Why are you disputing that we have hot and humid summers down south inbred? Seems like me trying to argue that it isn't cold in Minnesota in January.
inbredredneck":1p7h6f63 said:Highest recorded heat index of 148 degrees in Appleton Wisconsin in 1995 for the lower 48 everything else is bu!!shitshit. Why try to argue with history it makes a person look stupid.
Heavy breathing, but not noisy (panting without the mouth open), and he bled from the nose for 24 hours (lightly), which the vet said was from the heat stress on his lungs.denvermartinfarms":2ejt0qk8 said:How did his breathing sound when you first found him?I am thinking more about the change in temps than the heat.but i also have another idea.
It never happened in May, June, July or September. I just can't imagine how a group of people could be so ignorant to the facts.M.Magis":32f6ct7o said:Well, it did. And in May, and June, and July, maybe once in Sept.inbredredneck":32f6ct7o said:It will never happen in Ohio in August either.
Like hooknline mentioned, that describes 5 months of the year in where I visit in SW Florida I think. Brutal hot every single day, and cattle everywhere in between the condo towns. Good cattle too.
hooknline":35g2zxuy said:The only indication I see in this thread of 160 heat index is inbred. Who edited what?
Huh you might want to back track a bit, the matter of heat index has been discussed here before, I had already posted the Appleton Wisconsin temp last year.SSGenetics":8jkpol5u said:inbredredneck":8jkpol5u said:Highest recorded heat index of 148 degrees in Appleton Wisconsin in 1995 for the lower 48 everything else is bu!!shitshit. Why try to argue with history it makes a person look stupid.
Exactly... I would have to guess the OP didn't quit experience the heat he thought (probably humidity in the low 80's and temps in the low to mid 90s) putting the heat index 110-120, which is absolutely normal. Funny how you acknowledged his quoted index of 160, then googled the record to find 160 exceeds it... :bs:
Remember, just because you're inbred and redneck does not make you intelligent! :tiphat:
SSGenetics":3oympu0a said:inbredredneck":3oympu0a said:Highest recorded heat index of 148 degrees in Appleton Wisconsin in 1995 for the lower 48 everything else is bu!!shitshit. Why try to argue with history it makes a person look stupid.
Exactly... I would have to guess the OP didn't quit experience the heat he thought (probably humidity in the low 80's and temps in the low to mid 90s) putting the heat index 110-120, which is absolutely normal. Funny how you acknowledged his quoted index of 160, then googled the record to find 160 exceeds it... :bs:
Remember, just because you're inbred and redneck does not make you intelligent! :tiphat:
Yep. Welcome to florida 3 months of the year. I also know that parts of mo also saw similar temps and humidity as did a lot of that region.SSGenetics":2k60z49m said:hooknline":2k60z49m said:The only indication I see in this thread of 160 heat index is inbred. Who edited what?
Humitity in the high 80's and temps in the high 90's would give you a heat index of 160...
I thought his temps were seemingly normal conditions?SSGenetics":wfv781sb said:pdfangus":wfv781sb said:you described a spring day around here....
if indeed it was heat related, then it was not the heat but the change in conditions under which he was handled.
X2
I'd be in a world of hurt if I had cattle dropping in those seemingly normal conditions.
Hook how can you be so ignorant, I don't keep the records the national weather service does. They will also tell you that you are indeed full of it.hooknline":3gzr4mb5 said:Yep. Welcome to florida 3 months of the year. I also know that parts of mo also saw similar temps and humidity as did a lot of that region.SSGenetics":3gzr4mb5 said:hooknline":3gzr4mb5 said:The only indication I see in this thread of 160 heat index is inbred. Who edited what?
Humitity in the high 80's and temps in the high 90's would give you a heat index of 160...
But if inbred says it wasn't so, it couldn't be
inbredredneck":k70izcpi said:I thought his temps were seemingly normal conditions?SSGenetics":k70izcpi said:pdfangus":k70izcpi said:you described a spring day around here....
if indeed it was heat related, then it was not the heat but the change in conditions under which he was handled.
X2
I'd be in a world of hurt if I had cattle dropping in those seemingly normal conditions.
I don't know or care what the heat indexes are here. I was simply verifying that 3 months of he year we have humidity levels at 85% or above and highs at 90-97inbredredneck":2o71et32 said:hooknline":2o71et32 said:SSGenetics":2o71et32 said:Hook how can you be so ignorant, I don't keep the records the national weather service does. They will also tell you that you are indeed full of it.
yep you already proved that to us. Apples to apples they do it the same every where, it is not as hot as you think in Florida even Wisconsin is hotter.hooknline":195gb0k1 said:already
But I'm no national weather service either.
They don't mind the heat they don't like the cold.hooknline":2uhwxo7s said:So that's why the snowbirds always leave here during the summer. It's just as hot up north. Someone needs to tell them that