p>

<p>Well, I asked for rain... and will be getting it. Expecting hail, thunderstorms, and extreme winds. Also, expect temperatures to be lowered into the low 80s, upper 70s :-).</p>

<p>Recently Corpus Christi was named the second most uncomfortable city to live in based on heat and humidity levels (Miami was most uncomfortable). Typically the humidity in the heat of the day is 60% but at night it can get to 90% easily. In Corpus, as soon as you walk out the door, you can feel the wetness.</p>

<p>^Yeah, I've heard about Corpus. <em>shudders</em></p>

<p>It only gets like that here once in a blue moon, mainly in July when we have our brief summer showers.</p>

<p>Its Raining !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!</p>

<p>YAY! (10 chars)</p>

<p>I'm in Houston like Ericericeric and it's hot and sticky and was raining awhile ago.</p>

<p>Wow, poor people who have statewide watering bans. I don't remember ever having one. And no rain here, but its 79 degrees with 49% humidity. Just in case you were curious...</p>

<p>B.itch Turds Ass Mofo!</p>

<p>Yeah. Well, the thing is, our fresh-water sources aren't used by only Georgia (9 million people), but also shared by Alabama (5 million people), Florida (18 million people), South Carolina (4.3 million), and some parts of Tennessee (6 million people). That's roughly 42.3 million people sharing our water sources! And, if you've ever been here, you'll know that we don't have "great lakes" like in the North. No, we have the Chattahoochie River, Lake Allatoona, Lake Lanier, and Westpoint Lake. Those are the main "large" ones (I use large in quotation marks because they aren't really huge... barely large enough to make specs on a map). So, yeah, you can see why we worry about that.</p>

<p>Of course, I've been to Georgia before, so I understand the necessity of those bans. I'm just glad that I live in the "land of sky blue waters." :)</p>

<p>We didn't get flooding rains in my part of Texas, just enought that I didn't have to water my garden for a day and to make it dreadfully humid.
We don't have watering bans right now (probably will later in the summer), but we are under a burning ban.</p>

<p>Oh man! Let me tell you. I just got back from walking to the store, and wow. Not only was it hot, but it was hazy/smoggy. In fact, my chest hurts a little after walking in that ****ty air. I could actually SEE THE AIR. That hasn't happened for a while. So, I came on my computer, and my weatherbug says that the temp is 94 F, and that the AQU index is code red. Damn. We need LOTS OF RAIN. Are you listening God?</p>

<p>lol- thank god we just got our air conditioner fixed- it looks like its going to rain soon. i heard thunder :)
- the temperature got up to 97 degrees upstairs on wednesday</p>

<p>YAY! Fixed AC! </p>

<p>And, why does Phil get to be your gay best friend?</p>

<p>it's currently 99 here =-0</p>