It’s probably reasons like this that made people hate the word “moist” so much.My brother lived in Chicago for 10 years and talked about the 98/98 days, as in 98 degrees F, 98% humidity. I visited once during that. Holy hell.
I went to school there, too, and have walked that road in the top picture many times (it's hard to see in the picture, but it's very steep). It's unreal. Houghton is just not a place you would expect to have flooding like this. They can deal with massive amounts of snow, but not this much rain.Speaking of excessive moisture...
Flash flooding in Michigan’s U.P.
The wife went to college in this town, so she’s been watching with interest.
Something similar happened near Sault Ste Marie about 5 years ago, too.
—Patrick
Would be cooler (hotter?) at 128 F/128K miles/128 mph because then you'd have approximately 28 seconds to take the photo of all the numbers converging before the odometer changed (assuming the temperature remained constant, of course).You should get the odometer up to 122,000, and the speed up to 122 as well.
I, for one, am curious what would happen at 88 mph. It's hot enough, the vehicle is probably already leaving a flame trail.Would be cooler (hotter?) at 128 F/128K miles/128 mph because then you'd have approximately 28 seconds to take the photo of all the numbers converging before the odometer changed (assuming the temperature remained constant, of course).
/computation nerd
Dude, my electric bill here is 280-330 ... every month.Welp, it happened. I was warned it would happen, and after the gawdawful heat we had this month, it happened.
A $250+ electric bill.
Also another instance of EVERYBODY DUCK!Tiny island being formed from the lava flowing into the ocean.