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OT: 1:02am 90°F

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 4:04 pm
by Rick
WTF?

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 4:07 pm
by Don
Texas

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 4:13 pm
by Don
At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 4:19 pm
by Rick
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 4:22 pm
by Don
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


You wouldn't like the Quakes, but if you like 5 dollar burritos as big as your forearm, this is the place.

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 4:59 pm
by yulog
Gunbot wrote:
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


You wouldn't like the Quakes, but if you like 5 dollar burritos as big as your forearm, this is the place.


Phoenix has those for $ 3.50, just filled to the guilds with meat :D

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 5:00 pm
by The Sushi Hunter
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


It's about 52 degrees in San Fran near where I am. And all those wankers up there are screaming Global Warming? Oh yeah......where?

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 5:01 pm
by yulog
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


Quit your bitchin an move to phoenix, average midnight temp 100 degrees this time of year ,average pool temp 98 :lol:

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 5:03 pm
by Rick
yulog wrote:
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


Quit your bitchin an move to phoenix, average midnight temp 100 degrees this time of year ,average pool temp 98 :lol:


You got it Yulie, I'll shut up now. :lol:

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 5:13 pm
by The Sushi Hunter
Gunbot wrote:
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


You wouldn't like the Quakes, but if you like 5 dollar burritos as big as your forearm, this is the place.


We used to have a roach coach that used to stop right outside our office every day and they made the best ones. I stopped eating those about five years ago cause I was getting fucking fat off of them. Took me the five years of eating right and running three miles a day to burn all that shit out of my system and lose the stubborn fucking belly fat that they left behind on me. But I did it and my wife is happy now that I did. But it's beyond me that anyone would go to places like McDonald's, Taco Bell and Jack in the Box for a burrito when they can get much better elsewhere.

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 5:55 pm
by The Sushi Hunter
LLL wrote:
Gunbot wrote:
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


You wouldn't like the Quakes, but if you like 5 dollar burritos as big as your forearm, this is the place.


Guys I have lived in both places. Dealt with a couple of earthquakes and over a half dozen major hurricanes. For me the choice is simple - LA is the better place to be. 8)


I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 9:14 pm
by Suzanne
It is 71 here at 7:14 a.m. but the humidity is 90% so it feels like 74. Today's high is to be 90. Not complaining because I'll take that any day over 15 degree winter days. 8)

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 9:18 pm
by portland
Well after the 12 days of rain and 50 degree weather we have sun and 70's.....should be 80's but I will take what I can get.....summer has not come for the great state of Maine as of yet :evil:

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 10:25 pm
by Andrew
6c / 40F right now.....10.26PM. About as cold as winter gets..... Was 0 / 32 a last few mornings though. Frost everywhere....

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 10:53 pm
by portland
Andrew wrote:6c / 40F right now.....10.26PM. About as cold as winter gets..... Was 0 / 32 a last few mornings though. Frost everywhere....





Burrrr....I can hardly wait for another winter in Maine.......I need to move!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 10:58 pm
by epresley
107 here yesterday, 105 today in West Texas--hotter than blue blazes.

PostPosted: Fri Jul 10, 2009 11:16 pm
by strangegrey
Andrew wrote:6c / 40F right now.....10.26PM. About as cold as winter gets..... Was 0 / 32 a last few mornings though. Frost everywhere....


Yes!!! Next time we have weather like that in NYC, I'll be in disney world!

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 12:21 am
by Glenn
Love Texas!

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 12:34 am
by mikemarrs
yulog wrote:
Gunbot wrote:
Rick wrote:
Gunbot wrote:At 11:12pm it is 65 here in Los Angeles. Our summer is late this year.


I gotta move. :lol:


You wouldn't like the Quakes, but if you like 5 dollar burritos as big as your forearm, this is the place.


Phoenix has those for $ 3.50, just filled to the guilds with meat :D



my brother lives in phoenix.he recently sent me a pic showing me his huge backyard pool there.said the other day it was 115 degrees.

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:40 am
by mdaemon
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:44 am
by stevew2
mdaemon wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat
It sounds like hell on earth

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:50 am
by Don
stevew2 wrote:
mdaemon wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat
It sounds like hell on earth


We used to call it Paradise on Earth. Of course, earning a first world salary in a third world country does skew perceptions quite a bit.

We used to say, "If God made anything better than San Miguel Beer and Filipino women, he keeps it for himself".

Then I grew up and realized the errors of my ways.

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:50 am
by The Sushi Hunter
LLL wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornadoes, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


Experienced the earthquakes and the hurricanes, but never a typhoon. But tornadoes, it just so happened that on my one and only trip to Kansas, the town did get hit by a tornado the first night we were there. I thought the hotel was going to split in two. The sounds of the roaring winds were terribly frightening. The next morning I saw very old, very large trees with trunks 4 feet in diameter just plucked out of the ground and tossed across the street like they were weeds. :shock:


Kansas. I think that's pretty much tornado alley right there. All my family is in Nebraska and every year they get hit with tornados that seem to be coming out of Kansas. During some of the past summers where I'm visiting back home, occassionally we will have to get the hell out of where we are or seek shelter in the basement when a tornado is spotted somewhere nearby. Being on a Carrier, we went thought a few hurricanes at sea, cause when those come you can be pierside or the ship will get beat to death from smashing agaist the pier. It's friggin amazing to see white water coming up over the bow of a carrier onto the flight deck that is about 40 feet above the waterline. And those waves bend 8 inch steel plating too! I got to experience typhoons while living in the Philippines. Those are so frequent there. That's also when Mt. Pinatubo was so bad when it erupted, cause it did so the day before a typhoon came in. So they had millions of tons of volcanic dust which was a huge cloud up in the air and then when it started raining from the typhoon the next day, by the time the rain dropplets had passed through the vocanic dust cloud, they were balls of mud the size of coconuts coming down out of the sky. I was there in the Philippines when this happened. Destroyed basically everything, and that's why the U.S. military pretty much left the Philippines. Clark and Subic were wiped out all the way around.

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:51 am
by mdaemon
Gunbot wrote:
stevew2 wrote:
mdaemon wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat
It sounds like hell on earth


We used to call it Paradise on Earth. Of course, earning a first world salary in a third world country does skew perceptions quite a bit.

We used to say, "If God made anything better than San Miguel Beer and Filipino women, he keeps it for himself".

Then I grew up and realized the errors of my ways.


...you now prefer red wine and men?

:lol:

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:54 am
by Don
mdaemon wrote:
Gunbot wrote:
stevew2 wrote:
mdaemon wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat
It sounds like hell on earth


We used to call it Paradise on Earth. Of course, earning a first world salary in a third world country does skew perceptions quite a bit.

We used to say, "If God made anything better than San Miguel Beer and Filipino women, he keeps it for himself".

Then I grew up and realized the errors of my ways.


...you now prefer red wine and men?

:lol:


After I worked in a refugee camp in Porac after Pinatubo blew its top, I saw things in a different light. I was drifting in that direction already but that experience jolted me into a whole new reality.

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:56 am
by stevew2
mdaemon wrote:
Gunbot wrote:
stevew2 wrote:
mdaemon wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat
It sounds like hell on earth


We used to call it Paradise on Earth. Of course, earning a first world salary in a third world country does skew perceptions quite a bit.

We used to say, "If God made anything better than San Miguel Beer and Filipino women, he keeps it for himself".

Then I grew up and realized the errors of my ways.


...you now prefer red wine and men?

:lol:
he aint gay, you got him mixed up with Frank and Jason

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 4:29 am
by The Sushi Hunter
mdaemon wrote:
The Sushi Hunter wrote:I've been in hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes and tornados, and I'd rather be in an earthquake before any of the others.


We get these everyday in the Philippines plus floods and volcanoes erupting once a week. We also have man made disasters such as our semi annual coup d'etat


Floods in the Philippines, yeah I know. When I was first there and staying with my then girlfriend in her house in San Miguel Lubao Pampanga, I often wondered to myself why all the houses in the area were on bamboo stilts. Her family house was totally Filippino design, no glass or cement, just primarily wood and bamboo and was about four foot up off the ground and a chicken coop fenced in under it. Then about three to four days after I had arrived there, a storm came rolling in. I shit you not, it was right after sundown and still hot as hell out. We were standing around bullshitting under a electric light outside of her house at the base of the bamboo ladder, and it started to storm out. First came the lightening and thunder, then the rain. About ten minutes later the power went out. And we were still standing on ground level while talking and then flood water started rushing past. In literally fifteen minutes, it went from bone dry to knee deep water rushing past us standing there. I remember how the water was really warm, like bathtub warm. So now I knew why the houses are about four feet off the ground on bamboo stilts.

And about the coup d'etat, is that when the coup tries to overthrow the government? If so, I know about those too. I was there for two, one in 87' or 88' and the other I think in 89'. Earned a medal for each of them since we had to provide air support for the Philippine Government. The later of the two was the nastiest of the two I was in.

Re: OT: 1:02am 90°F

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 4:37 am
by Esc
Rick wrote:WTF?


that's nothing rick.

average temp 44 degC/111degF peaks at 50degC/122degF
50 to 77% humidity.

go figure where i am. :wink:

Re: OT: 1:02am 90°F

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 5:12 am
by yulog
Esc wrote:
Rick wrote:WTF?


that's nothing rick.

average temp 44 degC/111degF peaks at 50degC/122degF
50 to 77% humidity.

go figure where i am. :wink:



jeff scott soto's armpit during one of his shows??Image

Re: OT: 1:02am 90°F

PostPosted: Sat Jul 11, 2009 5:15 am
by portland
Esc wrote:
Rick wrote:WTF?


that's nothing rick.

average temp 44 degC/111degF peaks at 50degC/122degF
50 to 77% humidity.

go figure where i am. :wink:





Hell or the Equator??