Everyone answers that question differently. Someone in North Dakota may say 88 is too warm and they'll stay in side in the AC, and a Texan might argue that 88 is a nice cool summer day. It's all relative. So how hot is too hot for you?
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has issued a guideline to identify and clean post-flooding mold that's especially helpful after the flooding that's occurred throughout Texas this past month.
It always happens this time of year. The weather outside gets hotter, and the temperature inside stores and office buildings gets freezing cold. But did you hear one big box store is going to raise the thermostat one degree? Woohoo! Said women.
Are we finally back to normal? It feels a little more like Texas now that the sun is shining again, and it looks like it will shine all week. That means five things will happen.
Anytime there's a natural disaster, the American Red Cross rushes in to help, by setting up shelters and offering food and supplies. And the relief effort involved with the Texas floods may cost millions.
Just as Van starts to recover from the tornado two weeks ago, more spots in East Texas get hammered by severe weather and flooding. There was quite a bit of tree damage in Henderson on Monday, along with extensive flooding in Troup. Angelina County reported high water on FM 2497. But that's not the worst of it.
This is why I love the internet. The mundane things in life can get half a million views on Youtube.
Have you ever seen ice melt off of a frozen pipe? We don't get that much ice in Texas, but growing up in Nebraska things were covered in ice from November through March and I never bothered to stop and watch it trickle off...