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Blunderbuss Firozabad

Made of Pumpkin pie
Collage_20230724_041029.jpg

Upper left, clockwise
Scorpion cooling off in the pool, Oto glaring at the 6:30 am heat and sun, a person who collapsed from heat stroke, melted shoes, the Librarian, and a Welcome to Phoenix sign.



In 2022, Maricopa County recorded 425 heat-related deaths. That's one county out of 15.

Flights to and from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport were cancelled because the weather was hotter than the operating temperatures of some of the smaller aircraft
.


Melted shoes:

"John Janezic is a librarian at Sanborn Elementary School in Chandler, Arizona, and often helps with crosswalk duties when the bell rings after school.

Janezic was outside Thursday during the peak of the hot weather, guiding kids through the crosswalk. He was only out for 30 minutes when he decided to head inside and almost fell because his shoes suddenly felt different."

" “I was crossing the students, crossing the parents. And all of a sudden, when I was done, I turn around and I’m sweating, I’m tired, I want to come back to the library where it’s nice and air-conditioned. As I’m walking back, I trip,” Janezic said.

" Janezic said the soles of his shoes had melted off because of the hot pavement.

“I’m like, ‘What just happened?’ And I tripped because this part of the shoe was like this,” said Janezic said, showing the sole of his shoes, that had come apart from the rest of the shoe.

Although Janezic said he can no longer wear those shoes, the experience will not stop him from helping students stay safe when leaving school."


And a totally preventable death near Buckeye, when a wife spoke to fire station staff at 1:45 pm on Sunday:

" She explained her husband, a man in his 70s, called her earlier in the day to say his bike got a flat tire in a desert area west of the fire station and that he was attempting to walk to the fire station where she could pick him up," Buckeye Fire said.

Police and fire crews started looking for the man and found him dead in a desert area. He was identified as 73-year-old James Van de Voorde."

Bikers should carry an emergency patch kit, extra water, and they SHOULDN'T GO BIKING IN THE DESERT, IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAY, WHEN IT'S 116°.


Another death
:

" A woman died on an 8-mile hike in the Grand Canyon in triple-digit heat, park officials said. The 57-year-old hiker was trekking “in the remote Tuweep area” of Grand Canyon National Park, where the high temperature “was well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit,” on Sunday, July 2. "

" After the woman fell unconscious, rangers said they got a call about a “distressed day hiker” at around 6:30 p.m.

However, getting to the remote area of the park is a challenge, as “there is no water, gas, food, or cell service.

A ranger made it on scene around 1 a.m. on July 3 and declared the woman dead, park officials said."







[automerge]1690198469[/automerge]
P. S. Here's James Van de Voorde, a Vietnam vet, volunteered at a local no-kill animal shelter, moved to Arizona 5 years ago with his wife after retiring.

Screenshot_20230724_043204.webp
 
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My dad lived in Buckeye before he passed. Boring but decently nice. It felt like a suburb in the middle of nowhere surrounded by cow farms and empty fields.

10 years ago it would be cold in the morning and then insanely hot in the afternoons. Except, it was such dry heat that we didn't even sweat or notice that we were overheating. You'd feel basically fine and then pass out. My dad had a timer set on his phone to drink water every 15 minutes and he nagged the hell out of us to drink at the same time.

I can't imagine living in the kind of heat theyre facing now.
 
In 2020 there was 53 days above 110, this heat is nothing new. Years ago, I had switched jobs to be home more. I had bought a van for the work, something cheap. It was fine until it got over 100 degrees out. I drove around all summer with the heater on. The day I got the issue resolved a lady ran a stop sign. I gassed it right into the side of her car.
 
My dad lived in Buckeye before he passed. Boring but decently nice. It felt like a suburb in the middle of nowhere surrounded by cow farms and empty fields.

10 years ago it would be cold in the morning and then insanely hot in the afternoons. Except, it was such dry heat that we didn't even sweat or notice that we were overheating. You'd feel basically fine and then pass out. My dad had a timer set on his phone to drink water every 15 minutes and he nagged the hell out of us to drink at the same time.

I can't imagine living in the kind of heat theyre facing now.
I've been living in Nevada since 1997, a few miles south of Reno. The tricky thing is the seeming absence of sweat. Many people take sweat as one of the cues to drink more water. Here though, between the altitude and the arid environment, sweat evaporates almost before it leaves your pores. You're actually sweating buckets. If you wait till you're thirsty to drink, you're too late, and may find yourself fatigued and confused in the next half hour or so.

I think some of these recreational deaths occur when a hiker thinks dehydration simply means they have to endure a thirsty walk back to their car.

I wear a hydration pack. When it's half empty, I turn around.
 
I've been living in Nevada since 1997, a few miles south of Reno. The tricky thing is the seeming absence of sweat. Many people take sweat as one of the cues to drink more water. Here though, between the altitude and the arid environment, sweat evaporates almost before it leaves your pores. You're actually sweating buckets. If you wait till you're thirsty to drink, you're too late, and may find yourself fatigued and confused in the next half hour or so.

I think some of these recreational deaths occur when a hiker thinks dehydration simply means they have to endure a thirsty walk back to their car.

I wear a hydration pack. When it's half empty, I turn around.
Remember salt!
 
I worked part-time at bingo hall from 81 to 84. That picture is actually not nearly as smokey as what I was accustomed to. And yeah the air quality because of the fires coming out of Canada right now is terrible. Sorry we can't seem to get our s*** together on it.

The planet is on fire and global warming and climate change are pretty much at if not past the Tipping Point. We've destroyed ourselves.
 
I worked part-time at bingo hall from 81 to 84. That picture is actually not nearly as smokey as what I was accustomed to. And yeah the air quality because of the fires coming out of Canada right now is terrible. Sorry we can't seem to get our s*** together on it.

The planet is on fire and global warming and climate change are pretty much at if not past the Tipping Point. We've destroyed ourselves.
We’re gonna go out in a giant ball of flames, unless we nuke ourselves first.

I smelled the wildfires here in NJ for a few days in June, but it hasn’t been that bad since. When I was in NY and very close to Canada, it was hazy. No fault of Canada’s; we sure can’t get our shit together (in many ways) here either.
 
Man, I hope people are putting protection on their poor dogs' feet before walking them around the neighborhood.
Mostly, it seems that folks are walking their dogs 2 hours after the sun goes down or very very early in the morning. People try to stick to the lighter colored pavement as opposed to black topped parking lots.

A lot of people, if they can, go nocturnal this time of the year.



I'm in downtown Phoenix with a toddler and no vehicle. We have to walk everywhere. Straight up not having a good time. Can't wait til November when it starts cooling off.

Phoenix tops Tucson for temperatures!
You poor thing, Phoenix has such a clinging heat.
Are you using an umbrella when you have to go out?
It's sizzling hot the minute the sun comes up over the horizon.
For five months of the year it barely feels like you're living.
 
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View attachment 97175
Upper left, clockwise
Scorpion cooling off in the pool, Oto glaring at the 6:30 am heat and sun, a person who collapsed from heat stroke, melted shoes, the Librarian, and a Welcome to Phoenix sign.



In 2022, Maricopa County recorded 425 heat-related deaths. That's one county out of 15.

Flights to and from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport were cancelled because the weather was hotter than the operating temperatures of some of the smaller aircraft
.


Melted shoes:

"John Janezic is a librarian at Sanborn Elementary School in Chandler, Arizona, and often helps with crosswalk duties when the bell rings after school.

Janezic was outside Thursday during the peak of the hot weather, guiding kids through the crosswalk. He was only out for 30 minutes when he decided to head inside and almost fell because his shoes suddenly felt different."

" “I was crossing the students, crossing the parents. And all of a sudden, when I was done, I turn around and I’m sweating, I’m tired, I want to come back to the library where it’s nice and air-conditioned. As I’m walking back, I trip,” Janezic said.

" Janezic said the soles of his shoes had melted off because of the hot pavement.

“I’m like, ‘What just happened?’ And I tripped because this part of the shoe was like this,” said Janezic said, showing the sole of his shoes, that had come apart from the rest of the shoe.

Although Janezic said he can no longer wear those shoes, the experience will not stop him from helping students stay safe when leaving school."


And a totally preventable death near Buckeye, when a wife spoke to fire station staff at 1:45 pm on Sunday:

" She explained her husband, a man in his 70s, called her earlier in the day to say his bike got a flat tire in a desert area west of the fire station and that he was attempting to walk to the fire station where she could pick him up," Buckeye Fire said.

Police and fire crews started looking for the man and found him dead in a desert area. He was identified as 73-year-old James Van de Voorde."

Bikers should carry an emergency patch kit, extra water, and they SHOULDN'T GO BIKING IN THE DESERT, IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAY, WHEN IT'S 116°.


Another death
:

" A woman died on an 8-mile hike in the Grand Canyon in triple-digit heat, park officials said. The 57-year-old hiker was trekking “in the remote Tuweep area” of Grand Canyon National Park, where the high temperature “was well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit,” on Sunday, July 2. "

" After the woman fell unconscious, rangers said they got a call about a “distressed day hiker” at around 6:30 p.m.

However, getting to the remote area of the park is a challenge, as “there is no water, gas, food, or cell service.

A ranger made it on scene around 1 a.m. on July 3 and declared the woman dead, park officials said."







[automerge]1690198469[/automerge]
P. S. Here's James Van de Voorde, a Vietnam vet, volunteered at a local no-kill animal shelter, moved to Arizona 5 years ago with his wife after retiring.

View attachment 97176
I love Oto!
 
Had no idea so many of my Demonites were from AZ! I hope you guys stay cool and safe. So sorry for what you are all going through this sounds horrible! Does the electric company dial back the juice when the weather gets crazy? Here they do that when it gets really hot, so even if the ac is blasting it doesn’t ever feel too cool inside. Our grid is pretty old though and too much power usage can cause a blackout
 
Had no idea so many of my Demonites were from AZ! I
I really didn't either! @crystelb is in Tucson, and I really need to catch up with her.
I approached her when I was brand new in a DM, and now that I've been here a minute,, I get it as to why being approached like that can seem odd. She was very nice to me, but we didn't immediately make plans to meet for coffee! Lol.
Does the electric company dial back the juice when the weather gets crazy?

There are deep discounts if you don't use very much power during peak times, so that's a good motivator for a large number of people to help reduce the volume of demand during times like this.
So they really keep the supply up because if there's a lot of elderly people in Tucson and if their power goes out they could die. In fact there was a situation like that here in Arizona thats getting attention now when an elderly Woman's power was shut off over a $51 debt.
That forced some changes in how they do business.



Disclaimer: I do not read the New York Post, this was just the first example of an article I saw to show you, lol.
If I wanted the quality of news that the New York Post offers I would just eavesdrop on my neighbors.
 
Lol I love the Post for its headlines, always good for a laugh! I’m so sorry that woman died but at least her death was not in vain, and the policy was changed. What a horrible way to die…
I really didn't either! @crystelb is in Tucson, and I really need to catch up with her.
I approached her when I was brand new in a DM, and now that I've been here a minute,, I get it as to why being approached like that can seem odd. She was very nice to me, but we didn't immediately make plans to meet for coffee! Lol.


There are deep discounts if you don't use very much power during peak times, so that's a good motivator for a large number of people to help reduce the volume of demand during times like this.
So they really keep the supply up because if there's a lot of elderly people in Tucson and if their power goes out they could die. In fact there was a situation like that here in Arizona thats getting attention now when an elderly Woman's power was shut off over a $51 debt.
That forced some changes in how they do business.



Disclaimer: I do not read the New York Post, this was just the first example of an article I saw to show you, lol.
If I wanted the quality of news that the New York Post offers I would just eavesdrop on my neighbors.
 
I really didn't either! @crystelb is in Tucson, and I really need to catch up with her.
I approached her when I was brand new in a DM, and now that I've been here a minute,, I get it as to why being approached like that can seem odd. She was very nice to me, but we didn't immediately make plans to meet for coffee! Lol.


There are deep discounts if you don't use very much power during peak times, so that's a good motivator for a large number of people to help reduce the volume of demand during times like this.
So they really keep the supply up because if there's a lot of elderly people in Tucson and if their power goes out they could die. In fact there was a situation like that here in Arizona thats getting attention now when an elderly Woman's power was shut off over a $51 debt.
That forced some changes in how they do business.



Disclaimer: I do not read the New York Post, this was just the first example of an article I saw to show you, lol.
If I wanted the quality of news that the New York Post offers I would just eavesdrop on my neighbors.
I really didn't either! @crystelb is in Tucson, and I really need to catch up with her.
I approached her when I was brand new in a DM, and now that I've been here a minute,, I get it as to why being approached like that can seem odd. She was very nice to me, but we didn't immediately make plans to meet for coffee! Lol.


There are deep discounts if you don't use very much power during peak times, so that's a good motivator for a large number of people to help reduce the volume of demand during times like this.
So they really keep the supply up because if there's a lot of elderly people in Tucson and if their power goes out they could die. In fact there was a situation like that here in Arizona thats getting attention now when an elderly Woman's power was shut off over a $51 debt.
That forced some changes in how they do business.



Disclaimer: I do not read the New York Post, this was just the first example of an article I saw to show you, lol.
If I wanted the quality of news that the New York Post offers I would just eavesdrop on my neighbors.
@Blunderbuss Firozabad I’m down for coffee!! Were you affected at all by the storms? It’s been crazy over here on the east side
 
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