Humidity in Louisiana. No rain.

    by NiceFollowing9541

    35 Comments

    1. IndependentAside9266 on

      The air is basically soup here. You’d think it rained with how everything looks damp.

    2. Whats the temperature? If its 85 I’m impressed. If its 55F, this is a normal morning where I live.

    3. lilmiscantberong on

      I heard Texas was the same way, how in the world do you guys handle that? I live in northern Michigan where it’s significantly colder but when we do get humidity it’s stifling

    4. Constant-Catch7146 on

      Hard no from me. We get a few hot humid days in the summer here in Minnesota, but that’s it. Can’t stand hot and humid—- and certainly not for a solid 6 months. Our winters here have been getting warmer in general, so they have also become more tolerable. It’ll be above freezing temp soon and we might even get some rain tonight. Snow will go bye bye.

    5. Happens in Miami like 50% of the year but mainly over night or early night. I don’t think I’ve seen it during the day unless it’s “winter”

    6. I was going to complain irl about the 18 in of snow I just spent 4 hours shoveling in New England, but now I’m good. No thank you.

    7. BrohanGutenburg on

      Also worth noting I just walked out with shorts and no shirt at 8am on Christmas morning in Lafayette lol.

    8. adderalpowered on

      Yeah I just took an ebike ride in shorts and a t shirt. It will be over 80 today. In oklahoma where it is usually 0-40 ° F. Extremely humid for the wintertime here.

    9. I visited New Orleans a few years ago and was driving around with the AC on full. When I got out of the car my glasses fogged up immediately because of the humidity.

    10. Yeah…good old Gulf Coast. Looks like this most mornings in Houston, too. Inside is unpleasant, too. Its like 78-79F outside this time of year so the AC barely runs and there is nothing to keep the humidity inside from creeping up to 65-70%.

      I actually just started running a dehumidifier set to 55%. Helps a lot.

    11. We are dealing with the same thing in Arkansas/Little Rock.

      It’s because we had enough cold weather prior to this warm spell that everything has cooled down. Carports, walls, floors, etc. were all now well below this extremely uncommon dewpoint.

      I literally could not walk on my carport yesterday – it was almost as slick as ice – due to the sheet of dew covering it. That’s not normal.

      This happens a few times every year during shoulder seasons when we get temp swings.

    Leave A Reply