Yes, it has been a little on the warm side this year.
Unfortunately, we, in Europe, will need about 100 years of consecutive warm
summers before we do anything about it.
Even Disneyland Paris only has air conditioning in their most expensive
hotels and it is VERY hot in the cheaper one (even with a ceiling fan). Next
year will probably be cold and wet (that's what happened after the last
heatwave back in 2003 I think it was). That's most of Europe - unpredictable
weather. It can be over 90 one week and the next you are wondering what you
did with your winter coat.
I do hope you enjoyed most of it though.
Maybe one year I will get there too.
Colin Hill
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, July 30, 2006 7:12 PM
Subject: [HG] St Chartier and European weather


> First of all, as an American who was raised in the climate of Southern
> California this may seem like I am being a whiney American tourist but it
must  be
> understood that I do not deal well with the heat even at home and I suffer
> from an inability to cool down once I get overheated.
>
>   Europe sucks......at least in July, and probably August. I have  never
been
> to an area that continually denies that the series of consecutive  heat
waves
> is a fluke, and the deaths of people do to the inability to  accept this
is
> mind numbing. BUY AN ICE MACHINE! Why is it that the in room air
conditioning
> produces more heat than it can actually cool? I am surprised that  the
summer
> in Europe doesn't cause more anger related killings from lack of  sleep
and
> over heating. If you live there you can cope with the issue just the  way
I can
> at home, but if you are traveling you rely on others to help and more
than
> once I was told to just deal with it. And I paid these people to tell me
this?
> My suggestion is to see Europe in the Fall or Spring unless you like the
> Winter cold (the in room heaters work great).
>     That is the worst of it now unto the actual  festival.
>
>     I don't suggest that you go if you are a beginner like  me (unless you
> are like Tobie and are just good from the start, then please go  and play
your
> heart out). The reason I say this is fairly simple, no matter who  your
are and
> how outgoing you can be it is all rather humbling and you tend to  feel
> pretty left out. It is like joining a philharmonic orchestra with a
beginners
> violin and a years worth of practice under your belt.
>     That being said, you should go at least once. It is  not at all what I
> expected. It surprised me in how the people could all play and  dance all
night
> and they all seemed to know the dances. There were people  that were
dancing
> traditional dances from all ages and all backgrounds. It  seemed as though
they
> had all learned the dances when they were young and were  all still happy
to
> dance them into their old age. My wife commented that it was  odd to see
> traditional dances being performed by kids with dreadlocks next to a
couple in
> their 70s and everyone was happy. The best dancers were still there
dancing at 4
> AM and that 70 year old couple was out there with them. Not one  fight or
> disturbance during the whole time I was there. Not something that would
ever
> have happen here.
>     The music was great. I can't tell you how many times I  heard the
songs
> that I know and felt comfortable with during the day and night.  The
players
> were amazing and the music never stopped. I don't know that I want  to
hear a
> bagpipe for a while. No offence to bagpipers but after four days of  the
same
> songs at the volumes that can break ear drums it tends to wear on you.
>      I tried to see all the music that I could but  sadly I missed the
show
> with Patrick and Gille, accompanied but our now famous  Tobie. It was
rather
> hard on occasion to get things together during the day and  still have
time to
> eat and sleep.
>
>    It is truly a trip to take but the weather (from what I hear)  is
variable
> and it can hail during the hottest part of the day, rain until the  mud is
> thick enough to stick your shoes to the ground, roast you all day without
let
> up, or it can be perfect weather that everyone is happy in. So bring
clothes
> for all occasions.
>
>      I am aware that most people don't want a weather  report so I will
stop
> here and continue in a new vain in my next report.
>
>     Scott
>


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