Forum Discussion
ejfranz
Nov 16, 2013Explorer
Photomike wrote:
That and the fact that it is a dry cold, as if that makes any difference but it sounds good!
I grew up in Calgary and ran around in jeans and running shoes for most of the winter in snow up to my knees. The snow was too cold to melt. It was a dry cold and as long as you kept moving you did not feel the cold. We moved to the Okanagan and then the coast and that was a wet cold and It felt cold. The snow was mostly wet and soaked thru your clothes. The moisture draws the heat out of you faster than the dry cold air.
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