The recent heat wave in the U.S. has prompted some of you to ask me how hot it is here.
Basic Geography Reminder: South Africa is in the Southern Hemisphere. The seasons are reversed from those in the Northern Hemisphere (where the U.S. is located).
It is winter here!
And boy howdy, is it ever. Yesterday as I drove to work, it was 2.5C (around 36F), and I don’t think it warmed up much above 8C (46). There were rumors in the morning of snow in nearby suburbs Krugersdorp, Sandton and Honeydew, but I never saw anything myself.
I made sure to be home in time for the 7.00 p.m. news so I could see how the rest of the country fared. The southern and Eastern Cape areas are having flooding rainstorms. Roads and bridges are washing out, flights delayed, some people dead. The central Free State had snow. Bloemfontein had about 5 inches! (I was in Bloemfontein last week, and it was -9C when the plane landed that morning!) Interior Eastern Cape and KwaZulu Natal provinces also had snow. The border to Lesotho (a mountainous country that is surrounded by South Africa) was closed because the road was impassable.
The high today will be only 10C (50F). As I’ve mentioned to some of you before, this may not seem all that cold, but keep in mind that most buildings – homes and offices alike – don’t have central heating. Our offices have individual units in each office, but the hallways, break room and bathrooms are icy. At my house, I bought a small space heater for the bedroom and another for the lounge. I have an electric mattress pad on my bed, plus a nice, fat down comforter. Sleeping is fine. It’s getting out of bed in the morning that’s a mission!
When I was here last winter (July and August), it was pretty mild. Daytime temps were in the mid teens (14-18C = 57-64F), sometimes warmer. “This is winter?” I thought. “I can live with this!” So, when I was packing things up in Birmingham, I had trouble deciding if I should bother bringing any wool sweaters, hats, gloves, scarves, etc. Thank goodness that I did!
Here are some news stories and photographs:
http://tinyurl.com/qp8zx
http://tinyurl.com/hyo6t
03 August 2006
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5 comments:
I guess the grass is always greener -- a while back you told me that you missed humidity. It's hard to imagine entertaining such a sentiment today in Philadelphia, where the temperature is expected to reach 98, with a dewpoint of 75. But I do have AC!
Hey Kati,
Sounds very nice! I would take 50 degrees any day now! It was 101 in Fort Payne this week!
Jay
Hey UF,
I DO miss humidity! It's a struggle to keep my lips from getting chapped all year, and right now I'm fighting what one customer called "winter fingers" -- dry, cracked and even bleeding cuticles.
xoxoxo
--ksg
Hey Jay,
Yesterday it was 10C (50F) -- INSIDE my house. That is cold, no matter how you slice it! Wish I could send Ft Payne some of this cool air...
--ksg
Loved your comment on my blog!! I think the accent thing is just a novelty issue...hmmm...Hope you're not blowing away. Oh, if you're interested in a new blog to stalk/enjoy, I posted a link on mine to another BSC student studying in SA (Cape Town). Can't wait to see you! When are you visiting again?
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