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New This is not cold...
This is Shorts and T-Shirt weather...

Snow... Bah... When *I* can't get out... then we have snow...

I never seem to get stuck... for long that is... or go sliding off the road... driving at the break-neck speeds I do...

Chris... welcome to the beginning of a Great Season... Just wait 'til February, Albany get *LOTS* and *LOTS* of snow... sometimes in the order of "Feet per Day" multiple days in a row... ;)

You'll see... Welcome.

BTW, when it gets to ~10F and windchill of ~-30F, then I put on a light windbreaker... unless I am going outside to work... Then I just put on long-sleeves...

[link|mailto:curley95@attbi.com|greg] - Grand-Master Artist in IT
[link|http://www.iwethey.org/ed_curry/|REMEMBER ED CURRY!!!]

Your friendly Homeland Security Officer reminds:
Hold Thumbprint to Screen for 5 seconds, we'll take the imprint, or
Just continue to type on your keyboard, and we'll just sample your DNA.
New Well, see, I'm just a simple southern boy
unfamiliar with your big-city ways. ;-)
"We are all born originals -- why is it so many of us die copies?"
- Edward Young
New Chris, I lived about 50 miles South of where you are...
in Red Hook, NY, 1965-1979. The all time low during that time was -26 degrees F (-32 degrees C). Most winters will have some days below -20 degrees F. However, these days are generally on calm days with clear nights -- after "radiational cooling". Gusty days with near 0 degrees feel much worse -- wind chill factor, of course. Once had a period of 2 weeks all below 0 degrees.

One February while camping with my son and other Boy Scouts and sleeping in a "lean-to" (i.e. essentially outside), it got down to 7 degrees F. That was not a problem. The mistake I made was leaving my boots outside the sleeping bag. They had been damp and froze solid and might as well have been made of steel. That's when you discover boots need to be pliable to get them on. A few minutes of baking in front of a campfire did the trick on the boots. The least fun thing was going potty in an outhouse. :)

Just keep adding layers of clothing until comfortable.
Alex

"I have a truly marvelous demonstration of this proposition which this margin is too narrow to contain. -- Pierre de Fermat (1601-1665)
New start eating fatback and lose the chickory in the coffee! :)
will work for cash and other incentives [link|http://home.tampabay.rr.com/boxley/resume/Resume.html|skill set]

"Therefore, by objective standards, the leading managers of the U.S. economy...are collectively, clinically insane."
Lyndon LaRouche
New Layers is the key
I have spent most of my life significantly north of where you are. What Alex said about layers is very accurate. Deep winter you want something like this: t-shirt, long flannel shirt, sweater, winter coat w/ scarf, toque, and mitts/gloves. Layers work well for the legs, too... I can usually handle 30 below weather with just jeans and underwear, but I grew up in it;). Get some longjohns.

Finally, good footwear and handwear is crucial... good boots are very important, and note that mitts are significantly warmer than gloves. Most of your heat escapes through your head, so make sure you get a good hat too.

The other note about winter cold is best expressed with a quote for Lawrence of Arabia... "the trick is not minding". You'll find that it's entirely within the realm of reason for your legs to drop down to fifteen degrees and still function and even be comfortable... it feels strange, but not necessarily painful, and you can sustain that for many hours without real discomfort once you get used to it. Core temperature has to remain high, of course...

BTW, Chris... did you ever receive the CDs I sent you? I have no way of knowing if they got to you or not...

Regards,

Jack
--\n-------------------------------------------------------------------\n* Jack Troughton                            jake at consultron.ca *\n* [link|http://consultron.ca|http://consultron.ca]                   [link|irc://irc.ecomstation.ca|irc://irc.ecomstation.ca] *\n* Laval Qu\ufffdbec Canada                   [link|news://news.consultron.ca|news://news.consultron.ca] *\n-------------------------------------------------------------------
New The part I couldn't get used to...
Having to ground myself before touching things.

I mean, I have heard of electrifying kisses, but the reality is more than a little painful. :-(

Cheers,
Ben
"Career politicians are inherently untrustworthy; if it spends its life buzzing around the outhouse, it\ufffds probably a fly."
- [link|http://www.nationalinterest.org/issues/58/Mead.html|Walter Mead]
New Bwahahahahaaaa
Yeah, that works:)

That's about humidity... and whether you use artificial or natural fibers in your carpeting. Where I have lived is generally humid in the wintertime... which means less static electricity, but also means that the cold feels colder. Winter fogs are very cool (that's when it's foggy at night despite the fact that it's fifteen below... that would be about 0 for you Yanks) but they can be quite uncomfortable if you need to spend a lot of time in them. It's in weather like that when you discover that wool is far far superiour to most if not all of the artificial insulators...
--\n-------------------------------------------------------------------\n* Jack Troughton                            jake at consultron.ca *\n* [link|http://consultron.ca|http://consultron.ca]                   [link|irc://irc.ecomstation.ca|irc://irc.ecomstation.ca] *\n* Laval Qu\ufffdbec Canada                   [link|news://news.consultron.ca|news://news.consultron.ca] *\n-------------------------------------------------------------------
New Permanent Change
After being in Denver for a few years I adapted to cold and even now can be out in 40 degrees with no coat at all. The drawback is that the limbs seem to be permanently cold, even in summer with the A/C running.
-drl
     Albany is FREAKING COLD - (cwbrenn) - (14)
         swap ya 89 and 50% humidity start drinking rye whiskey - (boxley)
         Snicker - (drewk)
         You're still in the tropics. - (jbrabeck)
         Wisconsin is too - (SpiceWare)
         This is not cold... - (folkert) - (7)
             Well, see, I'm just a simple southern boy - (cwbrenn) - (6)
                 Chris, I lived about 50 miles South of where you are... - (a6l6e6x) - (5)
                     start eating fatback and lose the chickory in the coffee! :) -NT - (boxley)
                     Layers is the key - (jake123) - (3)
                         The part I couldn't get used to... - (ben_tilly) - (1)
                             Bwahahahahaaaa - (jake123)
                         Permanent Change - (deSitter)
         It could be worse... - (ben_tilly)
         At Least You Have Topsoil - (deSitter)

We intend to respond to this matter pro-actively.
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