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Where are you, 2dimes? what part of Canada?2dimes wrote:Doubt it. It fell from the sky as wet snow then froze when the temperature went lower.

Yeah, that's what we have in Ontario -- a late fall heatwave. Last week's temperatures hit 25 in places.jusplay4fun wrote:Where are you, 2dimes? what part of Canada?2dimes wrote:Doubt it. It fell from the sky as wet snow then froze when the temperature went lower.
I am in VA, just a bit south of Washington, DC, and we expected temperatures this afternoon near 80 F (26.7 Celsius). I am getting ready to grill outside now.
25 degrees is snowing temperature!Dukasaur wrote:Yeah, that's what we have in Ontario -- a late fall heatwave. Last week's temperatures hit 25 in places.jusplay4fun wrote:Where are you, 2dimes? what part of Canada?2dimes wrote:Doubt it. It fell from the sky as wet snow then froze when the temperature went lower.
I am in VA, just a bit south of Washington, DC, and we expected temperatures this afternoon near 80 F (26.7 Celsius). I am getting ready to grill outside now.
Meanwhile, in Vancouver it is snowing, and in Grande Prairie (which if memory serves is close to where 2d lives) they had a multi-vehicle pileup last night cause by a sudden whiteout.
The East and the West are very different.
Standard room temperature is normally given as 20 or 22 or 23 degrees Celsius. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_temperaturejimboston wrote:25 degrees is snowing temperature!Dukasaur wrote:Yeah, that's what we have in Ontario -- a late fall heatwave. Last week's temperatures hit 25 in places.jusplay4fun wrote:Where are you, 2dimes? what part of Canada?2dimes wrote:Doubt it. It fell from the sky as wet snow then froze when the temperature went lower.
I am in VA, just a bit south of Washington, DC, and we expected temperatures this afternoon near 80 F (26.7 Celsius). I am getting ready to grill outside now.
Meanwhile, in Vancouver it is snowing, and in Grande Prairie (which if memory serves is close to where 2d lives) they had a multi-vehicle pileup last night cause by a sudden whiteout.
The East and the West are very different.
Get your system of measurement right for Christ’s sake.
25 Celsius, used in Canada, is 77 Fahrenheit (used basically ONLY in the USA). Get it together, jimb.jimboston wrote:25 degrees is snowing temperature!Dukasaur wrote:Yeah, that's what we have in Ontario -- a late fall heatwave. Last week's temperatures hit 25 in places.jusplay4fun wrote:Where are you, 2dimes? what part of Canada?2dimes wrote:Doubt it. It fell from the sky as wet snow then froze when the temperature went lower.
I am in VA, just a bit south of Washington, DC, and we expected temperatures this afternoon near 80 F (26.7 Celsius). I am getting ready to grill outside now.
Meanwhile, in Vancouver it is snowing, and in Grande Prairie (which if memory serves is close to where 2d lives) they had a multi-vehicle pileup last night cause by a sudden whiteout.
The East and the West are very different.
Get your system of measurement right for Christ’s sake.
I know the Kelvin scale, too, but, like Duk said, that is not useful, except in the study of gases and astrophysics.80 F (26.7 Celsius)

He just doesn’t get it Duk.Dukasaur wrote:Standard room temperature is normally given as 20 or 22 or 23 degrees Celsius. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_temperaturejimboston wrote:25 degrees is snowing temperature!Dukasaur wrote:Yeah, that's what we have in Ontario -- a late fall heatwave. Last week's temperatures hit 25 in places.jusplay4fun wrote:Where are you, 2dimes? what part of Canada?2dimes wrote:Doubt it. It fell from the sky as wet snow then froze when the temperature went lower.
I am in VA, just a bit south of Washington, DC, and we expected temperatures this afternoon near 80 F (26.7 Celsius). I am getting ready to grill outside now.
Meanwhile, in Vancouver it is snowing, and in Grande Prairie (which if memory serves is close to where 2d lives) they had a multi-vehicle pileup last night cause by a sudden whiteout.
The East and the West are very different.
Get your system of measurement right for Christ’s sake.
If by "get your system of measurement right" you mean I should be using Kelvin, I suppose you have a valid argument to make. However, Kelvin, while perhaps useful in astrophysics, is of limited usefulness on Earth.