Harry Palmr wrote: » Roasting day in the Diese, I'm posting this naked.
Jpmarn wrote: » This Spring season started much worse than a normal Irish winter with a blizzard threat but is ending up better than a normal Irish summer with plenty of sunshine and very high temperatures although shy of reaching the threshold of status yellow warnings for high temperatures. Remember the low temperatures at the start of this spring season.
Ultimate Seduction wrote: » Syran how does this May compare with recent years in terms of railfall and average temp
Gonzo wrote: » I feel we never really had 'spring' this year. We basically went from 'winter' to 'summer' in the space of about a week. If only this could continue all the way to late October then a very quick transition to the depths of winter in November!.
Harry Palmr wrote: » Can anyone remember the last time we had this, it was about 6/7 years back I think. A persistent miserable grey easterly that went on from late winter until May, two weeks of Spring and then it was Summer.
Oneiric 3 wrote: » Still 17.2 here at 11.17pm, with not even a fluff of a breeze. Enough! :mad:
highdef wrote: » Please don't say such horrible things. Enjoy the pleasures of this warmth. Throw off the sheets or duvet when sleeping at night and embrace the heat that nature is treating us to. Open your bedroom windows for a few hours before bedtime if you like it cooler. In fact, open all available windows.... You'd be surprised how much the house cools down when there is good circulation in place. It's rare that it's too warm to sleep in this country, even with no bed sheets over you and as it stands, this warm spell is certainly not noteworthy with regards to uncomfortably warm nights.
Gonzo wrote: » I think the temperatures we have right now for night time is really comfortable. Most parts of the world experience night time summer temperatures much warmer than we get. Even London and the SE of England get's proper warm nights regularly during the summer, as does most of continental Europe, United States, Canada, Australia, NZ and most of Asia. Ireland is almost unique in that it rarely experiences a warm night and when it happens, most of our homes are not ready to deal with it. If we all had air conditioning units, warm nights would be very manageable.