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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 4:33 am Post subject: |
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I went to a friend's wedding in Alamogordo, New Mexico in the summer of '71. I don't know the exact temp because I was hiding in the car after being told it would be the guys' responsibility to chase the rattlesnakes out of the sagebrush before the ceremony. But it was hot, even though I was in a cold sweat.
The coldest: every damn winter morning when I was kid in Iowa, getting up and delivering newspapers before school, with Elvis (my dog--his upper lip curled). The coldest number I remember is -22F. When the sun finally did come up that day, there were sun dogs. Neither Elvis nor I appreciated them. |
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Novernae
Joined: 02 Mar 2005
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Posted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 8:45 am Post subject: |
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| Coldest, can't really compete. Minus 32C was the coldest and I still went to school. Then I moved to a city where they thought minus 20C was enough to cancel school. Wimps! Hottest, North-western Argentine summers. 45C not including the humidex, which put it well over 50. Thank god for the siesta, though at 10am the construction workers were still dying from the heat every once in awhile. As a great symmetry story I knew a girl who went from Tucuman, Argentina, Manitoba on a 24 hour flight. When she left it was 42C, when she arrived it was -42C. Can you imagine your body dealing with an 84C degree change? |
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desultude

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Location: Dangling my toes in the Persian Gulf
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Posted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 12:29 pm Post subject: |
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| Novernae wrote: |
| Coldest, can't really compete. Minus 32C was the coldest and I still went to school. Then I moved to a city where they thought minus 20C was enough to cancel school. Wimps! Hottest, North-western Argentine summers. 45C not including the humidex, which put it well over 50. Thank god for the siesta, though at 10am the construction workers were still dying from the heat every once in awhile. As a great symmetry story I knew a girl who went from Tucuman, Argentina, Manitoba on a 24 hour flight. When she left it was 42C, when she arrived it was -42C. Can you imagine your body dealing with an 84C degree change? |
It is actually not so uncommon for the weather to change that much in central Aaska. It can be -30 to -70 (F) one day, and above freezing the next when a chanook wind comes through. Ice comes crashing down from roofs, and the next night when it freezes again, every surface is ice. |
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Novernae
Joined: 02 Mar 2005
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Posted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 7:01 pm Post subject: |
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| desultude wrote: |
| Novernae wrote: |
| Coldest, can't really compete. Minus 32C was the coldest and I still went to school. Then I moved to a city where they thought minus 20C was enough to cancel school. Wimps! Hottest, North-western Argentine summers. 45C not including the humidex, which put it well over 50. Thank god for the siesta, though at 10am the construction workers were still dying from the heat every once in awhile. As a great symmetry story I knew a girl who went from Tucuman, Argentina, Manitoba on a 24 hour flight. When she left it was 42C, when she arrived it was -42C. Can you imagine your body dealing with an 84C degree change? |
It is actually not so uncommon for the weather to change that much in central Aaska. It can be -30 to -70 (F) one day, and above freezing the next when a chanook wind comes through. Ice comes crashing down from roofs, and the next night when it freezes again, every surface is ice. |
That's great. I didn't know that could happen (though my story's still better; an 84C change is a 150F change
I hate all this conversion stuff! Why can't Americans get with the program and use the highly superior metric system, then we would avoid little misunderstandings like this Though us Canadian's aren't much better; I once worked for a Federal scientific research farm where the fields were measured in lengthwise in feet and widthwise in meters ) |
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coolsage
Joined: 28 Jan 2003 Location: The overcast afternoon of the soul
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Posted: Sat Sep 09, 2006 2:56 am Post subject: |
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| The weather today: In Detroit it's going to be 82, and over in Windsor, it will hit a high of 28. Those Founding Fathers really knew where to draw the borders. |
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