I will have take your word for that.I love freezing water bottles and popping them in the Yeti before going to work all day. Keeps everything nice and cold on a hot one....
It’s all fun and games until you’re deep throated by a five inch ice rod!
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Here’s a look at it over time:I'm happy that my last Covid project is done- the railroad steps which connect the driveway down to the backyard (~ 20' of elevation difference). I started this on April 6th, and 4 months later, I placed the last bit of stone fill today. Here it is by the numbers:
36 railroad ties used
250 bolts
5,500 pounds of pea gravel
4 drills broken in the process.
4 times Chainsaw blades had to be resharpened
30 bags of cement
This is what it looks like completed:
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Very happy to have had the cool summer we’ve had so far...
BUT, the weather is about to change:
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Pffft!! I’ll take your 105° over our 98° and 10,000% humidity any day.Very happy to have had the cool summer we’ve had so far...
BUT, the weather is about to change:
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Dude, it’s the same! 107 degrees is just as hot and miserable as 98 at your place, with high humidity... And, it happens here with much more frequency...Pffft!! I’ll take your 105° over our 98° and 10,000% humidity any day.
I beg to differ on your opinion of heat and humidity versus just heat.Dude, it’s the same! 107 degrees is just as hot and miserable as 98 at your place, with high humidity... And, it happens here with much more frequency...
Next summer, I will be in Seattle
you have every right toI beg to differ on your opinion of heat and humidity versus just heat.
I just got back from AZ where it was 112 the whole time. At 9pm it was still 104. Bill is right, with his heat you just cant catch your breathyou have every right to
Ive lived in Dallas, Houston, South Texas, several cities in South Florida, and Mississippi, which is the worst in the summertime, but 107 degrees in the shade is hot, it will likely be 110 or more as usually is the case... yes, it’s dry heat, but that why they have a “heat index” to compare “apples to apples”
I’m with Jon! I’ve been to California, Vegas, and Arizona. I’m always thinking “This is 108°!!??” I’ll take this any day over 95° in Virginia.....you have every right to
Ive lived in Dallas, Houston, South Texas, several cities in South Florida, and Mississippi, which is the worst in the summertime, but 107 degrees in the shade is hot, it will likely be 110 or more as usually is the case... yes, it’s dry heat, but that why they have a “heat index” to compare “apples to apples”