We are in Perth, the car told us it was 41.5 degc on the way to the beach today, but it is very dry with low humidity so not as bad as it sounds. One place was 43.8 at midday, which is over 110F.
We left the house open today and ran the misters, spent some time in the pool, because we are elevated and catch the breeze it was fine, might run the AC tonight for sleeping.
Perth people are used to it, the real problem is the temp of the minimum, for sleeping.
Is there a reason ground-coupled geat exchangers wouldn't work?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground-coupled_heat_exchange...
For homeless people?
Wow. I skimmed the title and just read the article.
Aside from a single sentence mentioning homeless people mid way, nothing else in the article was geared towards the homeless.
Even the splash image at top was people lounging on a beach midday. Not something you'd associate with homeless people doing.
We are in Perth, the car told us it was 41.5 degc on the way to the beach today, but it is very dry with low humidity so not as bad as it sounds. One place was 43.8 at midday, which is over 110F.
We left the house open today and ran the misters, spent some time in the pool, because we are elevated and catch the breeze it was fine, might run the AC tonight for sleeping.
Perth people are used to it, the real problem is the temp of the minimum, for sleeping.
Isn’t the real problem that it’s just getting warmer and warmer? These bouts are getting pretty frequent I reckon
Here you go - https://amp.watoday.com.au/national/western-australia/winter...
Last summer was very mild for us and this is the first really hot day we have had this summer.
It is very hard to differentiate weather from climate experientially.