Windchill
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 18:09 last edited by
Current temperature is 24 deg, "feels like 4 degrees".
I just went for a 2 mile lunchtime walk without a hat. Not the smartest thing I've done today.
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 18:22 last edited by
Ha.... yeah that'll make your nose hairs freeze.
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Current temperature is 24 deg, "feels like 4 degrees".
I just went for a 2 mile lunchtime walk without a hat. Not the smartest thing I've done today.
wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 19:14 last edited by -
wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 19:37 last edited by
Man, Jon, that was cold, even by TNCR standards.
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 20:43 last edited by
Folks, there ain't nuthin' between that north wind coming out of Canada and my house, but one barbwire fence in Kansas.
And I swear two of the strands are down...
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 21:42 last edited by
I blame Trump for this. He's trying to buy Greenland and Canada, and clearly they're retaliating.
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 22:05 last edited by
I only came here because the internet alerted me to dry wit being given back to native dry wittiens. Carry on!
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 22:07 last edited by
I say bring her aboard, with her 10 provinces meaning not 1 state but 10 blue states!
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 22:11 last edited by NobodySock 1 Jul 2025, 22:12
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I say bring her aboard, with her 10 provinces meaning not 1 state but 10 blue states!
wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 22:33 last edited by@NobodySock said in Windchill:
I say bring her aboard, with her 10 provinces meaning not 1 state but 10 blue states!
We'll Alberta as a test run, 'mkay?
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Folks, there ain't nuthin' between that north wind coming out of Canada and my house, but one barbwire fence in Kansas.
And I swear two of the strands are down...
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 23:39 last edited by Jolly 1 Jul 2025, 23:40
27°.
Think I'll go throw another log on the fire.
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wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 02:25 last edited by
Tomorrow we have a low of 18 and a high of 24.
Guess who left his jacket at school? I guess dad’s driving him in.
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Tomorrow we have a low of 18 and a high of 24.
Guess who left his jacket at school? I guess dad’s driving him in.
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wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 02:33 last edited by
Not with a windchill of 3. It’s 20+ minutes.
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wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 02:45 last edited by
Run, perhaps?
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wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 04:58 last edited by NobodySock 1 Aug 2025, 05:05
Guess who left his jacket at school? I guess dad’s driving him in.
Make him walk.
With his second of at least 3 or 4 jackets dad! Heck, I have a closet full of them and I live in the land of sweltering heat. Our winters have changed, if you can call it Winter here. We haven't seen the thermometer dip under 32 in maybe 4 years? It used to be a regular thing in January, to the point of worry for the citrus growers, who ripe fruit can be ruined on one cold night. It's why many orange orchards have windmills scattered throughout. Moving the air warms it enough to stop freezing the oranges. Then there's the rogue windy rainstorm that can come in March when the blossoms on all the stone fruit are in full bloom. A bad enough storm can ruin a year's profit in peaches, nectarines, and plums. Grapes, the other predominant fruit here seem to be impervious to the weather and we waste them anyways and lay them on the ground to dry out into raisins. Oh wait, yes, a rogue rainstorm can do much damage to fruit on the ground, but that is rare in August.
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Guess who left his jacket at school? I guess dad’s driving him in.
Make him walk.
With his second of at least 3 or 4 jackets dad! Heck, I have a closet full of them and I live in the land of sweltering heat. Our winters have changed, if you can call it Winter here. We haven't seen the thermometer dip under 32 in maybe 4 years? It used to be a regular thing in January, to the point of worry for the citrus growers, who ripe fruit can be ruined on one cold night. It's why many orange orchards have windmills scattered throughout. Moving the air warms it enough to stop freezing the oranges. Then there's the rogue windy rainstorm that can come in March when the blossoms on all the stone fruit are in full bloom. A bad enough storm can ruin a year's profit in peaches, nectarines, and plums. Grapes, the other predominant fruit here seem to be impervious to the weather and we waste them anyways and lay them on the ground to dry out into raisins. Oh wait, yes, a rogue rainstorm can do much damage to fruit on the ground, but that is rare in August.
wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 09:13 last edited by -
wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 09:31 last edited by
NS - when I lived in central Florida as a kid on very cold nights the orange growers would set up special propane heaters and place them as a grid between each square of 4 trees. Each tree then had a heater in all four sides.
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wrote on 8 Jan 2025, 09:32 last edited by jon-nyc 1 Aug 2025, 09:33
Re extra coats - he outgrows his too often to have extras, his main coat which he doesn’t like is at his mom’s and he’s been using one of mine which is the one he left at school. I don’t have another adequate to the task (except the one I wear every day) as I recently purged pre-move. I’m a bit of a minimalist like that.