Weather where you are thread
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Hell has frozen over and I live there.
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"Official updates
From National Weather Service · Last updated 12 hours ago
WIND ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 3 PM SATURDAY TO 7 AM EST SUNDAY... ...COLD WEATHER ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 10 PM SATURDAY TO 10 AM EST SUNDAY- WHAT...For the Wind Advisory, northwest winds 30 to 40 mph with
gusts up to 50 mph expected. For the Cold Weather Advisory, very
cold wind chills as low as 23 expected."
Wind gust of this speed could reduce my mobile home to matchsticks. The more likely scenario is it will be pushed from side to side from its "level" that is two iron beams running lengthwise these being lifted off the ground by iron supports I think grounded in concrete. The structure sits about 3' off the ground allowing wind to lift it off the iron beams. There's a fair chance the wild will lift the structure and then let it drop. In that scenario the severity range is between knowing it's happen when you're inside to the wind raises it up and leaves it as a pile of matchsticks next to where it stood or sideways off the iron beams so it lands on its side or upside down.
Of course at 23 wind chill you can die of hypothermia. Of course I have no heat and never did have any insulation.
One small mercy is the wind doesn't start until 3 p.m.
Temperature starting at 55 at 12 a.m. descending throughout the day to 39.
My cracked, blown open casement window repair will probably be torn apart with the difference being there would be a lot more glass flying everywhere when it explodes and no way to fix it in these conditions. I can't pay for a new casement window. I'll just leave a hole in the wall.
This is why I want to move to solid construction.
- WHAT...For the Wind Advisory, northwest winds 30 to 40 mph with
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I can't believe you don't have a winter coat. I can recommend as excellent quality and value for money:
Pategonia
MamutHere it's been wet and is forecast to continue.
Heavy driven rain two days ago again found a crack in our area of flat roof.
So a tarpaulin is on until fair weather gives a chance to repair. Thought I'd try Siramico liquid rubber this time, instead of old school bitchumen. -
Thanks for the recommendations! I appreciate it.
People in Florida don't buy winter coats.
Then again, most people don't have roommates who don't pay the electricity bill when it's in your name, truck the electricity company into believing you skipped town, leaving a debt in your name sent to collections, truck the electricity company into believing they are the new tenant, running up the electricity bill again, and having the power cut off permanently.
But, yes, I learned this winter (when it was too late to budget for this purpose a second time) about the myths and facts about what you do to avoid hypothermia.
A winter coat, a wool blanket, wool sweaters, mittens, warm socks, and a fitted cap not a hoodie would have been the right approach.
They say cold and damp is a very, very dangerous combination I mean if you didn't have any or didn't have adequate shelter e.g. if you were sheltering in an abandoned barn.
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No. it's just I haven't lived somewhere cold since I was 14.
I was born in Tampa and my parents and I moved to my father's home town when I was 2. I lived in New York for about a year after college as well.
I hated the cold. I've always hated the cold.
This is where my father passed in the house he built in '73, the same one my brother and I inherited, and the estate sold.
Duchess County (Hyde Park) is where FDR had a mansion. Many old Dutch families and Gilded Age industrialists had mansions on the Eastern side of the Hudson.
The area was settled by the Dutch before the English. A lot of its place names and folklore are Dutch.
Its indigenous inhabitants were the Iroquois.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iroquois
It's definitely cold there! There are four distinct seasons.
It gets much colder and there's a lot more snow if you travel north to Albany, Buffalo, etc.
I remember the last winter coat I had there. It was jacket length, down but too much, making it look like the robot in Lost in Space, with goofy late '70's style oversized wool collars.
My mother bought it for school clothes and I wore it for about four years.
Then when I left to live with my grandparents the summer before 10th grade, I left it there and used it whenever I was there during the winter.
It was a disaster. I don't know what happened to it. I assume it met a fate along the lines of getting thrown in a dumpster.