We get frost every winter. It will freeze at night but warm up during the day. Not all days but enough to do in tender plants in the garden. And when it is at all damp, +5 degrees feels colder than -5 (Americans can google the conversion to their quaint units)
As to how much heating we need, there's the rub. The houses are so poorly constructed and insulated that you can't really heat them properly. Admittedly our crappy dog door doesn't help, but lots of single pane glass and leaky everything. Much of the house doesn't have heat.
ha, sounds very familiar. I actually miss it. /end of thread jack.
that's like when the authorities went overboard in combating badly insulated houses and started calling for everything to be hermetically sealed and suddenly houses developed problems with mould..
but seriously, what are winter temps like in your neck of the woods? Do you really need that much heating?
We get frost every winter. It will freeze at night but warm up during the day. Not all days but enough to do in tender plants in the garden. And when it is at all damp, +5 degrees feels colder than -5 (Americans can google the conversion to their quaint units)
As to how much heating we need, there's the rub. The houses are so poorly constructed and insulated that you can't really heat them properly. Admittedly our crappy dog door doesn't help, but lots of single pane glass and leaky everything. Much of the house doesn't have heat.
Yeah, they have introduced standards for maintaining temperatures in rental housing here. That means it would be impossible to rent my house.
that's like when the authorities went overboard in combating badly insulated houses and started calling for everything to be hermetically sealed and suddenly houses developed problems with mould..
but seriously, what are winter temps like in your neck of the woods? Do you really need that much heating?
âEasy AM 66â A worthy successor to the Firesign Theater. âAnd once again weâre looking at a temperature of 75â¦unless youâre outside.â
William, and anyone with a radio background, I think youâd especially enjoy.
That reminds me of a Canadian journalist living in NZ commenting on our housing standards,
"In Canada we tend to think of the weather as an outdoor phenomenon".
(I've posted this before so please forgive the repeat)
âEasy AM 66â A worthy successor to the Firesign Theater. âAnd once again weâre looking at a temperature of 75â¦unless youâre outside.â
William, and anyone with a radio background, I think youâd especially enjoy.
Driving in to work I often see things that make me do a double take; this morning it was a small sedan tootling along, with a banana ⦠on the back window; outside; held in place by the spoiler. I can just imagine the driver looking in the rear view mirror and thinking: âOH! Thereâs my breakfast!â
Location: Really deep in the heart of South California Gender:
Posted:
Jul 9, 2023 - 5:42pm
kurtster wrote:
That was Los Angeles everyday in the 50's and 60's.
Oh yeah.
It was worse for one than smoke.
Playing outside when I was a youngster... my lungs would hurt breathing in. And the eyes would burn.
Walking to school in the early morning fog... the eye's would burn from the mist getting into them.
Holey moley!