The Day

Water is refreshing in the heat, right? In parts of Fla., not so much

- By MICHAEL PHILLIS, BEATRICE DUPUY and REBECCA BLACKWELL

Key Biscayne, Fla. — In the sweltering summer heat, nobody tries to cool off by jumping into a hot tub. In parts of Florida, however, that’s what the ocean has felt like.

This past week, sea surface temperatur­es reached as high as 101.2 degrees around the state’s southern tip in Manatee Bay, according to the National Weather Service — although scientists said the context for Monday’s reading is complicate­d.

“It was like there was no difference between humidity of the air and going into the water,” said Chelsea Ward of Fort Myers, Fla.

Triple-digit ocean temperatur­es are stunning even in Florida, where residents are used to the heat and where many retirees find refuge from cold, northern winters. Several

other nearby spots reached the mid-90s. A storm finally came through on Wednesday, helping water temperatur­es drop back down in to the more temperate 80s.

Humans naturally look to water for a chance to refresh. Every summer, millions grab their swimsuits for a day on the beach and a chance to cool off in the water — a break from everyday work and worry. Pools offer the same relief and a place for friends to gather. But when water temperatur­es get too high, some of the appeal is lost.

Ward, 47, doesn’t keep her beach bag in her car anymore even though she lives minutes from the beach in Fort Myers. Lately, the water is just too hot. On Sunday, when her friend asked if she wanted to go to the beach, the two decided against it after discoverin­g the water temperatur­e was around 90 degrees.

When it’s hot, the body cools down by sweating, which evaporates and releases heat. Dipping into the ocean is typically so refreshing because heat efficientl­y transfers from your body into the water. But as water temperatur­es climb, that effect diminishes and you lose less heat less quickly, according to Michael Mullins, a Washington University toxicologi­st and emergency medicine physician at BarnesJewi­sh Hospital in St. Louis.

A hot tub — or a stretch of ocean water hotter than body temperatur­e — reverses the transfer of heat into your body. That’s not a pleasant experience on a sizzling, humid, Florida day.

“It would feel,” Mullins said, “like you are swimming in soup.”

Ice blocks in the pool

People already tend not to swim that much in the Florida waters that were so extremely hot last week. The water can get muddy and there are alligators and crocodiles in the area, too.

But high temperatur­es anywhere can make swimming less pleasant. Through Friday, Phoenix endured highs above 110 degrees every day this month. Pools are warm. About 150 miles to the northwest in Lake Havasu City, Ariz., Stefanee Lynn Thompson, 50, wanted to keep guests cool for a pool party she hosted Sunday. The heat had raised the pool’s temperatur­e to 96 degrees.

Her friend recommende­d she go buy ice blocks. She ran to the grocery store, picked up 40 of them and dumped them in the pool. She set up fans, too. All that hard work dropped the pool’s temperatur­e a grand total of 4 degrees.

“When it’s 120 out, anything helps,” Thompson said.

Recently, ocean temperatur­es off the western coast of Florida have been a few degrees above normal, sitting around 88 to 90 degrees. It’s not just humans that suffer when the oceans warm. Sea corals are bleaching. They can be hurt when water temperatur­es rise above the upper 80s.

July has been so hot that scientists announced a global heat record even before the month ended. Climate change is creating a hotter world, warming oceans and making some storms more destructiv­e. Sea surface temperatur­es are somewhat above average around Florida, but they are far higher in parts of the North Atlantic near Newfoundla­nd where they are as much as 9 degrees hotter than usual.

The extremely high sea surface temperatur­es recorded earlier last week off Florida’s southern tip were caused by lots of sun, little wind and no storms.

“I’ve never seen temperatur­es 100 degrees in Florida Bay in the 21 years I’ve been in the Keys,” said Andy Devanas, science officer at the National Weather Service in Key West, Fla.

Warm water everywhere?

And there are some questions about how representa­tive Monday’s 101.2-degree reading in Manatee Bay were. Water there is shallow and thus heats up quickly. If there’s lots of sediment, that can raise temperatur­es, too, according to David Roth, a forecaster with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Climate Prediction Center.

By contrast, stop by the YMCA pools on the North Shore of Massachuse­tts near Boston and you’ll descend into water that’s around 78 to 80 degrees. The ocean nearby is cooler, too. Sea surface temperatur­es off Cape Cod, for example, barely touched the mid70s last week.

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