Fashion, beauty and animal loving language consultant from South Africa living in Stockholm, Sweden.
View all posts by Janet Carr
2 thoughts
Haha. Yes I live in Dubai. Have a similar picture of the car temp. Surprisingly, evenings are worse because when the sun goes down and the humidity increases it feels like a closed kitchen. We have air conditioning but I feel for the outdoor workers. Tough life.
A minimum of 43 degrees Celsius?? I would be like the Wicked Witch of the West – “I’m mellttttiiinnngg”.
But the upside to this is, any freshly washed laundry put outside on the clothesline would be done in two shakes of a lamb’s tail!! And when it reaches 52 degrees Celsius, you can ditch the skillet and instead fry your eggs on the sidewalk!
Many moons ago I did experience this kind of oppressive heat (it was around 120 degrees Fahrenheit) in the SouthWest part of the United States, but thank goodness it was a dry heat. I can’t imagine how people would be able to function at that temperature with high humidity instead – *horrors*!!
Haha. Yes I live in Dubai. Have a similar picture of the car temp. Surprisingly, evenings are worse because when the sun goes down and the humidity increases it feels like a closed kitchen. We have air conditioning but I feel for the outdoor workers. Tough life.
A minimum of 43 degrees Celsius?? I would be like the Wicked Witch of the West – “I’m mellttttiiinnngg”.
But the upside to this is, any freshly washed laundry put outside on the clothesline would be done in two shakes of a lamb’s tail!! And when it reaches 52 degrees Celsius, you can ditch the skillet and instead fry your eggs on the sidewalk!
Many moons ago I did experience this kind of oppressive heat (it was around 120 degrees Fahrenheit) in the SouthWest part of the United States, but thank goodness it was a dry heat. I can’t imagine how people would be able to function at that temperature with high humidity instead – *horrors*!!