Deborah Lewis

***We finally closed up the house and turned on the ac.***

It's almost 5:00 here and it's sixteen below. Our friends just called
from Race Track, about fourteen miles away and it's twenty six below
there.

I guess we'll be staying in today and watching movies and I don't want
to hear any more about your damn AC Mary! <g>

Deb L, making the raspberry noise in your general direction...

Kelli Traaseth

----- Original Message -----
From: Deborah Lewis

**I guess we'll be staying in today and watching movies and I don't want
to hear any more about your damn AC Mary! <g>**
Ah, yeah, same here, -20 in Minnesota, but a high of -5 I hear! <g>

All of you down south, if you listen really close I bet you can hear all the raspberries!

Kelli in MN





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[email protected]

In a message dated 1/5/04 4:56:24 AM, ddzimlew@... writes:

<< I guess we'll be staying in today and watching movies and I don't want
to hear any more about your damn AC Mary! <g> >>

Like the moon, New Mexico can have big differences in temperature within the
same day. I was surprised in Minnesota to find that a hot summer day can mean
an equally hot summer night, and that in the winter the sun coming out might
make NO difference in temperature.

Here it can be 40 degrees, so in spring and fall there's a time when we run
the heater in the car if it's early morning, and the air conditioning in the
afternoon.

Lately it's only been 20 or 25 degrees difference, and that's no fun. 58 is
our highest predicted next week, and below freezing each night. "But at
least it's a dry cold." HA HA HA.

(but really, without humidity, it's easier to deal with than if it were also
foggy or snowy)

Weather is fascinating to me. We get so used to our own local clouds and
clues that other places can seem like other planets. We were watching a movie
the other day and Marty said "The clouds are upside down!" I said, "No, it's
just Iowa. They have different looking skies."

Sandra

Sandra

Mary

From: "Deborah Lewis" <ddzimlew@...>

<<I guess we'll be staying in today and watching movies and I don't want
to hear any more about your damn AC Mary! <g>

Deb L, making the raspberry noise in your general direction...>>




LOL!! Take haert Deb. We're having a cold front come in on Wed. It's
supposed to go down to 74!

And I believe it looks something like this : ~~~~~~~



Mary B.
http://www.homeschoolingtshirts.com

Olga

We are just getting our pool heated so we can go in by the end of
the week!

Olga ducking and running out at full speed!

--- In [email protected], "Kelli Traaseth"
<tktraas@p...> wrote:
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Deborah Lewis
>
> **I guess we'll be staying in today and watching movies and I
don't want
> to hear any more about your damn AC Mary! <g>**
> Ah, yeah, same here, -20 in Minnesota, but a high of -5 I
hear! <g>
>
> All of you down south, if you listen really close I bet you can
hear all the raspberries!
>
> Kelli in MN
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

zenmomma2kids

>>(but really, without humidity, it's easier to deal with than if it
were also foggy or snowy)>>

I'm loving the Oregon fog and rain. It's such a change from the high
desert climate of Utah. We were in the mountains and it was dry as a
bone all summer and then 2 feet of snow for at least 6 months. But it
was a dry snow. <g> Really. Champagne powder they called it. I'm
still glad to be rid of it.

>> Weather is fascinating to me. We get so used to our own local
clouds and clues that other places can seem like other planets. >>

Absolutely. Our first few months of fog and mist were almost magical
for us.

Right now though it's been snowing/sleeting/freezing for about 10
days. It's supposed to be in the 50's by the weekend though. Then we
get flooding! Cool. ;-)

Life is good.
~Mary, at home, warm and dry and chuckling that they close the
schools here for 1 inch of snow.