cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Canada sizzling!

Orion
Explorer
Explorer
We are at the beginning of a severe heatwave here in BC. The forecast high for Kamloops is 46C , which if achieved, will be the highest EVER Canadian temperature. What is really amazing is that it is still June! For those metrically challenged, that is 115F. Yes many places in the US have been hotter, but I bet that if we weren't still in a pandemic, we could go down to the ferry dock and watch passengers getting off the Seattle ferry wearing winter jackets! ๐Ÿ˜‰
Sometimes I sit and think deep thoughts. other times, I just sit!
51 REPLIES 51

Boon_Docker
Explorer III
Explorer III
My heart goes out to those people in Lytton. So far 90% of the village has been destroyed.

Orion
Explorer
Explorer
The latest news is that the village of Lytton has been evacuated because of fires that have broken out all over town. Talk about out of the frying pan and into the fire! This is going to be a terrible fire season! We live right on the coast and we've had no rain for about three weeks!
Sometimes I sit and think deep thoughts. other times, I just sit!

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
One thing aggravates me. I built and had it certified by the National Weather Service, an official NWS weather station in Concord, CA., in the 1950s I was in grade school. I used my paper route money to purchase a foot+ tall mercury thermometer, which turned our to be National Bureau of Standards certified with certificate.

In July of 1970 the San Francisco Bay Area suffered under a week long heat wave. At 6:00 AM opening the door meant sun rays on the face and they burned with heat. At the Shell Oil refinery in Martinez, we were taking salt pills and avoiding heaters, steam pipes, and other radiating surfaces.

When the shift ended I headed home. My car had no A/C
But the thermometer in the NWS box read 117F. The next day the Concord Transcript and San Francisco Examiner reported official NWS temperature records of 115 and 117F. Headlines. My house did not have A/C either.

But this is what I did.

From my forays to Mexico I had a ton of bulk cloth mosquito netting. I got a strong fan and wetted down the netting then wrapped it around me. When the fan played across the netting I actually started to get chilled. I even head it wrapped around my head. I would unwrap it every 15 minutes or so and re-soak it.

The weekend passed then my vacation started. I headed to my parent's house at Lake Tahoe. It got to 90F there and I drove up to high altitude then back packed to 10,000 feet. Still hot but the cool stream water soaked my shorts and tee shirt.

If the humidity is less than 50% I sure can recommend the soaked mosquito netting and fan cool down. Years later I learned that heat waves in the mountains and low humidity can be tamed with evaporative swamp coolers. I've measured 100F entry air and 68F exhaust air with ten percent relative humidity

High temps and high humidity are another beast altogether. When it gets to be a steam bath in Las Penas, my bedroom has both an air conditioner and de humidifier.

The newspaper reported dozens of deaths in Canada.

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
Orion wrote:
Again, this is Canada and June!
You're talking Death Valley temps.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

Orion
Explorer
Explorer
Our heat wave has now peaked and the final result in the village of Lytton was 49.6c , which is 121F ! Again, this is Canada and June!
Sometimes I sit and think deep thoughts. other times, I just sit!

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
fj12ryder wrote:
A couple hundred years of data is hardly enough to produce incontrovertible results.
As I mentioned, we know CO2 concentrations from ice cores going back several hundred thousand years. That should be pretty good.

We know warming and cooling has happened, but not in 150 years. And I agree, continually pumping stuff into the atmosphere is not a great idea.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

fj12ryder
Explorer III
Explorer III
Personally I find it hard to believe that all the pollution being pumped into the atmosphere can't help but contribute to problems. But climate change prediction software has to have solid data to produce meaningful results: GIGO. A couple hundred years of data is hardly enough to produce incontrovertible results.

Personally I see no problem with trying to clean up the air and water, but nothing much can be done until the population growth curve can be leveled out. Until then it's just bandaid actions.
Howard and Peggy

"Don't Panic"

BCSnob
Explorer
Explorer
Alaska oil and gas operators active on the North Slope face a long-term, existential threat to infrastructure for which there is no easy solution โ€“ thawing permafrost.

Source: S&P Global, 2019


Oil companies are investing more in technologies to refrigerate the permafrost which is melting because of use of the products they are producing on the permafrost. :h

Makes me wonder if it is the layer formally known as "perma"frost.
Mark & Renee
Working Border Collies: Nell (retired), Tally (retired), Grant (semi retired), Lee, Fern & Hattie
Duke & Penny (Anatolians) home guarding the flock
2001 Chevy Express 2500 Cargo (rolling kennel)
2007 Nash 22M

Orion
Explorer
Explorer
I don't normally get into the climate change thing much especially when dealing with a very hot or cold day, but when Canada achieves its highest ever temp, 46.6C 116F in JUNE, it makes you think! This is a month earlier than our average hottest day of the year . If this had happened towards the end of July, that figure could have been 121F ! And remember too that these are official temps, not what someone recorded with his home thermometer on the deck! I see that that temp in Lytton BC, the north end of the Fraser Canyon, was hotter than Phoenix!
Sometimes I sit and think deep thoughts. other times, I just sit!

d3500ram
Explorer III
Explorer III
Had wet snow spritzes coming down on my deck last night around 2200 and woke up to a bit of snow coverage on the high peaks this morning. Very pleasant today with highs in the upper 60's.

BTW- I am at just under 10,000 feet.
Sold the TC, previous owner of 2 NorthStar pop-ups & 2 Northstar Arrows...still have the truck:

2005 Dodge 3500 SRW, Qcab long bed, NV-6500, diesel, 4WD, Helwig, 9000XL,
Nitto 285/70/17 Terra Grapplers, Honda eu3000Is, custom overload spring perch spacers.

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
The temperature in Lytton in the southern B.C. Interior rose to 46.1 on Sunday, setting a new Canadian record, according to Environment Canada.

This won't make boondocking any easier!

I see myself becoming a 'power pole princess'. ๐Ÿ˜ž
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

happycamper1942
Explorer
Explorer
41 degrees C or 106F on southern Vancouver Island today which is crazy. All sorts of records being broken.
2008 Ford F350 crew cab short box PSD, 2021 TravelAir 90W camper

Moderator
Moderator
Moderator
PackerBacker, ATC is strictly for topics NOT related to rving or camping so good call. ๐Ÿ™‚

Community Alumni
Not applicable
Time to move this, it's gone way off any context to rving or camping in Canada or Alaska

Moderator