|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming, undoubtedly fueled by COVID-19:
24 degrees Celsius in West Cork, Ireland from 1300 to after 1600 local time.. We're huddling inside with the curtains closed, too frightened to look out into the raging sun of our burning destiny. Andre Jute ....and other hysterical bull**** PS When I first came to live in Ireland, people thought I was a weirdo because I walked around in what they thought of as high summer (usually between 13 and 19 Celsius) in a fur coat. In the desert where I grew up the noonday temperature was often over a 100 degrees C but the nights could be below freezing. |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On 2/6/20 10:01 pm, Andre Jute wrote:
In the desert where I grew up the noonday temperature was often over a 100 degrees C but the nights could be below freezing. Over 100 degrees C in the desert? Wow. That's hot. At least to make a pot of tea you could (quickly) put a kettle of cool water outside and then wait a while for it to boil, before retrieving it (again, quickly) to pour on the leaves. -- JS |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 8:10:57 AM UTC+1, James wrote:
On 2/6/20 10:01 pm, Andre Jute wrote: In the desert where I grew up the noonday temperature was often over a 100 degrees C but the nights could be below freezing. Over 100 degrees C in the desert? Wow. That's hot. At least to make a pot of tea you could (quickly) put a kettle of cool water outside and then wait a while for it to boil, before retrieving it (again, quickly) to pour on the leaves. -- JS Heh-heh! I meant Fahrenheit, of course. Actually, as long as the heat is dry, you get used to it. But if there is also high humidity, the combination can be oppressive. Earl Grey, with some extra lime, and honey off a hilltop in Corfu. Andre Jute Even to know how to spell Fahrenheit these days gives away your age |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 10:27:47 AM UTC-7, Andre Jute wrote:
On Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 8:10:57 AM UTC+1, James wrote: On 2/6/20 10:01 pm, Andre Jute wrote: In the desert where I grew up the noonday temperature was often over a 100 degrees C but the nights could be below freezing. Over 100 degrees C in the desert? Wow. That's hot. At least to make a pot of tea you could (quickly) put a kettle of cool water outside and then wait a while for it to boil, before retrieving it (again, quickly) to pour on the leaves. -- JS Heh-heh! I meant Fahrenheit, of course. Actually, as long as the heat is dry, you get used to it. But if there is also high humidity, the combination can be oppressive. Earl Grey, with some extra lime, and honey off a hilltop in Corfu. Andre Jute Even to know how to spell Fahrenheit these days gives away your age Why do you suppose one wouldn't automatically assume a misprint when such temperatures are not possible in the air on Earth? |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On 4/6/20 3:27 am, Andre Jute wrote:
On Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 8:10:57 AM UTC+1, James wrote: On 2/6/20 10:01 pm, Andre Jute wrote: In the desert where I grew up the noonday temperature was often over a 100 degrees C but the nights could be below freezing. Over 100 degrees C in the desert? Wow. That's hot. At least to make a pot of tea you could (quickly) put a kettle of cool water outside and then wait a while for it to boil, before retrieving it (again, quickly) to pour on the leaves. Heh-heh! I meant Fahrenheit, of course. Actually, as long as the heat is dry, you get used to it. But if there is also high humidity, the combination can be oppressive. Earl Grey, with some extra lime, and honey off a hilltop in Corfu. Andre Jute Even to know how to spell Fahrenheit these days gives away your age Of course. I've seen adverts for steel coatings that survive the Australian summer sun, where in the advert they crack an egg on to a sheet of steel that has been left in the sun for a while, and it fries nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Etf8ovWEtrg We have Australian stingless bee honey in our Earl Grey tea, thank you very much. -- JS |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 12:19:05 AM UTC+1, James wrote:
We have Australian stingless bee honey in our Earl Grey tea, thank you very much. -- JS "Australian stingless bee" You must be working for the Australian Tourist Authority! What was that old saw? "Nineteen of the world's most venomous animals hail from Australia." After I'd been in Australia a while, I toured around the entire periphery of the continent/huge island, and I've also crossed Australia through the middle, Adelaide to Darwin and back. There are so many South Africans in Australia because so much of it, the thin green strip on the coastlines, the huge farms and deserts inland, the sheep, the miles of wheat, the vineyards up the Barossa, all looks like home to them. Venomous animals? What venomous animals? Andre Jute Home is anywhere I put my typewriter down |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Thu, 04 Jun 2020 04:45:33 -0700, Andre Jute wrote:
On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 12:19:05 AM UTC+1, James wrote: We have Australian stingless bee honey in our Earl Grey tea, thank you very much. -- JS "Australian stingless bee" You must be working for the Australian Tourist Authority! Native bees. Commonly referred to as Sugar Bag Honey. They don't sting, but they do bite. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 6:13:49 AM UTC-7, news18 wrote:
On Thu, 04 Jun 2020 04:45:33 -0700, Andre Jute wrote: On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 12:19:05 AM UTC+1, James wrote: We have Australian stingless bee honey in our Earl Grey tea, thank you very much. -- JS "Australian stingless bee" You must be working for the Australian Tourist Authority! Native bees. Commonly referred to as Sugar Bag Honey. They don't sting, but they do bite. Why don't you mention that your great Australian government has made electricity so expensive that half of the population can only cook a single meal every couple of days? One would think that would be important to someone that is so apt to scream about the American government. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Fri, 05 Jun 2020 16:29:26 -0700, cyclintom wrote:
On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 6:13:49 AM UTC-7, news18 wrote: On Thu, 04 Jun 2020 04:45:33 -0700, Andre Jute wrote: On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 12:19:05 AM UTC+1, James wrote: We have Australian stingless bee honey in our Earl Grey tea, thank you very much. -- JS "Australian stingless bee" You must be working for the Australian Tourist Authority! Native bees. Commonly referred to as Sugar Bag Honey. They don't sting, but they do bite. Why don't you mention that your great Australian government has made electricity so expensive that half of the population can only cook a single meal every couple of days? The government doesn't control the price of electricty. They sold off everything to do with electricity generationm retailing and distribution to private owners and they were the ones who may electricity relatively expensive and made it so economical to install home PV. You'll have to give a credible reference about only one hot meal every second day. I'll treat that as your usual arse pluck. One would think that would be important to someone that is so apt to scream about the American government. Shrug, I and everyone I know has no probable affording their eectricty bill and none are looking underfed. PS. Australia has such natural warmth, that a lot of meals are eaten cold or cool, like salads, cold met, etc. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Holy Maloney, it's Global Warming
On Friday, June 5, 2020 at 9:08:40 PM UTC-7, news18 wrote:
On Fri, 05 Jun 2020 16:29:26 -0700, cyclintom wrote: On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 6:13:49 AM UTC-7, news18 wrote: On Thu, 04 Jun 2020 04:45:33 -0700, Andre Jute wrote: On Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 12:19:05 AM UTC+1, James wrote: We have Australian stingless bee honey in our Earl Grey tea, thank you very much. -- JS "Australian stingless bee" You must be working for the Australian Tourist Authority! Native bees. Commonly referred to as Sugar Bag Honey. They don't sting, but they do bite. Why don't you mention that your great Australian government has made electricity so expensive that half of the population can only cook a single meal every couple of days? The government doesn't control the price of electricty. They sold off everything to do with electricity generationm retailing and distribution to private owners and they were the ones who may electricity relatively expensive and made it so economical to install home PV. You'll have to give a credible reference about only one hot meal every second day. I'll treat that as your usual arse pluck. One would think that would be important to someone that is so apt to scream about the American government. Shrug, I and everyone I know has no probable affording their eectricty bill and none are looking underfed. PS. Australia has such natural warmth, that a lot of meals are eaten cold or cool, like salads, cold met, etc. That came directly off of your usual and favorite source of information, the Lame Stream Media. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...priciest-power Which leads me to believe that either 1. You are not living in Austalia or 2. Mommy pays for everything. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
STP - global warming | datakoll | Techniques | 9 | April 20th 10 05:37 PM |
Global Warming | Tom Kunich | Racing | 308 | May 10th 08 03:54 PM |
A little global warming | WeaselPoopPower | Racing | 1 | November 16th 07 06:47 AM |
Global Warming | Tom Kunich | Racing | 212 | November 16th 07 02:41 AM |
Global Warming | Richard Bates | UK | 84 | July 25th 04 11:58 PM |