Hi Ruth !

I'm confused!  Here in good old Virginia, USA, a temperature
of 79 Farenheit is considered fairly comfortable.  ....
unless there's a tremendous amount of humidity to contend
with.  But even so, it's not until it gets above the mid
'80's with high humidity that we begin to complain.   So I'm
not arguing here or suggesting that you have a different
tolerance for heat - but what is it that makes your heat
more uncomfortable?  In Arizona, for example, the heat can
be nearly 100 degrees farenheit but since they have
practically no humidity they're not terribly uncomfortable.
Warm, maybe... but not "dying out there".

Clay - in Lynchburg, VA, USA, where we've got 26 degrees
farenheit outside - and a steady strong wind that makes it
feel even colder.  Thank goodness for clear skies!!


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ruth Budge" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2004 6:50 PM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Oregon weather - Wednesday


> Alice, I don't know whether it'll make you feel better or
worse to know that
> the *overnight* temperature in Sydney was 79 degrees
Fahrenheit.  And where
> that temperature is measured is near a cooling sea
breeze - so just a few miles
> inland, where I am, I estimate the minimum temperature
overnight would've been
> about 81 F!!!
>
> Christmas day/night was a couple of degrees worse -
they're the two nights when
> I've just left the airconditioning running all night in
order to get some
> sleep.
>
> Today we're expecting temperatures a couple of degrees
lower, but now the winds
> have picked up, and are blowing a gale....this is
bushfire-danger weather, as
> well as the thunderstorm season - a lethal combination.
>
> And yet, in the Snowy Mountains, a couple of hour's drive
away from Noelene,
> they're expecting a light fall of snow!!
>
> Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)
>
>
> Alice Howell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Winter has really
come to the Northwest
> USA area. We are in the 4th storm
> in about 2 weeks. We had snow New Year's Day so most
people were
> home. Kids were out of school on holiday. The main
freeways were
> restricted to traction devices on vehicles from border to
border. It's the
> first time I can remember that happening.
>
> Things eased up for a day, and then the current storm came
in. It was
> forecast as the 'storm of the century'. Yes, I know we are
only in the 4th
> year of this century, but its been decades since one like
this hit Portland.
>
> There is 3-12 inches of snow in the valleys and low hills.
The
> temperatures dropped below freezing. My town of
McMinnville seemed to be
> in a 'warm' pocket and only went down to 19 degrees F. We
set a new record
> of the lowest 'high' temperature. It snowed for 2 days,
then turned to ice
> pellets and freezing rain.
>
> A warm front is trying to push the cold weather to the
east. This warm air
> caused the freezing rain. There was 1/2 inch of ice on top
of my car this
> morning and it is still coming down. This ice is on
everything. Walking
> -- driving is treacherous. Portland had twice as much ice
in some
> areas. It is in a direct line of the very cold winds
blowing down the
> Columbia River Gorge. My town is 50 miles away and
protected by some hills.
>
> The temp has warmed up to 30 degrees right now, so we are
only a couple
> degrees from starting to thaw. Portland is 5-10 degrees
colder with wind
> chill down to about 5 degrees.
>
> Schools have been closed for three days. Local rail
service has
> closed. Buses are still running but with tires chained,
thus are running
> slow. Trees are coming down from the weight of the ice and
causing power
> outages. Business in Portland is at a standstill. The
freeway east has
> been closed for 18 hours. There are 160 semi-trucks parked
at one truck
> stop waiting to get on their way. The latest forecast is
that the cold
> over Portland is not moving. The highest temp predicted
today is 28
> degrees F so they will not start melting yet. Winds are
still at 30 miles
> per hour. Freezing rain is expected to continue another 24
hours. They
> predict that the schools will be closed again tomorrow and
maybe Friday.
>
> Since Portland is not thawing, the lace meeting tomorrow
will be
> cancelled. Maybe we can reschedule it. We were supposed to
have a
> reporter and photographer from the biggest newspaper
coming to write a
> story on lace hearts for Valentine's Day. The president is
starting the
> process of rescheduling, and when I hear from her, I'll
start calling
> members to tell them what's happening.
> We don't want any lacemakers out in this mess.
>
> So far, I'm weathering this okay. No power outage so the
heaters are still
> heating. My furnace can't cope with below freezing temps
so I add some
> space heaters. I've had no frozen pipes. I've made two
lace hearts during
> this storm. My food was stocked but the fresh veggies are
running low by
> now. There's lots of food in the house, however. We won't
go hungry.
>
> The TV just showed a city bus that was stuck. It was
chained to a jeep
> that was chained to a large pickup. The two little
vehicles pulled it free
> to cheers from the people around there.
>
> I will we could share some of this weather with Australia.
Mix the two,
> and it might be rather pleasant.
>
> In the cold,
> Alice
>
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