A nice dry -4.
Stormy Weather II
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... for them as has the French, amusing explanation in le Monde of perceived temperature (température ressentie) - wind chill etc. I hadn't realized it was calculated differently in the winter for cold and in the summer for heat -
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Some good advice to people with roofs over their heads (not me, I have another flat over mine!): leaving the trap door to the loft open will lose you a bit of heat inside the house, but will likely save you bigger costs on pipe burst repairs up there; and make sure to prevent dripping taps draining away, as the drip-drip freezes more quickly than a rapid discharge of (eg) washing up water. Put the plug in and, if possible, stick a receptacle under any dripping tap.
Lots of snow showers this afternoon here, contrary to the local forecast, and an increasing blustery wind - last night's minus 7 C was the coldest at any time of year since January 2010; the shade temperature has not reached zero all day, making this our first ice day for some while. The most responsible people around here appear to be the council tenants in the nearby estate who have cleared their paths and put down grit, making for a pleasant walk to get my weekly bread. Vints' olive oil suggestion for my ankles pinching boots has worked to a small degree, though they still chafe a bit. There are the usual complaints of local councils failing to grit and salt side roads. I suppose the problem couild be ameliorated by keeping the heavy plant needed to do the job in storage when we have our more usual temperate winters; in Zurich I remember the dual purpose ploughs and gritters would be on permanent patrol during a snowstorm - you would see one every so many vehicles along in lines of traffic: none of your "job done - not my problem if it snows an hour later" approach found here.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 28-02-18, 17:01.
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Cloudless day, lots of kids sledding on steep slopes, BUT clouds beginning to re-gather from east / south-east.
Some people think they have helped pedestrians by shovelling snow off the pavements, but evidently what is set to happen is that the resultant skin of chilled snow slush / water will freeze overnight and by late tonight and early tomorrow morning........make the gesture positively dangerous.
Thick snow is a heck of a lot easier to walk on than a thin layer of next-to-invisible ice!!
So, yes, do appreciate it, seriously, kind thought, but...unless they've put down grit / salt as well. then ...erm..................!!Last edited by DracoM; 28-02-18, 18:27.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostSome good advice to people with roofs over their heads (not me, I have another flat over mine!): leaving the trap door to the loft open will lose you a bit of heat inside the house, but will likely save you bigger costs on pipe burst repairs up there; and make sure to prevent dripping taps draining away, as the drip-drip freezes more quickly than a rapid discharge of (eg) washing up water. Put the plug in and, if possible, stick a receptacle under any dripping tap.
I may well do.
We have more of the stuff here today. It should never have been designed to be prettily white. Some awful shade of puce is the gist of it. To use a Nan word, I cannot abear it!
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Drew back the curtains this morning and still couldn't see out: the wind had driven the snow against all the windows on the bedroom side of the house! (I've lived here over 21 years, and this has never happened before.) No Don Giovanni for me tonight (and, No, Bbm - for some of us, this isn't a "silver lining" ) - and no Tchaikovsky Piano Trio tomorrow, either[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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