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How do you even live in that type of weather? I think it's freezing when its 40F. When it's too cold to go outside you need to move to another location.
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POOPERSCOOPER wrote:How do you even live in that type of weather? I think it's freezing when its 40F. When it's too cold to go outside you need to move to another location.
Seconded. Susan, you need a winter home in the states.
It's so fucking cold you can feel the hairs in your nose sticking together when you breathe, and your forehead hurts after a few minutes walk
Yeah, we've had our handful with similar weather around here as well. But then again, what doesn't kill you only makes you stronger, o'aight? Some of my friends don't wear long-legged underwear until it hits -20 Celsius / -4 Fahrenheit.
"Calgary is a city of extremes, and temperatures have ranged anywhere from a record low of −45 °C (−49 °F) in 1893 to a record high of 36 °C (97 °F) in 1919. Temperatures fall below −30 °C (−22.0 °F) on about five days per year, though extreme cold spells usually do not last very long."
While not exactly cold here, it's freezing compared to normal temperatures. Been getting down to 5 C at night, and sometimes not more than 8 or 9 during the day.
Current weather conditions:
Sandstorm. Mild.
Location: Cairo Airport
Temperature: 23 °C
Comfort level: 24 °C
Dew point: -2 °C
Barometer: 1007 millibars
Humidity: 19%
Visibility: 4 km
Wind: 33 km/h from 190° SouthDirection North
Last update: Sat 9:00 AM EET
<a href="http://www.duckandcover.cx">Duck and Cover: THE Site for all of your Fallout needs since 1998</a>
Pawns4Mons wrote:"Calgary is a city of extremes, and temperatures have ranged anywhere from a record low of −45 °C (−49 °F) in 1893 to a record high of 36 °C (97 °F) in 1919. Temperatures fall below −30 °C (−22.0 °F) on about five days per year, though extreme cold spells usually do not last very long."
There's a double-whammy for you, Susan. You live in Canada, which is a frigid inhospitable wasteland barely capable of supporting life. Also, you're raised in a place that wants to be French but never will be, so you bear the curse of your ancestors.
"You're going to have a tough time doing that without your head, palooka."
- the Vault Dweller
I'm visiting PL these days.
When I arrived it was about -20 during day (and very sunny) dropping lower during the night. Now for a few days it's been aroun 1 degree and snowing. It's supposed to go back to freezing after the weekend. From this perspective southern England where people panic about -5 and 2 inches of snow, crashing their cars skidding in non-winter tyres seems unreal.
Pawns4Mons wrote:"Calgary is a city of extremes, and temperatures have ranged anywhere from a record low of −45 °C (−49 °F) in 1893 to a record high of 36 °C (97 °F) in 1919. Temperatures fall below −30 °C (−22.0 °F) on about five days per year, though extreme cold spells usually do not last very long."
Pawns4Mons wrote:"Calgary is a city of extremes, and temperatures have ranged anywhere from a record low of −45 °C (−49 °F) in 1893 to a record high of 36 °C (97 °F) in 1919. Temperatures fall below −30 °C (−22.0 °F) on about five days per year, though extreme cold spells usually do not last very long."
It was finally warming up here, but then the weather took a dive again. It's just cold, dry, and miserable with unrelenting winds. The wind is probably the worst part, coupled with the shoddy worksmanship of all Egyptian buildings. Gaps around doors and windows means the dust gets blown right in and covers everything.
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