I hate summer!!!!!

Velociraptor

You were in the wrong part of New Mexico and Arizona. Get above 6500' and it is absolutely beautiful. We didn't have nor need AC.

So now you're in Western Kentucky, beautiful country with ticks, chiggers, heat, humidity, and poison ivy. But you also have LBL.
 
I hate summer!!!!!

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I LOVE SUMMER. It's a wonderful 95 today and nice and humid. Thank God I'm a southern girl.
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I hate heat, I hate heat with humidity worse. Thank goodness we have mostly dry heat here.

But, you know what would be nice, if I hadn't slept late that one day and totally missed SPRING.

It is really nice here when we do actually have spring and don't get 100 degree days until July.
 
I just want a dry place with a year-round temp range of 50-70 degrees. That's not too much to ask, right?
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I'm a Southern Girl, too. WAY south. Still hate heat and humidity. And someone else will, too, when they get a tad older and suffer from HOT FLASHES, LOL!
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* I don't even CARE if it's dry ALL the time after 3 years of hurricane damage! I'm well versed in "leak management", lol. BUT, those temps + a generous cut in humidity sound pretty awesome.
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Well, I'm going to chime in just to make all of you that are suffering in the heat feel just a little bit better.

It's the 5th of June and the highest temp we've had so far is 64 degrees. But that was just one day. Most of our days have been in the mid 40's. Right now, at 11:30 in the morning, it's only 45 degrees. We had over 10 inches of rain by the middle of May and we're headed for another record for June as it's rained every day since the 1st. My daughter left for camp this morning with a winter jacket on and raingear over that. We never put away winter hats and gloves.

We can't grow tomatoes without a serious greenhouse because it doesn't get warm enough and forget about peppers, cucumbers and any sort of melon. The wonderful, sweet water melon everyone mentions? Ours are shipped from the lower 48 and we're lucky of they are halfway ripe when they get here.

Flower gardens are pretty much a joke, although lots of us try - the moisture just rots everything. There is no such thing as pastureland, a bale of timothy hay sells for $23.00 (yes, that's per bale - you don't want to know what the per ton cost is) and all livestock has to be fed year round.

HOWEVER: When the sun comes out and shines on the lush green hills its the most beautiful place in the world. We have fresh halibut, salmon and crab year round and once you've seen a brown bear up close you will never forget it.

I guess my point is that there is no perfect place. But they each have their redeeming qualities. I envy each of you the deep heat and overflowing gardens but I'm not ready to trade for it yet!
 
That's why the bears get so big, they are watered a lot.

I do miss Alaskan summers, except for the mosquitoes and when you forget to go to bed because it is still light.
 

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