Those temps are definitely averages. South Carolina and North Carolina get both colder and hotter than those numbers. One thing to remember about NC, SC, and GA is the diverse regions. The mountains in NC have had measurable snowfall multiple times since the beginning of October while the central area is more temperate and the coastal areas have seen temps in the 80s. All three of those states have temps above 100 in the summer and can drop to below 0 depending on where you are.
Georgia has a 15-20° difference in temperature from the southern part to the Mountains in the northern part of the state every day. The humidity will vary with elevation to some degree also.
Born in Pennsylvania, while living in Hawaii 2011-19, North Carolina (NC) is what I consider as the ideal state to live for many reasons (low taxes, cost of living, population density, crime rate, recreational & sports year round). While, as a "Damn Yankee" in 1975, the influx of Northerners moving to NC in 1980, has changed that forever & has increasingly made NC much more welcoming to people from around the world, while mostly maintaining its own identity. The "Tarheel State" is THE place to hunker down and settle down, whether you're single or wanting to start or bring your family. That's why I call NC home.😊
I vote Florida as one of the highest behind Arizona. Lived there 50 years ago and hated it. The humidity made me extremely sensitive to the heat. I'm now in Tennessee were we have dry heat. It's very bearable and I can stay in it a lot longer than a few minutes. Humid actually means wet. Not hot.
Just letting you know also on a different subject.... Voiceplay and Geoff released their Christmas videos on their Patreons Friday and Saturday. They are both absolutely amazing. When Voiceplay did "Sleeping In The Cold Below" last year by Warframe video games they liked it so much they commissioned Voiceplay to do a video for their new Warframe video game Warframe1999. Voiceplay released a Teaser Short on RUclips about it with more information.
I chuckled. The photo they opened with when talking about Washington State vs Arizona was where I currently live, Bremerton. Stats are funny... remember any day with 1/10th of an inch of rain is a "rainy day".
The west coast temps are moderated by the very cold waters compared to the east coast. In summer it keeps it cooler and winter it helps keep it warmer.
I loved living in Miami Beach Florida in the early '90s but it only took one hurricane to scoot me out of there. I was in Phoenix for 11 years and the heat didn't bother me too much, but I was a lot younger then. Now I'm in Los Angeles and here I stay until I croak (I love LA and the upsides greatly outweigh the downsides for me).
Correct... Nearly 18yrs ago, my wife & I moved from NJ to SC. Over the past two decades, SC has had significant population growth. Oftentimes, word-of-mouth chain growth from those who already made the move. Since we moved, 12 (soon to be 13) households of our family, friends, & acquaintances have moved throughout SC (Upstate, Midlands, Pee Dee, Lowcountry). BTW: Love the Moultrie Flag
We have lived in the top 4 humid states Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida and now back to Alaska (we have also lived in Alabama where there is a thing called stagnant air, where humid air gets really still and stagnates like water) and now live in the top humid state. What is wrong with us?
No four seasons here in Southern Ca. And, we have beautiful scenery. So weird to see no mountains like Florida. Went on a cruise out of Florida and leaving that aircondition on board to having be blinded when my glasses fogged up.
LOL! The temperature here in Georgia just last night was in the mid 20s. It's been below freezing the last three nights in a row. This video is playing down the cold in Georgia just a bit too much. It does get very cold in Atlanta during the winter, but the temps are all over the place. It can be as low as 25 one day and be 60 the next. The weather is weird here. In the summer, it can hit 100 degress, but is usually around 92-96 on average.
I live in San Diego, and when preparing for a trip to Australia, I noticed that San Diego is almost exactly the same latitude north as Sydney is south, so it didn't surprise me that the weather/climate is very similar to what I was used to, including the mild weather (moderated by being close to the ocean), a relatively dry climate with low humidity, and a propensity for wildfires in the surrounding hills and mountains.
What they don't take in account is that while the "temperature is higher the humidity adds to that. I'm not surprised Florida made #1 . As far as hurricanes.... It depends on where you live as to how much hurricanes you experience. I lived in sw FL (Naples, Fort Myers). We got them once every 8-19 years. And then not real real bad. Voiceplay is in Orlando. They get them every 2-4 years. And again not super bad. Most of the worst ones are on the East Coast, Atlantic Ocean. Miami, Ft Lauderdale, Daytona Beach and so on. The difference? East hurricanes come from Africa (Atlantic) or Mexico (Gulf) areas. As they move across the water they build up. The hotter and more water the more powerful. Atlantic has more water than the Gulf. Also humidity.... Humid means wet. Not meaning hot. So most anywhere that is wet is humid in the summer. That is why 90% of the hottest states are near coasts. Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, California, Texas, Louisiana, Arizona, etc.
I know someone who lived in Tucson Arizona and he made the dumb choice to walk barefoot on the cement outside to get home and he had blisters so big on his feet that you couldn’t avoid having to pop them or he wouldn’t be able to walk. But even walking with them popped hurt like hell for him. That’s how hot it gets here plus he accidentally ran into a jumping cactus too because he decided to not stay on the path that was provided.
We get snow every winter. We had 29 inches 2 yrs ago. In one day We where upper 60 overnight with thunderstorm and tornadoes. By Noon we dropped 40 degrees and had ice snd snow in PM. Welcome to Oklahoma.
Phoenix temperatures? A little over 100 degrees in the summer? I have relatives in Phoenix - here's some current data. This past summer (meaning all of June, July, and August) - 2024 - the Average temperature, meaning the 24 hour average for the entire summer was 99F! They had 113 consecutive days with highs above 100F and sixty one of those days exceeded 110F. October 1st and 6th reached 113F, and the 7th was 110F.
I've lived from Florida to Michigan. I would never live in either again. The south is too humid for me except for where I live now, the mountains of North Carolina. We have four distinct seasons and none of them are extreme.
I remember when I visited Perth and Fremantle back in the 1980's... I was struck by how similar it felt to San Diego (weather wise). A number of us commented on it.
\] This revierw of'best' warm clinates is utterBS. He must have been from the soughtern states. Humidity is a killer! Most of the US deaths due to heat in the summer is in the northeast, not the southwest, such as Arizona. In your last video aboutthe coldest states, I responded their as well since I live in Minneaplolis, MN for 13 years, finioshed high school, wen to college an finished there, got married, had to kids and left! The weathe is so bad there, Winter and so humid and buggy in the short summer. Then I lived in Souther CA for 7 years, and we went to the beach on Thanksgiving (late Nov), and again on Christmas (late Dec). Then we moved to Arizona, where it is almost always sunny, with no fires, no big stores from the ocean, no earthquakes, no mus slides, etc. While we did love CA, I grew to love Arizona almost as much. The Winters are warmer and much sunnier. While the summers are definitely harsher because the high daytime temps are 105-116F just about everyday, but essentially no rain at all, which is why we are considered in the desert (must be under 10" of precipitation a year. We get only 7". The San Jose Bay area (Silicon Valley) gets 14" a year, sometimes really big storms from the ocean to go over that. The dry heat is amazing, and as long as you stay out of the sun, you can handle it pretty well. We have been here 24 years now, and we were on CA 25 years (split between Southern CA and Northern CA). So, if just based on the weather alone, I would place AZ as # 2 only IF you like living on a very isolated island (Hawaii), and #1 otherwise.
I have lived in Louisiana all my life. I can confirm we are a humid oven down here about 8 months out of the year. I would say miserable is a better word for the heat we get vs enjoyable....
Hottest day ever was in 1961 in Kopperl Texas, called Satan's Storm and it reached 60⁰C/140⁰F. The hottest "place" on earth is Death Valley in California at 134⁰, I think.
I am from the SC lowcountry. In the winter our average daytime high is around 60 degrees. At night probably 45. We might get a handful of days a year where it gets down to 34. The last couple winters its been 60-80 all winter and it is hot and humid in the summer. Usually 85-95 every single day with high humidity. It gets hotter than that but that is about what it is every day. Hottest I have ever seen was back in I think it was 2012 in late June it hit 106 the heat index was somewhere around 120 with the humidity. We have seasons I guess but its nothing like up north. Our fall and spring temps are like summers up north. I don't know where he got these numbers from. Maybe the upstate of SC up in the mountains because our average daytime high is around 60-62 range here in the winter. The only time we have days colder than that in the winter is when there is artic blasts that cool the whole eastern half of the country and that usually doesn't last more than a week. In the last 25 years I can remember snow 2x and once was just a dust and the other was about 3 inches that came down at night and by noon it was all gone. There has been a couple other times where there was some snow in the air but it all melted as soon as it hit the ground. It is cold as shit in the 30s right now at 5am but there is one of those cold artic blasts where its been cold as shit all the way to Florida the last few days. Its going to get back up to 70 in a week. This whole week though its going to be around 50 every day and 30-40 at night the whole eastern half of the country is cold as shit right now. Actually I am at one of my other houses right now on the NY/PA line and its only 6 degrees colder up here right now only difference is we have 7-8 inches of snow here from the lake effect that has pounded us since Thanksgiving. Hardly any snow here at 7-8 inches though really if you drive just north or west of here people have 3-4 feet of snow maybe even more. We had a big blast this morning. I had to take my dog to the vet and the roads hadn't been plowed and there was probably 3 inches on the damn road and was snowing so hard you could only see maybe 100 feet in front of you. We only had probably 3-4 inches before this morning in a few hours today we got another 4 inches or so and it all came down in just a couple hours. You get closer to the lake though and the snow could be up to your chest.
I love the fact that after a few states the guy stops talking about the weather negative side probably because all the state on the gulf and Atlantic ocean side have flooding and hurricane risks and he forgot to mention that California doesn’t just have wildfires but atmospheric rivers and rock slides, mud slides, and earthquakes plus flooding and shark triangle .And Hawaii has the volcano and is in the great white shark triangle plus earthquakes and tropical storms and wildfires and flooding it’s an island. Oklahoma is one of which has the most tornadoes in tornado alley and can also have wildfires and flooding. Texas was warned about an ice storm and freezing temperatures and said they could handle it but they couldn’t. People died and houses were destroyed. Here’s the truth all states have dangerous and deadly weather events in the USA it just depends on what you’re willing to deal with. Like I’m willing to deal with the tornadoes or flooding and freezing temperatures and blizzard conditions for up to 4-6 months of the year so I live in Minnesota.
today it is 65 degrees/ 18 celsius. i am in shorts and a tee shirt. i'm in san diego. average is 57-72 degrees 22-57 degrees celsius. i will probably be wearing shorts on xmas
I don't know what study this is but it doesn't do Phoenix Justice because I work outdoors. In July of this year and most of August it never got below 90° Fahrenheit!!! So telling me that Arizona is number 10 on this list sounds ridiculous!!!
I can vouch for that. There are a lot of things we can complain about in San Diego, but the weather definitely isn't one of them. It's low/moderate humidity from the inland desert influence, temps not insanely high or low due to the proximity to the ocean (what I call "Mother nature's air conditioner"), and nearly all cyclonic storms in the Pacific either peter out or veer well to the south of us because of the prevailing ocean currents.
See the thing is, you cannot escape the heat. If the powers out and it's 100 degrees and 95% humidity...your dead. Also have fun working in the garden. The colder it gets, the more clothing you put on and also there is another millions of years old remedy for it that the cave men figured out...fire.
@@G2_Shane well checking my area, 56F/13.33C for the high today which will be unseasonably warm, and will be the highest for months to come, reminds me not having excess humidity can truly be a blessing.
The facts of this video is inaccurate. They must be using their numbers as an average of a 24hr day. Temperatures in south louisiana range from 15 to 120 degrees Fahrenheit.
Don't put too much faith in their weather predictions for 20 years in the future, because if those same prediction experts were all that right we should have all died back in 2012.
As a born and raised south Floridian(commenting before you get to Florida) I knew Florida was #1 on the list, also listening to you speak about where you're from Australia, I was like Florida, we're literally called the sunshine state🤣 you'd love it here😎 also our houses are built for hurricanes here unlike in other states because we have been through soo many, so unless you're on the coast, you're usually fine, unless there's tornadoes, which happen when you get a strong hurricane😅
One thing people forget is that Arizona isn't just the Mojave and Sonoran deserts. Flagstaff is at 7,000 ft. elevation and sees snow in the winter. .
Those temps are definitely averages. South Carolina and North Carolina get both colder and hotter than those numbers. One thing to remember about NC, SC, and GA is the diverse regions. The mountains in NC have had measurable snowfall multiple times since the beginning of October while the central area is more temperate and the coastal areas have seen temps in the 80s. All three of those states have temps above 100 in the summer and can drop to below 0 depending on where you are.
Georgia has a 15-20° difference in temperature from the southern part to the Mountains in the northern part of the state every day. The humidity will vary with elevation to some degree also.
I don’t know what kind of data points they used to come up with this list, but I can remember a day in Phoenix that was 125 degrees Fahrenheit.
Born in Pennsylvania, while living in Hawaii 2011-19, North Carolina (NC) is what I consider as the ideal state to live for many reasons (low taxes, cost of living, population density, crime rate, recreational & sports year round). While, as a "Damn Yankee" in 1975, the influx of Northerners moving to NC in 1980, has changed that forever & has increasingly made NC much more welcoming to people from around the world, while mostly maintaining its own identity. The "Tarheel State" is THE place to hunker down and settle down, whether you're single or wanting to start or bring your family. That's why I call NC home.😊
At 6:20 it’s 35 and we have a low of 23 later this week. I have seen it 90 at 11 pm, when you walk outside it feels like a sauna.
I vote Florida as one of the highest behind Arizona. Lived there 50 years ago and hated it. The humidity made me extremely sensitive to the heat.
I'm now in Tennessee were we have dry heat. It's very bearable and I can stay in it a lot longer than a few minutes.
Humid actually means wet. Not hot.
"A little over 100 degrees in the summer." I guess if you consider 10-15 degrees F to be a little.
Just letting you know also on a different subject....
Voiceplay and Geoff released their Christmas videos on their Patreons Friday and Saturday. They are both absolutely amazing.
When Voiceplay did "Sleeping In The Cold Below" last year by Warframe video games they liked it so much they commissioned Voiceplay to do a video for their new Warframe video game Warframe1999.
Voiceplay released a Teaser Short on RUclips about it with more information.
I chuckled. The photo they opened with when talking about Washington State vs Arizona was where I currently live, Bremerton.
Stats are funny... remember any day with 1/10th of an inch of rain is a "rainy day".
The west coast temps are moderated by the very cold waters compared to the east coast. In summer it keeps it cooler and winter it helps keep it warmer.
I loved living in Miami Beach Florida in the early '90s but it only took one hurricane to scoot me out of there. I was in Phoenix for 11 years and the heat didn't bother me too much, but I was a lot younger then. Now I'm in Los Angeles and here I stay until I croak (I love LA and the upsides greatly outweigh the downsides for me).
YEP. People moving in constantly here in South Carolina.
Correct... Nearly 18yrs ago, my wife & I moved from NJ to SC. Over the past two decades, SC has had significant population growth. Oftentimes, word-of-mouth chain growth from those who already made the move. Since we moved, 12 (soon to be 13) households of our family, friends, & acquaintances have moved throughout SC (Upstate, Midlands, Pee Dee, Lowcountry).
BTW: Love the Moultrie Flag
We have lived in the top 4 humid states Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida and now back to Alaska (we have also lived in Alabama where there is a thing called stagnant air, where humid air gets really still and stagnates like water) and now live in the top humid state. What is wrong with us?
No four seasons here in Southern Ca. And, we have beautiful scenery. So weird to see no mountains like Florida. Went on a cruise out of Florida and leaving that aircondition on board to having be blinded when my glasses fogged up.
LOL! The temperature here in Georgia just last night was in the mid 20s. It's been below freezing the last three nights in a row. This video is playing down the cold in Georgia just a bit too much. It does get very cold in Atlanta during the winter, but the temps are all over the place. It can be as low as 25 one day and be 60 the next. The weather is weird here. In the summer, it can hit 100 degress, but is usually around 92-96 on average.
Phoenix always gets into the 120s. Not sure when the video was made though. Summer before last, we had over 75 days over 100 in San Antonio.
Not always, but we always get close.
I live in San Diego, and when preparing for a trip to Australia, I noticed that San Diego is almost exactly the same latitude north as Sydney is south, so it didn't surprise me that the weather/climate is very similar to what I was used to, including the mild weather (moderated by being close to the ocean), a relatively dry climate with low humidity, and a propensity for wildfires in the surrounding hills and mountains.
What they don't take in account is that while the "temperature is higher the humidity adds to that.
I'm not surprised Florida made #1 .
As far as hurricanes....
It depends on where you live as to how much hurricanes you experience. I lived in sw FL (Naples, Fort Myers). We got them once every 8-19 years. And then not real real bad.
Voiceplay is in Orlando. They get them every 2-4 years. And again not super bad.
Most of the worst ones are on the East Coast, Atlantic Ocean. Miami, Ft Lauderdale, Daytona Beach and so on.
The difference? East hurricanes come from Africa (Atlantic) or Mexico (Gulf) areas. As they move across the water they build up. The hotter and more water the more powerful.
Atlantic has more water than the Gulf.
Also humidity....
Humid means wet. Not meaning hot. So most anywhere that is wet is humid in the summer.
That is why 90% of the hottest states are near coasts. Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, California, Texas, Louisiana, Arizona, etc.
I know someone who lived in Tucson Arizona and he made the dumb choice to walk barefoot on the cement outside to get home and he had blisters so big on his feet that you couldn’t avoid having to pop them or he wouldn’t be able to walk. But even walking with them popped hurt like hell for him. That’s how hot it gets here plus he accidentally ran into a jumping cactus too because he decided to not stay on the path that was provided.
We get snow every winter. We had 29 inches 2 yrs ago. In one day We where upper 60 overnight with thunderstorm and tornadoes. By Noon we dropped 40 degrees and had ice snd snow in PM. Welcome to Oklahoma.
I had friends in Oklahoma, and never knew what to expect when I visited. I loved it though.
It's currently -6°C in the northern 🇺🇸 where I'm at.
Phoenix temperatures? A little over 100 degrees in the summer?
I have relatives in Phoenix - here's some current data.
This past summer (meaning all of June, July, and August) - 2024 - the Average temperature, meaning the 24 hour average for the entire summer was 99F!
They had 113 consecutive days with highs above 100F and sixty one of those days exceeded 110F.
October 1st and 6th reached 113F, and the 7th was 110F.
My brother lives near Phoenix. He gives us daily weather reports. It's much more severe than the video shows.
I am surprised he didn't mention the Death Valley summer temps which average over 120 degrees.
Don't get much hotter or drier.
But does anybody actually live in that area?
I've lived from Florida to Michigan. I would never live in either again. The south is too humid for me except for where I live now, the mountains of North Carolina. We have four distinct seasons and none of them are extreme.
Im thinking that video is underestimating the highs and the lows. I know it’s an avg but it sure seems like it’s a lot hotter in ATL and SC
The video isn’t accurate at all. Phoenix hits 110-115 daily during summer. North Texas can get -5F. Austin hits 110F several times a year.
Phoenix is Hell on Earth.
This year it was 100+ F from June to November. 110 fro. June to September. But i prefer it to Michigan.
He makes "humid" sound like a good thing. 😂
I remember when I visited Perth and Fremantle back in the 1980's... I was struck by how similar it felt to San Diego (weather wise).
A number of us commented on it.
\] This revierw of'best' warm clinates is utterBS. He must have been from the soughtern states. Humidity is a killer! Most of the US deaths due to heat in the summer is in the northeast, not the southwest, such as Arizona. In your last video aboutthe coldest states, I responded their as well since I live in Minneaplolis, MN for 13 years, finioshed high school, wen to college an finished there, got married, had to kids and left! The weathe is so bad there, Winter and so humid and buggy in the short summer. Then I lived in Souther CA for 7 years, and we went to the beach on Thanksgiving (late Nov), and again on Christmas (late Dec). Then we moved to Arizona, where it is almost always sunny, with no fires, no big stores from the ocean, no earthquakes, no mus slides, etc. While we did love CA, I grew to love Arizona almost as much. The Winters are warmer and much sunnier. While the summers are definitely harsher because the high daytime temps are 105-116F just about everyday, but essentially no rain at all, which is why we are considered in the desert (must be under 10" of precipitation a year. We get only 7". The San Jose Bay area (Silicon Valley) gets 14" a year, sometimes really big storms from the ocean to go over that. The dry heat is amazing, and as long as you stay out of the sun, you can handle it pretty well. We have been here 24 years now, and we were on CA 25 years (split between Southern CA and Northern CA). So, if just based on the weather alone, I would place AZ as # 2 only IF you like living on a very isolated island (Hawaii), and #1 otherwise.
I have lived in Louisiana all my life. I can confirm we are a humid oven down here about 8 months out of the year. I would say miserable is a better word for the heat we get vs enjoyable....
This video makes humidity sound like a good thing. I'm east of Dallas. I visited New Orleans and moisture was dripping down the sides of buildings.
Hottest day ever was in 1961 in Kopperl Texas, called Satan's Storm and it reached 60⁰C/140⁰F. The hottest "place" on earth is Death Valley in California at 134⁰, I think.
I am from the SC lowcountry. In the winter our average daytime high is around 60 degrees. At night probably 45. We might get a handful of days a year where it gets down to 34. The last couple winters its been 60-80 all winter and it is hot and humid in the summer. Usually 85-95 every single day with high humidity. It gets hotter than that but that is about what it is every day. Hottest I have ever seen was back in I think it was 2012 in late June it hit 106 the heat index was somewhere around 120 with the humidity. We have seasons I guess but its nothing like up north. Our fall and spring temps are like summers up north. I don't know where he got these numbers from. Maybe the upstate of SC up in the mountains because our average daytime high is around 60-62 range here in the winter. The only time we have days colder than that in the winter is when there is artic blasts that cool the whole eastern half of the country and that usually doesn't last more than a week. In the last 25 years I can remember snow 2x and once was just a dust and the other was about 3 inches that came down at night and by noon it was all gone. There has been a couple other times where there was some snow in the air but it all melted as soon as it hit the ground. It is cold as shit in the 30s right now at 5am but there is one of those cold artic blasts where its been cold as shit all the way to Florida the last few days. Its going to get back up to 70 in a week. This whole week though its going to be around 50 every day and 30-40 at night the whole eastern half of the country is cold as shit right now. Actually I am at one of my other houses right now on the NY/PA line and its only 6 degrees colder up here right now only difference is we have 7-8 inches of snow here from the lake effect that has pounded us since Thanksgiving. Hardly any snow here at 7-8 inches though really if you drive just north or west of here people have 3-4 feet of snow maybe even more. We had a big blast this morning. I had to take my dog to the vet and the roads hadn't been plowed and there was probably 3 inches on the damn road and was snowing so hard you could only see maybe 100 feet in front of you. We only had probably 3-4 inches before this morning in a few hours today we got another 4 inches or so and it all came down in just a couple hours. You get closer to the lake though and the snow could be up to your chest.
Florida here. I believe he is mistaken. About many points.
I dont know if i agree with the highs and low in each state cuz here in CA it gets from 10 to 120
I love the fact that after a few states the guy stops talking about the weather negative side probably because all the state on the gulf and Atlantic ocean side have flooding and hurricane risks and he forgot to mention that California doesn’t just have wildfires but atmospheric rivers and rock slides, mud slides, and earthquakes plus flooding and shark triangle .And Hawaii has the volcano and is in the great white shark triangle plus earthquakes and tropical storms and wildfires and flooding it’s an island. Oklahoma is one of which has the most tornadoes in tornado alley and can also have wildfires and flooding. Texas was warned about an ice storm and freezing temperatures and said they could handle it but they couldn’t. People died and houses were destroyed. Here’s the truth all states have dangerous and deadly weather events in the USA it just depends on what you’re willing to deal with. Like I’m willing to deal with the tornadoes or flooding and freezing temperatures and blizzard conditions for up to 4-6 months of the year so I live in Minnesota.
today it is 65 degrees/ 18 celsius. i am in shorts and a tee shirt. i'm in san diego. average is 57-72 degrees 22-57 degrees celsius. i will probably be wearing shorts on xmas
Elvis loved going to Hawaii Lyle.
I think a lot of Alaska is a rainforest, but not a "tropical" rainforest. Although I may be wrong.
No live music stream today??
No I'm sick, just resting.
@@PatrolNation Sorry to hear. Get better soon.
I don't know what study this is but it doesn't do Phoenix Justice because I work outdoors. In July of this year and most of August it never got below 90° Fahrenheit!!! So telling me that Arizona is number 10 on this list sounds ridiculous!!!
that is because it has the mountains so the whole state is not hot
San Diego has probably the best weather in the country
I can vouch for that. There are a lot of things we can complain about in San Diego, but the weather definitely isn't one of them. It's low/moderate humidity from the inland desert influence, temps not insanely high or low due to the proximity to the ocean (what I call "Mother nature's air conditioner"), and nearly all cyclonic storms in the Pacific either peter out or veer well to the south of us because of the prevailing ocean currents.
See the thing is, you cannot escape the heat. If the powers out and it's 100 degrees and 95% humidity...your dead. Also have fun working in the garden. The colder it gets, the more clothing you put on and also there is another millions of years old remedy for it that the cave men figured out...fire.
I guess 60 could maybe feel cold if it had humidity and wind with it
60 is freezing, but 90 isn't really hot either.
@@G2_Shane well checking my area, 56F/13.33C for the high today which will be unseasonably warm, and will be the highest for months to come, reminds me not having excess humidity can truly be a blessing.
I'm surprised Nevada wasn't on the list.. must be because of the mountains?? I don't think this list is very accurate.
How old is this list? Temps in thee places are much hotter than said here!
The facts of this video is inaccurate. They must be using their numbers as an average of a 24hr day. Temperatures in south louisiana range from 15 to 120 degrees Fahrenheit.
He is full of it. This is his opinion, there is no proof, the temperature has been the same for ever. During the summer it will hit 115 deg.
Don't put too much faith in their weather predictions for 20 years in the future, because if those same prediction experts were all that right we should have all died back in 2012.
Every time I hear the words " climate change " on any post I dismiss the whole post as bullshit and move on to something else
Pretty terrible list
Yeah they didn't even mention California's world record for hottest ambient temperature in the shade on earth.
This list is not accurate at all.
As a born and raised south Floridian(commenting before you get to Florida) I knew Florida was #1 on the list, also listening to you speak about where you're from Australia, I was like Florida, we're literally called the sunshine state🤣 you'd love it here😎 also our houses are built for hurricanes here unlike in other states because we have been through soo many, so unless you're on the coast, you're usually fine, unless there's tornadoes, which happen when you get a strong hurricane😅
Really, Florida is prepared for hurricanes? Not feeling it. Been there once, way too humid.
@Kris-qk6ow did I ask you?