Thursday October 10th, 2024 12:23PM

South bakes, humidity feels like 100-plus degrees

By The Associated Press
CHARLESTON, S.C. - Heat advisories were posted from the Carolinas to the Great Plains as the South continued to roast Friday under temperatures and humidity that made beaches feel more like bakeries.

Forecasts for Friday highs were mainly in the upper 90s to 100 throughout much of the South. The heat index, which combines humidity and temperature, was well over 100 degrees from South Carolina to eastern Oklahoma.

The National Weather Service urged people to stay out of the sun, drink fluids and get some air conditioning.

Forecasters say high humidity from the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic is exacerbating the Southern staple of summertime heat.

The weather service issued an excessive heat warning for the South Carolina coast from Charleston into Georgia. In Georgia, the warning was posted across the middle part of the state in places like Americus and Dublin. Temperatures in the upper 90s combined with high humidity to make it feel like triple digits. Heat indices topped 100 along the coast by late morning.

A Charleston city worker who helps the elderly said one woman ran up a $600 electric bill as her small, inefficient window air conditioner ran almost nonstop to keep up with the heat.

"It's absolutely unforgiving. We have never had heat like this," said Elizabeth Spencer, who runs the Elder Support Line for the Charleston Police. She said she is getting 50 phones calls a day about elderly people struggling with the oppressive heat.

It was the 11th straight day of a heat advisory or warning on the South Carolina coast, said Julie Packett, a weather service meteorologist in Charleston. She said the pattern is expected to continue through August.

In South Florida, the heat made the asphalt shimmer with mirages as the humidity weighed down the air like a stifling blanket.

Carine Weiss, who comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo, said the heat feels worse to her now than it did when she was growing up in Africa.

"I'm almost ready to pass out it's so hot," said Weiss, 47, while playing tennis with friends in Weston, Fla. "It's very hard (to play) during the summer ... I'm moving a lot slower.

Most of Alabama was under a heat advisory as temperatures in the 100-degree range were forecast for parts of the state Saturday.

Weather service meteorologist Scott Unger in Birmingham said the heat index for many parts of the state could be in the 105 to 110-degree range. He said it's a bit hotter and steamier than normal, but is a reminder of the season: "It's summertime," he said.

NORTH GEORGIA

August is expected to mirror June and July in north Georgia... with more unseasonably hot weather.

Assistant state climatologist Pam Knox tells Georgia News Network "the official forecast from the Climate Prediction Center...indicates that we are likely to stay above-normal for most of August."

Temperatures during most of July, just like June, have run as much as 10 degrees above normal.

"It probably won't stay that hot all the way through August but, you know, it's still 'high' summer, the sun's (at its) highest, so we have a ways to go before we can expect a lot of relief," Knox said.

In June there was one day-after-another with above-normal temperatures and July brought with it more of the same.

Thursday was the twelfth straight day of above-normal temperatures in many places in north Georgia, including Gainesville, where it was also the tenth day in a row of 90+ highs.

(AccessNorthGa.com's Ken Stanford contributed to this story.)
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