This Heat is UNbelievable!

plthijinx • Jul 2, 2005 4:48 pm
man it's so hot here at the airport, the devil called and placed an order for a new A/C unit!!

latest weather info here at KLVJ - KLVJ 021953Z AUTO 00000KT 10SM FEW060 36/20 A2985

pearland: 7/02/05 at 1953 zulu - auto observation - wind: calm, visibility: 10 statute miles, sky: few clouds at 6,000 ft., temp: 36 celcius, dewpoint 20 altimiter: 29.85

97 degrees!!!!! wtf!!?! someone PLEASE turn on the A/C! I did a fuel ferry flight an hour ago and probably sweat off 5 pounds off of my already skinny ass! this sucks! at least we bought a margarita machine today that we'll try out after the flying day is done. that's something to look forward to.....
Troubleshooter • Jul 2, 2005 5:03 pm
97 degrees? You're kidding right? What kind of sissy are you?

Right Now for
Hammond, LA (70401)
Save this Location

On The Spot Weather

Thunder
96°F
Feels Like
114°F

Previous seven days:

25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th 1st
High 97°F 93°F 97°F 97°F 97°F 97°F 99°F
Low 72°F 72°F 72°F 72°F 77°F 77°F 73°F
plthijinx • Jul 2, 2005 5:06 pm
yeah, but hauling fuel around running from airplane to airplane sucks! it was over 100 yesterday and i bet it gets there today. not to mention the thermal turbulance up there right now. it's just not comfortable.
melidasaur • Jul 2, 2005 5:13 pm
It's fantastic in my part of the country... low 80s, little humidity, nice breeze. We suffered the hot crap last week. I hate hot weather, I hate summer... and I read in a magazine that you can get Seasonal Affective Disorder in summer... I think I may have it. if fall and winter could hurry up, I'd be much happier.
wolf • Jul 2, 2005 5:15 pm
93,000,000 miles away and it's still uncomfortably warm ...

77°F, 47% humidity.

When, oh when, will winter finally arrive?
jinx • Jul 2, 2005 6:05 pm
wolf wrote:

When, oh when, will winter finally arrive?

*Gasp*
Blasphemer! I've barely tanned...
plthijinx • Jul 2, 2005 7:02 pm
well my day of flying is officially done. appropriate for the heat I just had my first um well, I don't know the name....it's ice, vanilla blue bell ice cream and rum. pretty tasty! :yum:
Rock Steady • Jul 2, 2005 7:09 pm
In New York in the summer it's 98 degrees and in California it's 76.
In New York in the winter it's 38 degrees and in California it's 76.
In New York there are 6 million hard working people and in California there are 76.
busterb • Jul 2, 2005 7:23 pm
Here also, and I picked today to change out my ac. More in my thread about Lowes & Whrilpool
plthijinx • Jul 2, 2005 7:36 pm
oh boy, i feel for ya on that one busterb. my flying may have been done but i had to fuel 3 airplanes and pull one around the ramp to the staging area for someone who's taking it in an hour. oh well, at least the heineken is cold!

Rock: good one!
BigV • Jul 2, 2005 7:36 pm
60 deg, cloudy some rain. I love june
Trilby • Jul 2, 2005 7:58 pm
melidasaur wrote:
I hate hot weather, I hate summer... if fall and winter could hurry up, I'd be much happier.



*GASP* I never knew anyone else who felt that way but me! Summer in the friggin' valley that is Ohio sucks. It's too hot to even GO OUT from noon to six! It's like winter only you feel guilty for not going outdoors to "enjoy" the weather.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 2, 2005 9:26 pm
97 degrees!!!!! wtf!!?! someone PLEASE turn on the A/C!
If it's 97 on official temp, what is it on the runways and aprons? :confused:
plthijinx • Jul 2, 2005 10:16 pm
about 105. i seriously worked my ass off today running around this tiny, overcrowded ramp. i'll try and remember to bring my camera as to show the ramp/area that i operate, for free mind you, well actually i get free airtime. oh, actually if you look quickly at the end of the take off run in the take off run video from the yak attack thread you can see our ramp just before we go almost verticle....but i'll grab a pic anyway......

oh, .MOV on that file link, and kinda big too.
Tonchi • Jul 3, 2005 3:42 am
Careful, you might get Lookout and I talking about what it takes to live through the summer in Phoenix! Anything under 110 is doable, after that requires more extreme measures. Look', were you there in the summer of either 1988 or '89 I think it was, when we hit 123? I'm still sorry I didn't buy one of the T-shirts from that event.
wolf • Jul 3, 2005 9:47 pm
jinx wrote:
*Gasp*
Blasphemer! I've barely tanned...


Hollywood Tans is open year round.
plthijinx • Jul 5, 2005 8:39 am
Tonchi wrote:
summer of either 1988 or '89 I think it was, when we hit 123?


yeah but that was a "dry" heat ;)
lookout123 • Jul 5, 2005 10:43 am
i wasn't there for 123, but i was playing flag football in 1993 when it hit 122 and they had to shut down sky harbor airport.

this weekend was beautiful. 110-113 degrees. i was never more than 15 feet from my swimming pool or a margarita.
plthijinx • Jul 5, 2005 5:47 pm
this weekend was brutal. with the heat and other things. on one flight that i had sunday, i lost my vacuum pump which powers the artificial horizon and heading indicator. thank god i was in visual conditions. helluva learning experience though. i got to see first hand how the instruments react when they loose the pump. i remember looking down at the AH and it was telling me i was in a dive when in fact i wasn't. heading was way off too so i looked over at the suction guage and it read zilch.

then last night i had a sight seeing flight for fireworks, lost my panel lights, had numerous bogeys in the sky and had to deal with every redneck on that side of town shooting wannabe sam's at me. (at least it seemed that way). shheesh, it was a long night. on the bright side, the 3 major shows were spectacular!
mrnoodle • Jul 5, 2005 6:14 pm
Brianna wrote:
*GASP* I never knew anyone else who felt that way but me!

Me three. September to December is my season. June's okay too. But screw this sweating business.
OnyxCougar • Jul 5, 2005 6:20 pm
Bullhead City, AZ. Where I went to high school.
Consistantly records hottest place in Arizona (along with Havasu).

High school ditch day involved foil, frozen pizzas, big coolers filled with icy refreshments and the Colorado River, which varies 5 degrees from 52.

125+ temps plus 52 degree water plus instant immersion = shock

The pizza was good tho.

I recall the thermometer on my porch getting stuck at 126 one day. Broke the thermometer.

"But it's a dry heat".

Broiled or Braised, you're still cooked.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 5, 2005 6:33 pm
I'm told that much heat affects the brain. :eyebrow:
cowhead • Jul 5, 2005 6:49 pm
whimps! alright... today it's rather pleasant for Kansas in July... but we ought to be hitting the 100+ mark which isn't so bad.. it's the 98% huimidity that can be a little much.. then again I work in a kitchen, where I fully expect it to break the 120 degree mark.. soon.. then again I try to think positively about it.. some people PAY to go into saunas.. me? I get paid for it.. now where did I put that bodyfat. . .
plthijinx • Jul 5, 2005 7:02 pm
maybe so but this is at 6:00 p.m.......rediculous! and i'm getting ready to go to an icehouse (ha!) and play in a hold'em tournament....sheesh. at least it's open and a nice hot breeze will be flowing through there.....
mrnoodle • Jul 6, 2005 12:06 pm
I like the birds. Do the pictures correspond to the numbers? Like, that's the temperature that species dies at? :lol:
BrianR • Jul 7, 2005 7:05 am
plthijinx wrote:
well my day of flying is officially done. appropriate for the heat I just had my first um well, I don't know the name....it's ice, vanilla blue bell ice cream and rum. pretty tasty! :yum:


add more rum and a dash of milk and you have Moose Milk!!!!!
plthijinx • Jul 7, 2005 9:04 am
:yum: !!

yeah, mrN if not the heat then the west nile virus! :D
Trilby • Jul 24, 2005 1:07 pm
Well---it's getting up there. We're supposed to hit 95 and feel like 110 due to humidity. It's miserable--can't even go outside. Whew! Staying indoors where the
A/C breathes that cool, cool air, eating popsicles.
plthijinx • Jul 24, 2005 1:17 pm
i'm getting ready to go to the airport and we have an afternoon forecast of 95 with a heat index of 106. and it's humid. today shall suck moving planes around the ramp. sounds like we almost have the same forecast Bri....
jaguar • Jul 24, 2005 1:24 pm
pussies, I've done outdoor construction work in 107 of your funny fahrenheit things.
dar512 • Jul 24, 2005 1:30 pm
Mad dogs and Englishmen, then.
lookout123 • Jul 24, 2005 2:10 pm
how about working on the flightline with engines screaming, wearing full BDU dress out, and 118 in the shade? been there done that. when it gets that hot, standard procedure is that when the third person passes out, everyone calls it quits.
Clodfobble • Jul 24, 2005 2:13 pm
You know what's really funny? On the local weather report yesterday, they displayed the temperature as such:

Temp: 102
Wind Chill: 97
plthijinx • Jul 24, 2005 3:03 pm
lookout123 wrote:
how about working on the flightline with engines screaming, wearing full BDU dress out, and 118 in the shade? been there done that. when it gets that hot, standard procedure is that when the third person passes out, everyone calls it quits.


at least someone knows what i'm talking about :cool:

edit: last weekend i damn near had a heat stroke putting the interior back in a piper aerostar. that was brutal. i didn't even see it coming. i went in the office to get the dvd screen (mounted behind the pilots, flip down screen) for the passangers and when i got the the office i went light headed and things started to get very dark. i had to rest in the office for about an hour before i could complete the installation.
plthijinx • Jul 24, 2005 3:04 pm
Clodfobble wrote:
You know what's really funny? On the local weather report yesterday, they displayed the temperature as such:

Temp: 102
Wind Chill: 97


wind chill? in austin? in july? now THAT'S funny!!
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 24, 2005 4:09 pm
plthijinx wrote:
at least someone knows what i'm talking about :cool:

Try stacking bales of hay in a 140 deg F hay loft and the dirt and dust that was plastered to you starts dropping off because you've stopped sweating.
Grab a drink and every pore bursts open like a dam dumping out the amount equivalent of what you're drinking. :sweat:
Griff • Jul 24, 2005 8:13 pm
xoxoxoBruce wrote:
Try stacking bales of hay in a 140 deg F hay loft and the dirt and dust that was plastered to you starts dropping off because you've stopped sweating.
Grab a drink and every pore bursts open like a dam dumping out the amount equivalent of what you're drinking. :sweat:


I know exactly what you're talking about.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 24, 2005 8:24 pm
Oh, I forgot.... after the hayloft, the next time you blow your nose, don't use anything you're not going to bury or burn. :lol:
footfootfoot • Jul 24, 2005 8:55 pm
Then there is crossing the continental divide seven times in one day on your bicycle, not peeing once the whole day because you never had to, and when you finally do, it's almost as dark as coffee. 107º
Brett's Honey • Jul 24, 2005 9:03 pm
Yesterday we were 106 with a heat index of 115........
zippyt • Jul 24, 2005 10:56 pm
Jag i see your construction in 107 , with tearing down a burned out lumber yard at 114-8 standing temp , I don't rember but it set a record in Memphis , coated in black dust ,I have NO idea what the heat index was , but it was BRUTAL !!!!!!!

Bruce , never stacked hay but try working on a man lift 40+ feet up next to the roof of a whear house , you can actualy tell the temp by watching cigerette smoke ,
if its floating up , hell its cool
if its hanging around your head , it starting to get hot
if it is flowing DOWN , well it is HOT !!!!!!!

Most of the work i do now days is out side , i had to paint my hard hat silver to help shed some heat ( and yes it DOES make a slight difference ) , and my boss wounders why i carry a fan !!!
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 24, 2005 11:25 pm
Oh yeah...it's easy to see why those roofers would lie, cheat, steal and even kill to get a job in the union hall. Those roofs are hell on earth.

Somewhere around here I have a white, broad brimmed, linemans hard hat. It's a lot better than a bump cap in the sun. :)
farfromhome • Jul 25, 2005 12:54 am
"about 105. i seriously worked my ass off today running around this tiny, overcrowded ramp."

Hmmm..
I don't want to get into an I can outdo you war, but heres my job: I work in a hardware warehouse. I'm in the shipping dept. We load trailers every day. More than half are floor loaded (not palletized). Several each day are calculated to be at 100 to 120%. What does that mean? It means you are stuck inside a metal can where the temps will routinely be 20-30 degrees (or more) higher than the air temperature. There's no air flow. And you are loading cases of paint and nails to the ceiling of the trailer. Not to mention pipe, concrete, fence post, barbed wire and the other 65,000 items in this warehouse. We had many days over 90 last summer and uncountable days in the eighties. And lest I forget...you better hustle. Big brother is watching your line count.
Trilby • Jul 25, 2005 11:08 am
All of the above working conditions totally suck and you've my sympathy. I used to be a nurse in a steel mill. I'll bet they're falling out today. Gonna be 110 degrees and it already feels like it at 11:00 in the a.m.

What Greenhouse effect?
plthijinx • Jul 25, 2005 11:12 am
yeah, all of these conditions suck. hands down.
melidasaur • Jul 25, 2005 11:52 am
This heat is why I suffer from seasonal affective disorder in the summer... it's so damn hot!!! AAAAHHHHHH!
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 25, 2005 1:10 pm
farfromhome wrote:
Hmmm..
I don't want to get into an I can outdo you war, ~~snip~~

Not a war, just commiserating and informing so when you see people doing the jobs described, you can appreciate they're earning their money.
I've always maintained that people that work outside or even semi-outside like you do are only to be envied about 5 days a year. :biggrin:
SouthOfNoNorth • Jul 25, 2005 3:41 pm
can't really complain, since i'm a paper pusher in an air conditioned office right now. although, when i was working my way through college i worked at a power plant as summer help. they had us do all of the crap work (surprisingly) and one of the jobs was cleaning out the seventh floor of the power station........which was the boiler room floor where the coal dust conveyors came in. you had to wear every type of personal protection available, goggles, respirator, ear plugs (it was LOUD) hard hat, paper suit, gloves, you name it. all in 110-115 degree temperatures. was fun, especially when you blew your nose at the end of the day and black stuff came out.

right now, i'm loathing leaving work because i have my muay thai class tonight and the weather report says its 110 with humidity here in pa. we practice in an upstairs room with, of course, no ac or fans.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 25, 2005 3:47 pm
Oooow, power plants. That sucks big time. :dead:
melidasaur • Jul 25, 2005 5:24 pm
According to local news, we're supposed to have a front come through central illinois sometime tuesday night, wednesday... bringing much cooler temps for the rest of the week.


all i can say is - BRING IT ON!
Griff • Jul 25, 2005 6:55 pm
xoxoxoBruce wrote:
Not a war, just commiserating and informing so when you see people doing the jobs described, you can appreciate they're earning their money.
I've always maintained that people that work outside or even semi-outside like you do are only to be envied about 5 days a year. :biggrin:


I saw my cousin baling hay for his dairy the day before we left for Costa Rica (I kept a safe distance). Our last night in CR we stayed at a dairy farm outside San Jose at 6,000 ft. The cattle graze year round at temperatures that are mid-Spring here in PA. That's right, dairy farming without making hay. What will those crazy Ticos think of next?
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 25, 2005 10:46 pm
Better milk year round too. :thumb:
wolf • Jul 25, 2005 10:59 pm
We're in a code red emergency at least through tomorrow.
plthijinx • Jul 26, 2005 12:33 am
mowed the overgrown lawn today, wasn't too bad. only had to stop twice but it was way to damn hot to mow NBN's also......(yeah, i'm his "lawn boy") :help:
cowhead • Jul 26, 2005 12:34 am
oh, here's a fun thing. it seems seems I have gotten behind on my electricity bill, to the tune of 59.21 so a couple of days ago the fucking westar enegry guy has started coming around wanting to shut off my electricity.. well... seeing as how it's been an average of 108 or more.. means of course I've been running my A/C.. (not so much for me.. I mean I work in an enviroment that is that hot or hotter, so it doesn't bother me that much..I do have a 16 year old cat though and I don't think he would survive.. ANYWAY! ) I call them and try to work out a deal.. I mean I get paid of friday.. one week from when they started this bullshit (yes I know.. I was/am later on my bill..but not even 60$!?!?!) so. not that it ought to cause any of you any distress, If you don't hear from me for about a week.. well.. I'll be slumming it at the library. I know there are laws against shutting of peoples power in this kind of heat.. but damn.. what the fuck.. the guy is I dunno... angry at me for not being able to have my power shut off... it's weird. (heh, the fun thing is that I talked to an old friend of mine who used to work for them, it seems the trick is to go to the 'fuse box' and pull out the little peice of plastic they put between the connections... and walla! power! the only thing about that... is that they drive by to make sure you have no power... fucking weird...
Griff • Jul 26, 2005 9:17 pm
The saved max temp on my thermometer is 112 degrees F. I'm not sure if that was today or yesterday. It is now 69 degrees and dropping. The front was noisy and wet but I'll take it.
Undertoad • Jul 26, 2005 10:05 pm
That wasn't the front, just a line of T-storms! Front comes for us tomorrow late afternoon-night.
melidasaur • Jul 26, 2005 10:10 pm
It came through here about 6:45, 7:00 tonight. We even had to go into the basement as the tornado alarms were going off. I haven't had to do that in ages.
footfootfoot • Jul 26, 2005 11:15 pm
Bakeries in the summer.
tw • Jul 26, 2005 11:42 pm
Always the contrarian. Well here we are in my kind of weather (no -that's not satin; its pronounced satan). Been doing quite a few bike rides routinely beyond what I originally planned for - because it is so nice. I love this weather. Has not yet gotten hot enough (for me or the computers) to power any air conditioners. (BTW this is also the best weather to test your computers so that hardware problems can be identified and eliminated before problems cause data loss).

To justify a bike ride, first an objective is defined. One place has great chilli. Right there is ten miles one way. Two days ago, I rode a long circular route that probably turned a 16 mile trip into something like 30 for some diner coffee.

We ran a roofing company in my high school and college days. 100 degrees? No problem. We moved to the less sunny side of that building and just kept working. Walking on a roof when hot tends to do more damage to the roof.

While drinking that cup of coffee, someone desperately asked the waitress for something liquid and replenishing. Apparently he had suffered heat dehydration two days ago; so bad that he still had the headache today. All that gatorade, ice tea, orange juice, etc had done nothing. Of course. Long before gatorade was sold in bottles, we were buying it in powdered form - $1 per 1 gallon packets. And yet on the roof, gatorade was about as useful as coke for quenching a thirst.

I would come home bloated in fluids and yet still be thirsty. One gets that thirsty not due to insufficient water. The need is for salts and minerals; and not sodium. The only fluid that replenishes those salts is milk. Skim milk. At least one quart - usually two. Within half hour of drinking lots of milk, that headache is gone.

When doing house framing in this weather, I also drink a whole quart of milk for lunch. They wonder where I get the energy? I keep telling them. Don't believe the propaganda from gatorade and bottle water companies. Water is important. As much as one pint every hour the way I would work. But especially so are the salts and minerals. There are little in gatorade, Mountain Dew, and all those other hyped drinks. The guy has a headache for days because he was still short of whatthings that milk provides.

Another important fluid is orange juice or things that also provide those necessary minerals - ie bananas, or peaches.

Tonight is so pleasant that I may take the bike out for a near midnight ride. Good time because roads that I normally avoid due to heavy traffic are all mine this time of night. We just don't get enough days and nights like this. As usual, the contrarian. It implies what my real religion was. But then I learned how easy this weather is air conditioning is completely avoided in April, May, and June. Drink the right things such as a couple of tall cold glasses of milk. Avoid fluids hyped by commercial propaganda.
marichiko • Jul 26, 2005 11:45 pm
Stripping tobacco leaves in Kentucky in August. Don't know if that job ever got mechanized but back when I was a kid, you had to do it by hand. All the men in the family would converge on my grandparent's tobacco farm to get the job done. I was just a little kid and a girl at that, so I was spared. I'd climb high up in the loft of the tobacco barn (the best loft because it was far higher than the one in the dairy barn) and build a fortress for myself out of bales of straw that were stored up in that loft and hide the barn cats from my two cousins from Alabama and their new daisey BB guns. Me and the cats would stretch out up there, paralyzed from the heat and the humidity and watch my Daddy and GrandDaddy and uncles come in below with the tobacco leaves as tall as I was to be hung to dry. The drying sheaves of leaves would turn golden in the afternoon sunlight that came in through the slats on the barn. Best smell in the world!
jinx • Jul 27, 2005 11:38 am
Drink the right things such as a couple of tall cold glasses of milk. Avoid fluids hyped by commercial propaganda.

Huh. I actually can't think of a fluid more hyped than milk. :eyebrow:
So, the headache guy didn't eat anything for 2 days either, just drank water? Or you're saying that only cow milk can replenish a human body after a hot day? Eating and drinking anything else is just a waste of time then, or what?
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 27, 2005 2:56 pm
MMMmmmmm......milk. :yum:
mrnoodle • Jul 27, 2005 3:49 pm
Well. THAT should result in a few cartons going sour from disuse. :lol:
plthijinx • Jul 27, 2005 6:42 pm
i thought we were talking about heat here. she appears to be quite chilly! :D
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 27, 2005 6:49 pm
No, that's a normal healthy cow teat. :)
footfootfoot • Jul 27, 2005 11:37 pm
tw wrote:
Avoid fluids hyped by commercial propaganda.


GOT MILK?
http://www.nationaldairycouncil.org/NationalDairyCouncil

I worked with a couple of carpenters that would pound 3 Bud tallboys in rapid succession at about three o'clock each day.

They never left the roof. One and a half quarts of beer in the sun and I'd be down for the count.

They were hard workers though.
Elspode • Jul 28, 2005 12:16 am
Were we talking worst heat work experiences?

Baling very dry alfalfa hay in August in East Central Kansas. You end up coated from head to foot, inside *and* out, with a fine, green, granular powder which sticks to you like some sort of Satanic adhesive, and itches like crazy. When you finally get to shower it off, it sticks in all the folds of your joints and inside your ears.

Thank the gods I'll never have to do that again.
Queen of the Ryche • Jul 28, 2005 10:49 am
It's been a nice balmy 90s the past few days........w/ 90 % humidity........
worst for me: our vacation Ranch is just this side of Death Valley/back side of the Sierras - grandpa built it forever ago - laid his own pipeline from a creek from the Sierras, three miles down to the house - Forest Service told us we had to remove all of his pipeline - some back to nature crap - had three months to get it out or they'd seize our property (200 acres) - spent 10 weekends in a row in the summer (at least 100 degrees in the direct desert sun) driving up after work on Friday, spending Sat & Sun digging out three miles of cast iron, concrete and pvc pipe by hand, dragging it back down to the Ranch. I swear I lost ten pounds in those 2 1/2 months. (But we did git er done, and had a big party to celebrate on the last weekend. Screw you, Forest Service.)
wolf • Jul 28, 2005 12:47 pm
No worry, the Forest Service will find some other reason to seize your property.
Elspode • Jul 28, 2005 1:47 pm
Wolf is right. Unless you are a large corporate Right Wing campaign donor, and therefore automatically good for the economy (interesting how that works, idnit?), you no longer have any property rights.

So...what did you do for water after that? And what the hell ever happened to Grandfathering of easement rights (no pun intended)?
Queen of the Ryche • Jul 28, 2005 1:50 pm
The Ranch is the only private land for miles up there - we are surrounded by Forest Service and LADWP land - (the freakin L A Aqueduct runs across the bottom of the property). They have been trying to get it out of our hands for the last 100 years - the water battle has been ongoing. We have been on a waiting list for a well for about 10 years now, which will run us about $25,000. (They only allow water rights to so many people because the water table is so low, thanks to Mulholland and his damned aqueduct.) So for now, we bring all of our water with us.
plthijinx • Jul 28, 2005 1:58 pm
i guess drilling a well is out of the question?
Queen of the Ryche • Jul 28, 2005 2:00 pm
You have to have "water rights" which we are on the list to get approved for, the we have to hire someone to come drill it, which will run us around $25,000.
footfootfoot • Jul 28, 2005 8:55 pm
Have you looked in the yellow pages under "stealth drilling"? Worth a shot.
Queen of the Ryche • Jul 28, 2005 11:40 pm
stealth in Cali? Big Arny is watching...........
Trilby • Jul 30, 2005 1:41 pm
Just because I want to share: As I sit here typing the sweat is trickling down my cleavage. Howzat for a visual? I thought it was supposed to be LESS humid...
mrnoodle • Jul 30, 2005 1:46 pm
I'm just not seeing it. Maybe if you posted a picture?
Trilby • Jul 30, 2005 1:53 pm
*sigh* I would if I knew how. I've no ability to post pics, more's the pity. You can ask wolf--I'm so illiterate on the computer the fact that I'm even here in the cellar is a miracle. I will, however, introduce a new thread...for everyone bored on a saturday afternoon...wait......waaaaaaaaiiiitttttt.....!
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 30, 2005 9:31 pm
First you need a digital camera. From there on it's easy. It only seems perverted the first time. :)
zippyt • Jul 31, 2005 12:01 am
these last few days have been EGGGGGGselant !!!! warm but not KILLER hot ,,
when it WAS hot , it was SOOOO hot my Gold Bond broke down by about 10 am ,
( sorry in advance ) but these Nothing worse than your sweaty nut sack sticking to your leg as you try to work ,
heres a link , http://www.goldbond.com/home.asp ,
GOLD BOND [COLOR=Green]GREEN[/COLOR] RULES !!!!!!
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 31, 2005 11:14 am
Gold Bond!?!? I don't know about the green, but I'd rather smell sweat that the regular Gold Bond. Christ, that shit is rank. :vomitblu:
cowhead • Aug 1, 2005 4:02 am
uh.. amen brother.. Brianna thanks for the visual... zippyt.. damn you too HELL!!!! I'll save you a seat.
plthijinx • Aug 1, 2005 9:16 am
*trying real hard to keep correct visual in mind to avoid drain bammage* boobies boobies boobies
Trilby • Aug 4, 2005 11:30 am
Ok, it's 11:29 here in dayton, ohio and I've just returned from hose-watering my yard stuff--mostly hosta but some roses, geraniums, petunias, lavendar, pumpkin and one volunteer tomato--not an arduous task by any means. I am all sweaty and it's so brutally hot and dry out there that I am as much a prisoner in my home as if it were 40 below with drifting snow. THIS IS MISERABLE! I do not recall summers being like this when I was a kid. You could actually go outside and play back then, now it's too hot. It's like some alien world out there!
lookout123 • Aug 4, 2005 12:11 pm
it has actually been really nice here for the last several days. once the monsoons hit, the temp drops @ 100 degree highs - which for phoenix is actually pretty comfy.
Clodfobble • Aug 4, 2005 12:54 pm
Bri, you should water in the evenings after the sun goes down, otherwise literally half of it evaporates and you've wasted your time. Here, if you do that, you will likely have neighbors come out and nag you, but we're on official watering rotations so obviously it's a bigger deal here.
Griff • Aug 4, 2005 10:12 pm
I biked to and from work yesterday. It was a bit uncomfortable.
marichiko • Aug 4, 2005 10:37 pm
I considered turning on the heat today. Its been rainy and cold here for two days now on the Front Range of Colorado. ;)
plthijinx • Aug 5, 2005 4:49 pm
i just got back from flying to el dorado arkansas and at 10,500 feet it was 50 degrees, cold but felt good! i contemplated turning on the heater but.....naaaahhh!