Friday, March 14, 2008

Note to husband!

32 degrees Fahrenheit is NOT:

*cool

*chilly
*brisk
*nippy!

32 degrees Fahrenheit is

FREEZING!!!!

(literally!)

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a lady used to living close to the equator ---that is usually!! (Yep, it is in the 70's here!!!

Praying for you!

redneck preacher said...

wimp

HTOITA

Anonymous said...

As an Arizona native.....I don't even know what 32 degrees is

Liz said...

aw... gotta love the freezing temps Rita.. (joking, joking!!)

Harry said...

Hmm, lately we've been shedding our coats and celebrating, when it goes up to 32.

Abouna said...

Try being here when the temperature is in the low teens or even below zero. That is what we face here in Western New York every winter. Ya just gotta love it.

Anonymous said...

Just because the rest of YOU people CHOOSE to live where the weather drops to obscene temperatures, don't give us SMART people a hard time when we don't enjoy the fact the temperature of the air is low enough to crystallize water molecules!!!! That's NORMAL!!!!!

Rosemary Welch said...

I'll send you a great big warm hug through the net. Are you ready to catch it? Here I go...{{{{HUGS}}}} ;)

Unknown said...

Poor thing! We went putt putt golfing and got sunburned on Thursday! Jayde is great and all is well.

CrimeSceneFairy said...

my thoughts exactly. dad says freezing is a little chilly. Why on earth do you need a hat and coat?

MightyMom said...

oh wait, it that a note to your husband?? OR MINE???!!!!!!

M.J. said...

I am with you Rita!!! I love my wood stoce, and anything warm for this half of the year! although compared to most of the winter, 32 is ok. Much better than 8!!!!!

Anonymous said...

If it is cold , add layers.LOOSE LAYERS. Watch what the locals do, and maybe add another layer, because your body isn't acclimated yet.Cover your extremities- head hands feet- because that is where the most heat loss is. Movement also helps.

Locals survive cold weather by dressing for it.Their physiology isn't that different, with perhaps one exception. I took an overnight open truck ride once from Puno to the Bolivian border ~ 10-11,000 feet. I was dressed very warmly,lot of layers, but was too cold to sleep. Locals didn't appear much more layered than I was, but they were snoring away. Different physiology.

The people who complain the most about hot weather usually stay inside in the AC all the time. Similar for cold weather.