awww, dry heat is cheating. It can be 100 degrees outside and it will feel like 70.Dags90 said:Cold weather is definitely worse for me. I love hot, dry weather. My general shape also makes me very efficient at shedding body heat, high surface area to mass ratio.
Eh, it's naturally less humid in the colder months where I live in terms of relative humidity, so my conception of cold weather is usually pretty dry. Cold and humid is awful though.Ryotknife said:awww, dry heat is cheating. It can be 100 degrees outside and it will feel like 70.
dunno, im more likely to be killed by people in hot weather than during cold weather. Hot weather seems to make people go crazy, look at the crap that comes out of Florida and nearby areas.Dags90 said:Eh, it's usually naturally less humid in the colder months where I live in terms of relative humidity, so my conception of cold weather is usually pretty dry. Cold and humid is awful though.Ryotknife said:awww, dry heat is cheating. It can be 100 degrees outside and it will feel like 70.
You're also a lot less likely to be killed by a window air conditioner than a room heater. Think about that.
Only because people are more active when it's warmer, hinting that most people prefer warmer weather even if they lie to themselves that they prefer winter.Ryotknife said:dunno, im more likely to be killed by people in hot weather than during cold weather.
well yea, people like warm weather. The topic at hand is hot vs cold weatherDags90 said:Only because people are more active when it's warmer, hinting that most people prefer warmer weather even if they lie to themselves that they prefer winter.Ryotknife said:dunno, im more likely to be killed by people in hot weather than during cold weather.
I've heard British people complain when it manages to creep beyond 77 (25C) and gets sunny. I'd consider 80 to be pleasantly warm in a t-shirt and shorts. There was one day in July when I was in Montreal where it was about 72ish, humid, and with a reasonable breeze; I switched from being cold enough to wear a thin sweater and light jacket to taking it off when the sun was on me.Ryotknife said:well yea, people like warm weather. The topic at hand is hot vs cold weather
Course what is warm is subjective. I consider 40 degrees to be warm, I know people in the south that consider 80 degrees to be warm (which would be hot to me)
huh...i always thought Britian had a temperate climate, not too hot, not too cold. I hear that if they see snow they consider it the end of days.Dags90 said:I've heard British people complain when managed to creep beyond 70 (25C) and gets sunny. I'd consider 80 to be pleasantly warm in a t-shirt and shorts. There was one day in July when I was in Montreal where it was about 72ish, humid, and with a reasonable breeze; I switched from being cold enough to wear a thin sweater and light jacket to taking it off when the sun was on me.Ryotknife said:well yea, people like warm weather. The topic at hand is hot vs cold weather
Course what is warm is subjective. I consider 40 degrees to be warm, I know people in the south that consider 80 degrees to be warm (which would be hot to me)
Trade with me? It's winter and I really want to feel the sun. A day on Bondi Beach would be pretty much heaven right now.wombat_of_war said:im australian and anything about 26c is too hot for me, i love cold weather even when it gets down to -3 to -5 c
I beg to differ. I live in the Nevada desert and in the summer it gets to be a dry 120 degrees and it definitely doesn't feel like 70. You feel every degree here in the land of no-trees and nothing-but-sun. It's the worst because there's no escape from the heat, like I said no trees for shade. Half the buildings have no AC and the other half crank the AC down so low it's like 40 inside. That transfer from 120 outside to 40 inside is enough to make you sick.Ryotknife said:awww, dry heat is cheating. It can be 100 degrees outside and it will feel like 70.