68F this morning! Brrr! It’s gradually creeping up, the temperature is now, thankfully! Two mugs of tea later and a bowl of porridge at Castle Plantagenet today!
Stormy Weather II
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Last night was pretty disgusting - not all the wet stuff was liquid - and I'm glad I didn't need to be out. Today is sunny and blue sky with fluffy bits, albeit with a somewhat energetic cold quarter wind. Good to get out into for a while especially if something warming awaits on return, but possibly not the best for a coastal foray. The wet stuff is due to return this evening apparently.
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Originally posted by BBMmk2 View Post68F this morning! Brrr!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostEh? That's way beyond lethally hot! Perhaps you mean 65°F (18.3°C, which is itself not that chilly).Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/2654710 says the temperature outside in your area is around 6°C at the moment. Now that, to me, is chilly. That said, it's 2°C lower here.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostEh? That's way beyond lethally hot! Perhaps you mean 65°F (18.3°C, which is itself not that chilly).
[Ah. I think I have it. You meant 6°C.]
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post… and yet, it's sunny to the extent that I didn't need to wear my coat while on my walk (though the sun went behind the clouds intermittently for the latter half of the walk).
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Speaking of heating bills, I just had my second estimated electricity quarterly in a row. I cut down enormously on the amount of electricity and gas I used during the hot days of summer, and the last bill was £23 more than I'd expected. Today's, which I'd pre-estimated at £100, was a demand for £115. A manual meter reading revealed the one assumed by Eon to be 280 units more than the actual. Advised on the bill to submit the actual reading online, the system then declared my entry figures invalid! Evidently there was no way the supplier was going to accept the bit I'd been doing for the environment. Now resorting to the telephone number to be rung to report such matters, I was kept waiting for 20 minutes, having to put up with repeating alternations of pre-recorded apologies and the first 5 bars of the slow movement of Mozart's Jupiter, and gave up. I decided to try another phone number on the bill advised for ringing in one's readings. This involved several attempts to dictate my name, postal code and date of birth, all proving impossible as the system apparently was unable to interpret my speaking voice; likewise, for the first 3 attempts, typing in the same details on my phone key pad, which were too slow. Eventually I was through, this time "only" having to wait 10 minutes listening this time to a repeated Mozart piano concerto slow intro alternating with another pre-recorded apology, and the sprightly Scottish lass based up in Glasgow was able to process my amendments manually while I hung on listening to one of the Purcell Chaconnes! In the end I was informed that I will be receiving a new demand through the post in the next 5 working days, and the amount will be for £68.60, "proving" it pays to be patient. By how much my life has been shortened by the strain of it all will have to remain conjectural.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostSpeaking of heating bills, I just had my second estimated electricity quarterly in a row. I cut down enormously on the amount of electricity and gas I used during the hot days of summer, and the last bill was £23 more than I'd expected. Today's, which I'd pre-estimated at £100, was a demand for £115. A manual meter reading revealed the one assumed by Eon to be 280 units more than the actual. Advised on the bill to submit the actual reading online, the system then declared my entry figures invalid! Evidently there was no way the supplier was going to accept the bit I'd been doing for the environment. Now resorting to the telephone number to be rung to report such matters, I was kept waiting for 20 minutes, having to put up with repeating alternations of pre-recorded apologies and the first 5 bars of the slow movement of Mozart's Jupiter, and gave up. I decided to try another phone number on the bill advised for ringing in one's readings. This involved several attempts to dictate my name, postal code and date of birth, all proving impossible as the system apparently was unable to interpret my speaking voice; likewise, for the first 3 attempts, typing in the same details on my phone key pad, which were too slow. Eventually I was through, this time "only" having to wait 10 minutes listening this time to a repeated Mozart piano concerto slow intro alternating with another pre-recorded apology, and the sprightly Scottish lass based up in Glasgow was able to process my amendments manually while I hung on listening to one of the Purcell Chaconnes! In the end I was informed that I will be receiving a new demand through the post in the next 5 working days, and the amount will be for £68.60, "proving" it pays to be patient. By how much my life has been shortened by the strain of it all will have to remain conjectural.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe humidity's not that high (65% at Kenley at 1 pm), which may account for that. I can never figure why it is that "experts" inform us that air at high humidity is less likely to be experienced as wind-chill than dry air. If that were true one would feel less cold when immersing onself in water at a temperature of 15 degrees C than standing dressed in just swimming trunks in the same open air temperature. In my experience the "coldest" weather always seems to be when foggy, at just above freezing point.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThe energy companies routinely overestimate during the warmer months to build up credit against the winter bills. The official line is that this helps customers by evening out the financial load(I have been told this several times when complaining about big discrepancies); my take on it is that it's free borrowing for them, and also reduces the build up of bill non-payments which affect their profits. It's another reason why we are pushed to use direct debit as they can just drip feed their coffers each month and few customers bother to challenge the figures.
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