Summer is defined as the warmest season of the year, occurring between spring and autumn. It features the longest daylight hours and the year’s highest temperatures. I also know that summer begins on the summer solstice (around June 21 in the Northern Hemisphere and December 21 in the Southern Hemisphere) and ends on the autumnal equinox. However, I don’t think most of us look at it that way.

It’s the warmth that makes a summer, and in Florida our summers are long, hot, and feature afternoon thunderstorms. For those reasons, I have my own definition of the beginning of summer. Here is Sector Ocho, summer is the first day of the year where the temperature doesn’t go below 75 degrees Fahrenheit (that’s 24c to those of you in countries using the metric system).

I have a personal weather station in my backyard that I use as my official measuring station because I don’t believe Florida’s numbers. My weather station is one of these. It’s located in my backyard in the middle of a clearing with the nearest block to wind (a tree) being at least 50 feet away.

Anyway, the first day of summer has arrived, and it was yesterday, May 25. Our low temperature for the day was 75.6 degF. Summer started this year a full 12 days later than it did last year. Our dewpoint right now is 75.8 degF.

The reason for this, is that the low temperature can’t go any lower than the dew point. At that point, any further energy lost from the atmosphere is spent condensing water vapor, not reducing the temperature. When the dewpoint is at that point, the air starts becoming thick and the afternoon rains begin. If you have ever been in Central Florida during the summer, you know that it rains virtually every afternoon. That’s where we are now. Summer is here.

The dew point temperature is the temperature at which the air can no longer hold all of its water vapor, and some of the water vapor must condense into liquid water. At 100% relative humidity, the dew point temperature and the air temperature are the same, and clouds or fog can begin to form. While relative humidity is a relative measure of how humid it is, the dew point temperature is an absolute measure of how much water vapor is in the air (how humid it is). In very warm, humid conditions, the dew point temperature can reach 75 to 77 degrees F, but rarely exceeds 80 degrees.

Dew point is the best indicator of comfort in a hot climate. Once the dew point of the air exceeds 66 degrees Fahrenheit or so, the air begins to feel hot and uncomfortably stuffy. The reason for this is that your perspiration cannot evaporate to cool you off.

The dewpoint here will remain high from now until summer breaks in late September.

Here in Florida, there are 4 seasons:

Hot: March through May
F’ing Hot (Also known as Hurricane season, and in Orlando, tourist season): June through mid September
Still Hot: Mid September through Mid November
Snow Bird: Mid November through February

The people who live here know that anything needing to be done outside between May and September is best done before 11 am, when the thermometer typically breaks 90 degF. That’s why Floridians usually mow the grass starting at 8am. The combination of heat and the inability to shed heat through evaporation is a deadly combination. Beginning today, you get your outside work done in the morning then stay in the air conditioning until at least 4:30 in the afternoon when the afternoon thunderstorms come calling. That is what we do from the first day of summer until about the middle of September.

That’s why having a pool is such a great idea. My pool is a nice 84 degF throughout the summer, and it’s the only way to be outside while the “feels like” temperature is more than 90 or even 100 degrees.

Categories: Uncategorized

6 Comments

Boneman · May 26, 2026 at 9:59 am

“Rainy Season”… IYKYK.

The official / unofficial beginning of Rainy Season is the 15th of May and yes, every last little datapoint you cited is spot on accurate.

This year has been extremely dry as I’m sure you know. Our ponds in my community were the lowest I have ever seen them and were down 24” at least. They have come up about 10 inches.

What’s funny is pursuant to the “Daily Deluge” I’m sure we will be looking at areal flood warnings in the not to distant future.

I once, in order to actually have DATA about it, weighed myself before and after mowing the grass one AM in July… SIX POUNDSS OF WATER I lost doing it. Of course, once I collected that little bit of data, I jumped in the pool as I was quite warm.

WTF (Welcome To Florida).

Great post!

    YourAverageJoe · May 26, 2026 at 10:11 am

    The climate is the same in Houston, but the afternoon thunderstorms are not reliable.

    I’ll bet you know your way around a psychrometric chart pretty well…

ghostsniper · May 26, 2026 at 11:42 am

Except for 4 years in the army, I lived 40 years in Fort Myers, FL. Graduated FM High 1972. I remember rolling around on the sheets at night in the 60’s trying to find a cool spot in a non AC’d house. Nodding to sleep every afternoon in a non AC’d classroom. Early 70’s working in concrete construction on 10 story condo’s in Naples gulfcoast. A small thermometer on my belt showed 135 degrees on that slab. Didn’t own a vehicle with AC til the early 80’s.

I never liked the heat but I endured it, til I couldn’t stand it any more. That was in 2006. Florida wasn’t my home any more and it took me a long time to figure it out. Too many people, too much crime, too many assholes, too goddam hot.

We moved to small acreage in the woods of south central Indiana and I have not been back to FL at all and most likely never will. I’m an architect and 95% of my work is in southwest Florida.

It took me a long time to realize there is a better life outside Florida but I let that “family” thing chain me for way too long. I had to be me. So my wife of 42 years and I now live with the wild creatures and are enjoing every minute of it.

    Birdog357 · May 28, 2026 at 7:05 am

    That’s a gorgeous part of the greatest state in the union you moved to. Now if we could just get rid of the RINO tyrants and get us some good conservatives back in office, life would be grand.

Slow Joe Crow · May 26, 2026 at 10:05 pm

That’s the attraction of the High Desert. East of the Cascades summer humidity is generally 55-60% so even during the occasional 90-100 degree days so it’s bearable as long as you stay hydrated. Granteditgetscild in the winter, but you can always ski or snowmobile. I hate humidity sobI want nothing to do with most of the South

oldvet50 · May 27, 2026 at 7:25 am

The most humorous thing to me is the people that buy and install ‘misters’ to help cool them off here in Florida. They work great out west; not so much here.

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