Jan-25-2021 04:26 AM
Jan-29-2021 06:35 AM
Jan-29-2021 04:23 AM
trigley wrote:
I remember it well, it was proceeded by a thunderstorm and a good rain which left the whole city a sheet of ice. I was living in west Edmonton and working in St Albert. Driving was awful.
Those temperatures were in F. It was before we change to metric.
I had one of those certificates. I must have used it to light a fire in a subsequent cold snap.:)
Jan-29-2021 02:26 AM
Jan-28-2021 09:16 PM
BobsYourUncle wrote:
As a 14 year old boy, I lived in Edmonton in 1969. We had a record cold snap that lasted for weeks. It was a bit chilly there.
Highly unlikely anyone here remembers that.
In fact, tucked away in my filing cabinet is a newspaper article I clipped from the Edmonton journal after it was all over. I kept it for over 50 years.
It was still Farenheit back then.
Jan-28-2021 08:17 PM
Jan-28-2021 05:34 PM
ford truck guy wrote:
WAIT - - WHAT ?????? -55 C??:E
Temperature
-55
Celsius
=
-67
Fahrenheit
Formula
(-55°C × 9/5) + 32 = -67°F
WHO IN THIER RIGHT MIND WOULD ENJOY THAT????? Oh wait,, their not right in the mind, its FROZEN! ! ! :B
Jan-28-2021 05:03 AM
ford truck guy wrote:BobsYourUncle wrote:
It was minus 15C yesterday when I went outside to clear the fresh snowfall.
I must be getting soft.
I actually donned a light sweater for the occasion. My threadbare light t shirt wasn't enough....
Winter is on it's way. Almost time for a jacket now. Might have to dig out the gloves too.
darn Eskimo ! :B
Jan-28-2021 04:47 AM
BobsYourUncle wrote:
It was minus 15C yesterday when I went outside to clear the fresh snowfall.
I must be getting soft.
I actually donned a light sweater for the occasion. My threadbare light t shirt wasn't enough....
Winter is on it's way. Almost time for a jacket now. Might have to dig out the gloves too.
Jan-28-2021 04:17 AM
Jan-28-2021 02:54 AM
Jan-25-2021 01:02 PM
Jan-25-2021 12:54 PM
valhalla360 wrote:DrewE wrote:
One of my good friends growing up went to college at the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus.
He told me once that they had an informal test for how cold the day was. Take a half a cup of coffee, stick it out the window (on the second or third floor of the dorm, as I recall), and turn the cup over. If a brown splotch appears in the snow below, it's not too cold. If a small hole appears where the chunk of iced coffee hits it, it's starting to get fairly cold. If nothing at all appears on the snow, it's definitely cold and you should bundle up well.
The party trick is to take a cup of boiling water and toss it outside.
- It's its cold, it will instantly turn to light fluffy snow.
Done it many times in Michigan.
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be
Douglas AdamsJan-25-2021 12:29 PM
DrewE wrote:
One of my good friends growing up went to college at the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus.
He told me once that they had an informal test for how cold the day was. Take a half a cup of coffee, stick it out the window (on the second or third floor of the dorm, as I recall), and turn the cup over. If a brown splotch appears in the snow below, it's not too cold. If a small hole appears where the chunk of iced coffee hits it, it's starting to get fairly cold. If nothing at all appears on the snow, it's definitely cold and you should bundle up well.
Jan-25-2021 11:56 AM