Yeah, and bring your dog or girlfriend with you so you'll know what it's really going to be like.
For you it will just be the dog.
For you it will just be the dog.
Yeah, and bring your dog or girlfriend with you so you'll know what it's really going to be like.
For you it will just be the dog.
As predicted, new daily, monthly and all-time record highs were set throughout Southern California on Friday because of a monster heat dome sprawled over the region.
The temperature at UCLA soared to 111 degrees, the hottest ever recorded there, surpassing the previous record of 109 degrees, set Sept. 20, 1939, the National Weather Service reported. Records at UCLA date back to 1933.
While the temperature at UCLA set an all-time record, the high in downtown Los Angeles, 108 degrees, fell short of its all-time mark of 113 from September 2010. Still, the 108-degree reading crushed the July 6 daily record of 94, set in 1992.
In addition to UCLA, other locations that set all-time records in Southern California include:
Hollywood Burbank Airport, 114 degrees.
Van Nuys Airport, 117 degrees.
Ramona, 117 degrees.
Santa Ana, 114 degrees.
Riverside, 118 degrees (tying record from 1925).
The National Weather Service offices serving Los Angeles and San Diego produced the handy summary tables below, which highlight a number of the notable records set:
111 at UCLA is literally insane. UCLA is like 5 miles from the beach.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ern-california-friday/?utm_term=.b822c2b8227d
So if a tarantula was born this week it would likely die before this CT?
can't remember if I asked this on here or not, but was talking with some friends about PKs and we discussed the following:
which would you feel more confident doing: hitting a PK against a WC-quality goalie to extend the match or hitting two FTs down two with no time on the clock in the NBA playoffs
does your answer change if it is three FTs down three or a PK?
In Jaws Roy Scheider says we don't know how long sharks live, could be thousands of years. #JAWS
"People don't even know how old sharks are, I mean, if they live two - three thousand years...They don't know."
Ah, I've been to the Providence Athenaeum, but I don't remember seeing it there. Just the Edgar Allen Poe desk. 5 Million is pretty good for a book. But the market is kind of crazy for these things because they don't come up very often. I was looking at this gorgeous, clean humanist fifteenth century thing in the ugliest red velvet binding I've ever seen at this NYC bookseller's house a couple of years ago, and he priced the thing at a million. I asked him if it was worth a million bucks, and he said "maybe not because no one has bought it." Just silly money, but books are really a fantastic investment.