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Hot, dry weather likely in most parts of country

Zibago

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Hot, dry weather likely in most parts of country
Very hot weather expected in Sukkur, Sibbi, Larkana, Shaheed Benazirabad, Multan, Bahawalpur, Sahiwal, DI Khan.
hot-dry-weather-likely-in-most-parts-of-country-1492133381-3000.jpg

06:03 AM, 14 Apr, 2017
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Mainly hot and dry weather is expected in most parts of the country, while very hot weather is expected in Sukkur, Sibbi, Larkana, Shaheed Benazirabad, Multan, Bahawalpur, Sahiwal and DI Khan divisions.

Temperature of some major cities recorded on Friday morning:

Islamabad fifteen degree centigrade, Lahore twenty two, Karachi twenty six, Peshawar eighteen, Quetta, Murree and Muzaffarabad thirteen and Gilgit seven degree centigrade
 
. . .
It's a chilly 22 over here. :D

Does it snow ever in LA? Or does that signal the impending apocalypse?

Where I live we even ski in the Summer.

EEP5298s.jpg


15°C (59°F) is the hottest monthly average, in July.

I'd like to think I have a biological "keep frozen" label. Don't do well in the warm:wacko:.

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Does it snow ever in LA? Or does that signal the impending apocalypse?


Snow?! o_O

We get scared whenever it rains, even if we need it.


It used to snow occasionally, but I hasn't for quite some time:

"Snow once fell on the Los Angeles coastal plain with some regularity – on average, about once per decade. Since official records were first kept in 1877, the downtown Los Angeles weather station observed measurable snowfall three times, in 1882, 1932, and 1949, and news reports recorded snowfall elsewhere in the Los Angeles Basin in 1913, 1921, 1922, 1926, 1944, 1957, 1962 – and then never again, for 54 years running."

15°C (59°F) is the hottest month average, in July.


:o:

That's freezing cold weather for us. We would freak out.



We can't live without the beach. :smitten:

IMG_1748.jpg
 
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"Snow once fell on the Los Angeles coastal plain with some regularity – on average, about once per decade. Since official records were first kept in 1877, the downtown Los Angeles weather station observed measurable snowfall three times, in 1882, 1932, and 1949, and news reports recorded snowfall elsewhere in the Los Angeles Basin in 1913, 1921, 1922, 1926, 1944, 1957, 1962 – and then never again, for 54 years running."
Ten snowflakes per acre is what Floridians and Californians would call "Measurable Snowfall". Puhleaze, you'd find more Snowfall in a walk-in freezer. :crazy:
 
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Want to trade? it's 7 right now where I'm at:enjoy:.
We will look into your proposal after the mercury touches 45 C or more :D
Right now in month of April tempreture doesnot cross 35C

Does it snow ever in LA? Or does that signal the impending apocalypse?

Where I live we even ski in the Summer.

EEP5298s.jpg


15°C (59°F) is the hottest month average, in July.

I'd like to think I have a biological "keep frozen" label. Don't do well in the warm:wacko:.

View attachment 390755
Ah man.in July we get 35 to 45 :-(
 
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It's a real thing. Hard to believe for you Californians I know, but it's true:woot:! Snow really does exist.

It's one of those mythical creations, like unbiased media or Swedes, you think they aren't real. But turns out, they really are!

Summer's fake though. You can't convince me that's a real thing, I'm not falling for it:enjoy:.

We can't live without the beach. :smitten:

IMG_1748.jpg

I quite like the mountains myself, but ever warm season a number of Norwegians will shed their winter coats and head to the beaches. Yes, you read that right. We really do have beaches too.

23365315.jpg


Further inland tends to be colder then the coastal areas of Norway. That's Oslo's beach above, but where I live is mountainous so inversion and cold air gets caught in our valley and keeps the temperatures nice and fridge.

1280px-Loen.jpg


Some places actually get into the upper 20s and low 30s. Heck, even the far North of Finnmark is warmer then where I live!


Yeah I know, dumb question:jester:. I'm full of them.

To be honest, I kind of expected that, but I'm always up for being surprised too. Any good and cold places in California? I've never been myself, but I've heard the North of the state is radically different from the south. More green, more forested.

Sounds nice. I really should visit the States sometime. Something tells me Montana or North Dakota would probably be prime vacation destinations though:lol:.

Or maybe Alaska, during the Winter of course:D.

Ah man.in July we get 35 to 45 :-(

:o:

Egad! I think my brain just melted thinking about that!

How on Earth do you manage? I mean, we can always put on a coat if we're feeling cold (like that ever happens), but what? What do you do to cool down?

Don't tell me you're all running around in the buff:wacko:. I'd find the nearest pool and proceed not the come out. Ever.

Ten snowflakes per acre is what Floridians and Californians would call "Measurable Snowfall". Puhleaze, you'd find more Snowfall in a walk-in freezer. :crazy:

:lol:

I love the differences in people's climitization. Around here this is just another snow day. "Pack your bags, schools in an hour and you're walking." Heard that a few times during my younger years (slightly younger. I'm not even 20 yet:p:).

a_woman_carries_a_shovel_through_a_parking_lot_during_blizzard_conditions_in_chicago_WMRI.jpg


I could only image the panic that would ensue if a blizzard hit LA, or as we call them, Tuesday afternoon.

We will look into your proposal after the mercury touches 45 C or more :D

-45C right. Cause if so we've got you covered:p:.
 
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Summer's fake though. You can't convince me that's a real thing, I'm not falling for it:enjoy:.
i wish it was though i dont like it at all but i have a fair tolerance for dry heat i mean i once walked 3 km in 41C reason was kind of silly though :D
Egad! I think my brain just melted thinking about that!
Elsa is of beings so fragile :D
https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/20...n-temperature-likely-to-reach-52c-in-larkana/
The worst heat activity takes place in SOuth Pakistan its called the loo wind
https://rashidfaridi.com/2013/02/23/the-loo/
Its like someone opened an oven :-(
How on Earth do you manage? I mean, we can always put on a coat if we're feeling cold (like that ever happens), but what? What do you do to cool down?
When we are inside A.C,s do the trick but outside you just suck it up buttercup :D
Its advised to keep your head covered though walking in the sun gives a really nasty headache if you dont take precautionary measures
Don't tell me you're all running around in the buff:wacko:. I'd find the nearest pool and proceed not the come out. Ever.
I cant swim so no jumping in a water body larger than a bath tub :-(
-45C right. Cause if so we've got you covered:p:.
The lowest i have been to was -5C so cant really imagine how it feels like(-5 was fun till walking in the snow made my socks soggy )
 
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It's a real thing. Hard to believe for you Californians I know, but it's true:woot:! Snow really does exist.

It's one of those mythical creations, like unbiased media or Swedes, you think they aren't really. But turns out, they really are!


I'll have to take your word for it. You sure it's not just Norse mythology? :D

Summer's fake though. You can't convince me that's a real thing, I'm not falling for it:enjoy:.


Come to the valleys or the Inland Empire in August, here in the LA area. You'll be convinced immediately. :smokin:

Ever experience 40+ degree weather before, for days on end? :devil:


I quite like the mountains myself, but ever warm season a number of Norwegians will shed their winter coats and head to the beaches. Yes, you read that right. We really do have beaches too.

23365315.jpg


What's the temperature in this picture, just curious? :P

Some places actually get into the upper 20s and low 30s. Heck, even the far North of Finnmark is warmer then where I live!


:blink: :help:

To be honest, I kind of expected that, but I'm always up for being surprised too. Any good and cold places in California? I've never been myself, but I've heard the North of the state is radically different from the south. More green, more forested.


Indeed it is. California is very ecologically diverse.

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We have more than just beaches and chaparral. There are forests, mountains, grasslands, and deserts too.

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Come visit the Redwood forests:

home.jpg


Armstrong-Redwood-Forest-1024x832.jpg


6986993468_7946ca0ab0_b.jpg



Or go to the Sierra Nevada Mountains, and climb Mount Whitney. It's the tallest mountain in the contiguous United States (tallest outside of Alaska).

Mount_Whitney_2003-03-25.jpg


And of course, there's Yosemite National Park:

Yosemite.National.Park.original.8741.jpg



fd942491e60e0b0df4ed96b33b8343f7.jpg


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:lol:

I love the differences in people's climitization. Around here this is just another snow day. "Pack your bags, schools in an hour and you're walking." Heard that a few times during my younger years (slightly younger. I'm not even 20 yet:p:).

a_woman_carries_a_shovel_through_a_parking_lot_during_blizzard_conditions_in_chicago_WMRI.jpg


I could only image the panic that would ensue if a blizzard hit LA, or as we call them, Tuesday afternoon.


It's happened before:

CityDig: A Snowstorm in Los Angeles? It’s Happened.

Angelenos dreaming of a White Christmas, take note: The scene above may be set in Hollywood, but it’s no special effects shot. The photo from the Los Angeles Public Library’s collections documents the result of a freak snowstorm that passed over Hollywood on Jan. 22, 1921, dusting the gabled rooftops of the Charlie Chaplin Studios and rendering La Brea Blvd. a slushy mess.

Surface temperatures in the lowlands of the Los Angeles Basin and adjacent valleys rarely drop to freezing. But when the right atmospheric conditions prevail, Los Angeles can become a winter wonderland overnight. The biggest recorded snowstorm to visit the city hit on Jan. 10, 1949. Snowfall lasted nearly three days and varied by location; barely a third of an inch fell on the L.A. civic center, where official measurements were made, but nearly a foot fell elsewhere. Snow blanketed beach cities from Santa Monica to Laguna. Nighttime temperatures dipped into the 20s.

In a city whose traffic arteries seize up at the first drops of rain, snow brought major disruptions. Icy conditions forced the CHP to close portions of the Pacific Coast Highway, and the canyon roads over the Santa Monica Mountains became impassable; an accumulated foot of snow trapped nearly twenty automobiles in Laurel Canyon. The Southern California Gas Company reported record demand as furnaces worked around the clock. In the San Gabriel Valley, orange growers burned smudge pots in a futile effort to protect their crops from frost.

http://www.lamag.com/citythinkblog/citydig-a-snowstorm-in-los-angeles-its-happened/

Ten snowflakes per acre is what Floridians and Californians would call "Measurable Snowfall". Puhleaze, you'd find more Snowfall in a walk-in freezer. :crazy:


O ye, of little faith... :rolleyes:


chaplin_studios_00013600.jpg

It's no movie magic – that's real snow on Hollywood's La Brea Blvd. in 1921. The Charlie Chaplin Studios (now home to the Jim Henson Company) are on the right. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


broadway_at_12th_1944_0.jpeg



pico_east_from_union_1930_usc.jpeg

Snow on L.A.'s Pico Boulevard, looking east from Union in 1930. Photo courtesy of the USC Libraries – California Historical Society Collection.


ucla_snow_00042530.jpg

Snow on the UCLA campus in January 1932. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


universal_studios_1948_00022470_0.jpg

Universal Studios after a 1948 snow storm. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


jpl_snow.jpg

Rocky chaparral foothills stand above a snowy Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena/La Cañada Flintridge, 1949. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL Archive.


basilone.jpg

A snowball fight at the Basilone Homes in Pacoima after the 1949 storm. Photo courtesy of of the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research, Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles Photograph Collection.


noho_1949_00002187.jpg

Eleanor Valencia, Veronica Valencia Dizon, and Esther Rivera build a snowperson in North Hollywood, 1949. Photo courtesy of the Shades of L.A. Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


monterey_park_1949_0.jpg

The San Gabriel community of Monterey Park after a 1949 snowstorm. Photo courtesy of the Monterey Park History Collection, Monterey Park Bruggemeyer Library.


tujunga_1962_00112343.jpg

David and Bob Naranjo drag a toboggan down a Tujunga street after the snowstorm of 1962. Photo courtesy of the Valley Times Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


https://www.kcet.org/shows/lost-la/why-hasnt-it-snowed-in-los-angeles-since-1962
 
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O ye, of little faith... :rolleyes:


chaplin_studios_00013600.jpg

It's no movie magic – that's real snow on Hollywood's La Brea Blvd. in 1921. The Charlie Chaplin Studios (now home to the Jim Henson Company) are on the right. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


broadway_at_12th_1944_0.jpeg



pico_east_from_union_1930_usc.jpeg

Snow on L.A.'s Pico Boulevard, looking east from Union in 1930. Photo courtesy of the USC Libraries – California Historical Society Collection.


ucla_snow_00042530.jpg

Snow on the UCLA campus in January 1932. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


universal_studios_1948_00022470_0.jpg

Universal Studios after a 1948 snow storm. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


jpl_snow.jpg

Rocky chaparral foothills stand above a snowy Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena/La Cañada Flintridge, 1949. Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL Archive.


basilone.jpg

A snowball fight at the Basilone Homes in Pacoima after the 1949 storm. Photo courtesy of of the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research, Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles Photograph Collection.


noho_1949_00002187.jpg

Eleanor Valencia, Veronica Valencia Dizon, and Esther Rivera build a snowperson in North Hollywood, 1949. Photo courtesy of the Shades of L.A. Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.


monterey_park_1949_0.jpg

The San Gabriel community of Monterey Park after a 1949 snowstorm. Photo courtesy of the Monterey Park History Collection, Monterey Park Bruggemeyer Library.


tujunga_1962_00112343.jpg

David and Bob Naranjo drag a toboggan down a Tujunga street after the snowstorm of 1962. Photo courtesy of the Valley Times Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.
Ok, that's better than all the hype that Florida was making in 2014.
 
. . . .
Come to the valleys or the Inland Empire in August, here in the LA area. You'll be convinced immediately. :smokin:

:o:

Sorry, my denial is simply too strong:D.

What's the temperature in this picture, just curious? :P

The July average in Oslo is a hot 19 C, so it's probably around that.

Come visit the Redwood forests:

home.jpg


Armstrong-Redwood-Forest-1024x832.jpg


6986993468_7946ca0ab0_b.jpg



Or go to the Sierra Nevada Mountains, and climb Mount Whitney. It's the tallest mountain in the contiguous United States (tallest outside of Alaska).

Mount_Whitney_2003-03-25.jpg


And of course, there's Yosemite National Park:

Yosemite.National.Park.original.8741.jpg



fd942491e60e0b0df4ed96b33b8343f7.jpg


maxresdefault.jpg

:wub:

Well that does look rather lovely. I do love me some big red wood, and Yosemite looks, well, just like where I live:happy:.

O ye, of little faith... :rolleyes:


chaplin_studios_00013600.jpg

It's no movie magic – that's real snow on Hollywood's La Brea Blvd. in 1921. The Charlie Chaplin Studios (now home to the Jim Henson Company) are on the right. Photo courtesy of the Security Pacific National Bank Collection – Los Angeles Public Library.

:what:

I'm confused? Is that snow or did someone just drop a powdered donut:p:? If your house isn't buried, it's not "real" snow.

norway-winter-cabin-wallpaper-2.jpg


Call me weird but the only place in US i really want to visit is Death Valley California @XenoEnsi-14 @Kitten

nope.gif


I overheat in 20 degree weather. Death valley gets into the upper 30s and 40s!! I think I'll go visit the Norwegian transplants in Minnesota instead.

1d43562e-8477-41ff-8ba0-be0b3948908a.jpg


You can even "sandboard" while you're there. :enjoy:
319979-Sandboarding-in-death-valley-0.jpg


Sandboarding-Death-Valley-National-Park-California-Image-Credits-@tiffpenguin.jpg

:o:

Witchcraft!!! I've heard of Summer skiing, but on the sand?
 
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