- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message

Here to clear up any confusion on the daily summer "Blank is the hottest part of the US"
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:15 pm
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:15 pm
I'll start with my conclusion. The Houston down to McAllen/Brownsville to Laredo, in addition to Phoenix/Death Valley is the hottest part of the US. You might even be able to draw a line from Houston to Shreveport and include that as well to Houston to McAllen. Reason being is that it is the confluence of where the extreme high temps of the SouthWest meet the extreme high humidity of the Gulf SouthEast. Once you start getting further east from TX/LA border, the Gulf breeze begins to lower temperatures more. Despite the Houston area not receiving nearly the rainfall as Nola/Mobile, it is the most humid area of the US (SETX/SWLA). Houston getting up to 104 and 40% humidity, McAllen getting up to 108 to 110 with a 33-35% humidity put it at the 118 feels like in dead pan summer. As for Phoenix/DV, they are just simply hot as shite.
Most humid cities in the US
Most Humid cities in the US
It is also the hottest part of the entire Western Hemisphere. Equator has a more temperate climate that doesn't often get above 90 F, and I've yet to find anything in South America that competes with it after ample research. I've been researching this stuff every day of every summer for over a decade, and am here to debunk any myths about whatever is thought.
I'll start with Louisiana. South Louisiana gets a gulf breeze that usually doesn't ever get above 100, most times not above 97. It receives the same humidity as Houston (actually tiny bit lower). However, Houston gets to 104 in the dead summer due to the confluence of extreme temperatures of Texas/SouthWest, in addition to the humidity of the gulf. South East Texas to South Texas has it worst with this whole combination and confluence. In reality, Shreveport probably has higher heat index than South Louisiana, as North Louisiana has higher temperatures than SLA due to gulf influence. In any given day, if it's 97 in Lafayette, it's likely 101-102 in Shreveport. Shreveport averages just 2 percent below SLA in humidity but averages about 5+ degrees hotter in dead summer.
Florida is not anywhere close to the hottest part of the US. Florida and the eastern gulf gets more temperature moderation than the Western gulf. In dead summer in Gainesville, it is almost never seen to get to 100. Unlike Houston that will have 50+ of those days receiving slightly higher humidity than Gainesville. Gainesville usual high in dead pan summer will be 95-96.
Onto Phoenix, AZ. Arizona. Phoenix will get to 118 in the dead of summer. However, humidity will rarely eclipse 17% in these days, and most days will be around 14-15%. This basically means that the feels like and temp are going to be near the same.
Onto Death Valley, CA. I start by saying "YES EXTREME LOW HUMIDITY AND HIGH TEMPS CAN LEAD TO FEELS LIKE BELOW TEMP". Several days last summer I looked at Death Valley when it was around 123 deg F. The humidity was 4%. This led to a feels like of around 111. Humidity isn't always this low, but Phoenix is actually around 5% or so higher humidity than Death Valley from times I checked, but Death Valley has higher temps. It seemed to potentially be a washout in heat index btwn the 2.
Onto the more central deep South. Talking Southern AL, Southern GA, Panhandle Florida. Temps here don't often get above 97-ish due to gulf influence. They also have slightly lower humidity than SWLA/SE TX by about 3-4%. So between being on average, 6 or so degrees cooler than Houston, they also have a 3-4% lower humidity. Not in debate of close to being hottest places in the US.
I've been looking at this stuff daily in the summer for decades. After all this research I've done, the hottest part of the US is Houston to McAllen and Phoenix/Death Valley. If you want to stretch it even further, then you could maybe draw a straight line from Shreveport to Laredo/McAllen. Reason why it is this way is because it is the convergence of extreme high temps in the West and the extreme high humidities of the Gulf. Then you have the Phoenix area at 118 feels like and 118 actual temp.
The places like Phoenix and Death Valley as of right now are going to be hotter than the Brownsville all the way up to Lufkin area. Phoenix/Death Valley warms up much faster starting 110+ in early June. However, by late July, early August this is where they begin to be equal in feels like temp between there and Houston/McAllen.
Most humid cities in the US
Most Humid cities in the US
It is also the hottest part of the entire Western Hemisphere. Equator has a more temperate climate that doesn't often get above 90 F, and I've yet to find anything in South America that competes with it after ample research. I've been researching this stuff every day of every summer for over a decade, and am here to debunk any myths about whatever is thought.
I'll start with Louisiana. South Louisiana gets a gulf breeze that usually doesn't ever get above 100, most times not above 97. It receives the same humidity as Houston (actually tiny bit lower). However, Houston gets to 104 in the dead summer due to the confluence of extreme temperatures of Texas/SouthWest, in addition to the humidity of the gulf. South East Texas to South Texas has it worst with this whole combination and confluence. In reality, Shreveport probably has higher heat index than South Louisiana, as North Louisiana has higher temperatures than SLA due to gulf influence. In any given day, if it's 97 in Lafayette, it's likely 101-102 in Shreveport. Shreveport averages just 2 percent below SLA in humidity but averages about 5+ degrees hotter in dead summer.
Florida is not anywhere close to the hottest part of the US. Florida and the eastern gulf gets more temperature moderation than the Western gulf. In dead summer in Gainesville, it is almost never seen to get to 100. Unlike Houston that will have 50+ of those days receiving slightly higher humidity than Gainesville. Gainesville usual high in dead pan summer will be 95-96.
Onto Phoenix, AZ. Arizona. Phoenix will get to 118 in the dead of summer. However, humidity will rarely eclipse 17% in these days, and most days will be around 14-15%. This basically means that the feels like and temp are going to be near the same.
Onto Death Valley, CA. I start by saying "YES EXTREME LOW HUMIDITY AND HIGH TEMPS CAN LEAD TO FEELS LIKE BELOW TEMP". Several days last summer I looked at Death Valley when it was around 123 deg F. The humidity was 4%. This led to a feels like of around 111. Humidity isn't always this low, but Phoenix is actually around 5% or so higher humidity than Death Valley from times I checked, but Death Valley has higher temps. It seemed to potentially be a washout in heat index btwn the 2.
Onto the more central deep South. Talking Southern AL, Southern GA, Panhandle Florida. Temps here don't often get above 97-ish due to gulf influence. They also have slightly lower humidity than SWLA/SE TX by about 3-4%. So between being on average, 6 or so degrees cooler than Houston, they also have a 3-4% lower humidity. Not in debate of close to being hottest places in the US.
I've been looking at this stuff daily in the summer for decades. After all this research I've done, the hottest part of the US is Houston to McAllen and Phoenix/Death Valley. If you want to stretch it even further, then you could maybe draw a straight line from Shreveport to Laredo/McAllen. Reason why it is this way is because it is the convergence of extreme high temps in the West and the extreme high humidities of the Gulf. Then you have the Phoenix area at 118 feels like and 118 actual temp.
The places like Phoenix and Death Valley as of right now are going to be hotter than the Brownsville all the way up to Lufkin area. Phoenix/Death Valley warms up much faster starting 110+ in early June. However, by late July, early August this is where they begin to be equal in feels like temp between there and Houston/McAllen.
This post was edited on 6/21/24 at 7:11 pm
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:16 pm to Saunson69
Gainesville, Florida in August is 3 degrees warmer than hell
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:17 pm to Sput
quote:
Gainesville, Florida in August is 3 degrees warmer than hell
It is not. Not only does Gainesville rarely get above 95, but it is on average 3-4% humidity below Houston which gets to 105.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:19 pm to Saunson69
Houston sounds miserable to me. Urban sprawl, searing heat, high humidity. Illegals streaming in. Not sure why it is so glorified on this board.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:22 pm to Saunson69
I do t have stats for this but two of the hottest feeling places I’ve ever spent a day (and I’ve been to Phoenix and Vegas in July) are Macon Georgia and Columbia South Carolina. Never been to Houston.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:23 pm to Gravitiger
quote:
Vegas
Vegas is on an extreme heat streak right now, but if you look at weather.com and see averages daily from July to August, they are at 103 or so. With the humidity there never cracking above 15% when it gets above 100 there, it doesn't make the cut imo. Death Valley gets higher temps than Vegas, and similar humidity. Basically none.
In general, Phoenix and Death Valley are temp wise hotter than Vegas usually. Death Valley will get similar humidity level as Vegas, Phoenix actually gets a tad higher humidity than Vegas by just a few percentage points. However at that high of temps, each % gain effects feels like a lot.
This post was edited on 6/21/24 at 6:42 pm
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:25 pm to Saunson69
Hottest I've ever perceived was in vegas.
Felt like the sun was a lot closer than it was. Even the shade was pretty brutal.
Felt like the sun was a lot closer than it was. Even the shade was pretty brutal.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:30 pm to genuineLSUtiger
quote:
Houston sounds miserable to me. Urban sprawl, searing heat, high humidity. Illegals streaming in. Not sure why it is so glorified on this board.
Then, you put everyone in cars, sitting in traffic, on a 90 lane interstate highway.
Yes, Houston is mostly Hell.
This post was edited on 6/21/24 at 6:30 pm
Posted on 6/21/24 at 6:34 pm to Saunson69
quote:Walk down the strip in July and say that.
Vegas
Vegas is on an extreme heat streak right now, but if you look at weather.com and see averages daily from July to August, they are at 103 or so. With the humidity there never cracking above 15% when it gets above 100 there, it doesn't make the cut imo. Death Valley gets higher temps than Vegas, and similar humidity. Basically none.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 7:29 pm to Saunson69
quote:
Onto the more central deep South. Talking Southern AL, Southern GA, Panhandle Florida. Temps here don't often get above 97-ish due to gulf influence. They also have slightly lower humidity than SWLA/SE TX by about 3-4%. So between being on average, 6 or so degrees cooler than Houston, they also have a 3-4% lower humidity. Not in debate of close to being hottest places in the US.
Bull-f-n-chit
I’ve been all over the world and the US.
Worked on flightlines in Saudi next to the Red Sea where 120deg and 40% humidity was not unusual
Yet without a doubt the absolute hottest I’ve ever been was shooting an archery tournament (ASA world championship) in August in Albany, Ga.
Temp was @100 with 30- plus % humidity. People falling out left and right. Tough, outdoor baw types I’m here to say.
Albany, much like Columbus, Ga and Columbia, SC all sit in valleys and all have major river/lake systems to provide humidity. Any of these three in August with no wind will have you changing your mind with the quickness
Posted on 6/21/24 at 7:34 pm to Saunson69
I used to walk the levee outside NOLA for exercise, and in August it was like moving through a dead still smoldering furnace. Fun!
Posted on 6/21/24 at 7:41 pm to Saunson69
I was in Las Vegas in 2005, which is one of the hottest summers ever recorded there. The heat can be unreal, but on the misery scale it doesn't even compare to a New Orleans parking lot at 2pm in late July/early August after a morning shower and the rain evaporating off the asphalt at 93 degrees and 85% humidity.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 7:41 pm to Saunson69
I lived in Houston for a year. It is definitely not as hot as New Orleans.

This post was edited on 6/21/24 at 7:44 pm
Posted on 6/21/24 at 8:32 pm to Saunson69
I agree with your assessment. The shite hole known as Houston is the hottest feeling place in the US that i have been to, and I have been everywhere from Orlando to Madison, WI and Jacksonville to Los Angeles and everywhere in between.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 8:45 pm to DellTronJon
I lived in Houston for 4 years. Spent most of my life in Metairie/Destrehan. I agree with the OP other than NOLA humidity is worse than Houston. We are literally surrounded by water 360 degrees. Houston air temps are hotter. This is like a race to the bottom.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 8:48 pm to genuineLSUtiger
quote:
Not sure why it is so glorified on this board.
It's the Tex Mex
Posted on 6/21/24 at 8:58 pm to DellTronJon
quote:
The shite hole known as Houston is the hottest feeling place in the US that i have been to, and I have been everywhere from Orlando to Madison, WI and Jacksonville to Los Angeles and everywhere in between.
Posted on 6/21/24 at 9:03 pm to LegendInMyMind
Tempe is the hottest, no doubt!



Popular
Back to top
