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orbitalsolutions

Excluding the warp of time, space, matter and light; it is present
while driving a bus about the States.

What is Hot?

In Florida they consider the summer as Hot. I have had the pleasure
of aquainting Floridian naitves who coward at the thought of
venturing forward about the earth when over 90F. (They say it is too
Hot)...

In the desert, those who have live there, never consider it to be
Hot. They simply go about their lives, dusty as they may be, and
forge forward with their interest.

In the west it is not warm until it is over 105F, and it is only
warming up when the mercury excedes 115F ... when the temp exceeds
120F, and this happens every year, then it is summer weather. Not a
man alive will tell you that it's Hot. But you will find no one to
talk to either.

I just don't know.

Hope this note is relative, too.


James
78FC33SB "Old School"
Orange Lake, Fl. (Partly sunny and partly cloudy)

jwasnewski

Hi James: Don't have much to do on July 4. Do not know much about
relativity but here is what I think is Hot.

While growing up in Tampa, FL without a/c, only a fan blowing around
95 degree air at 85 percent relative humidity, that is Hot. Sleeping
in that weather is not comfortable. Just returned from Daytona
Speedway with air temperature at about 92, relative humidity at 77
percent and the asphalt surface temperature under the bus reading 122
on the heat gun, that's @#$% Hot. Lived in Temecula, CA and St.
George, UT for 25 years. Love that 105 degree heat with 7 percent
humidity. That's hot but it aint @#$% Hot. LOL

Leroy Eckert
1990 WB-40
Niceville FL.









In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, "orbitalsolutions"
wrote:
>
> Excluding the warp of time, space, matter and light; it is present
> while driving a bus about the States.
>
> What is Hot?
>
> In Florida they consider the summer as Hot. I have had the pleasure
> of aquainting Floridian naitves who coward at the thought of
> venturing forward about the earth when over 90F. (They say it is
too
> Hot)...
>
> In the desert, those who have live there, never consider it to be
> Hot. They simply go about their lives, dusty as they may be, and
> forge forward with their interest.
>
> In the west it is not warm until it is over 105F, and it is only
> warming up when the mercury excedes 115F ... when the temp exceeds
> 120F, and this happens every year, then it is summer weather. Not
a
> man alive will tell you that it's Hot. But you will find no one to
> talk to either.
>
> I just don't know.
>
> Hope this note is relative, too.
>
>
> James
> 78FC33SB "Old School"
> Orange Lake, Fl. (Partly sunny and partly cloudy)
>

Pete Masterson

I guess I live in the wrong part of the world. It's 67 degrees
(Fahrenheit) right now. It's expected to get up to 72 or 75 sometime
today. The annual July 4th fireworks displays will (as almost every
year) be viewed as flashes of light in the fog. As Mark Twain
remarked, "the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San
Francisco." (We get our hot weather in September and October.)

On Jul 3, 2006, at 8:56 PM, orbitalsolutions wrote:

> Excluding the warp of time, space, matter and light; it is present
> while driving a bus about the States.
>
> What is Hot?
>
> In Florida they consider the summer as Hot. I have had the pleasure
> of aquainting Floridian naitves who coward at the thought of
> venturing forward about the earth when over 90F. (They say it is too
> Hot)...
>
> In the desert, those who have live there, never consider it to be
> Hot. They simply go about their lives, dusty as they may be, and
> forge forward with their interest.
>
> In the west it is not warm until it is over 105F, and it is only
> warming up when the mercury excedes 115F ... when the temp exceeds
> 120F, and this happens every year, then it is summer weather. Not a
> man alive will tell you that it's Hot. But you will find no one to
> talk to either.
>
> I just don't know.
>
> Hope this note is relative, too.
>
> James
> 78FC33SB "Old School"
> Orange Lake, Fl. (Partly sunny and partly cloudy)
>
> ___

Pete Masterson
aeon


Pete Masterson
aeonix1@...
'95 Bluebird Wanderlodge WBDA 4203
El Sobrante, CA






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

Howard O. Truitt

Pete,
I really feel bad for you in the cool of San Pablo Bay, You need to come on down
to deep south west Georgia. I just checked my digital temp gauge at 2:30 PM
Eastern Standard Time, Temperature 104.3 degrees, Relative humidity 44%. Gnat
count 1200 per square inch.
Pure Misery,
Howard truitt
Camilla, Ga.
86 PT40

----- Original Message -----
From: Pete Masterson
To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2006 2:03 PM
Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] General Relativity


I guess I live in the wrong part of the world. It's 67 degrees
(Fahrenheit) right now. It's expected to get up to 72 or 75 sometime
today. The annual July 4th fireworks displays will (as almost every
year) be viewed as flashes of light in the fog. As Mark Twain
remarked, "the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San
Francisco." (We get our hot weather in September and October.)

On Jul 3, 2006, at 8:56 PM, orbitalsolutions wrote:

> Excluding the warp of time, space, matter and light; it is present
> while driving a bus about the States.
>
> What is Hot?
>
> In Florida they consider the summer as Hot. I have had the pleasure
> of aquainting Floridian naitves who coward at the thought of
> venturing forward about the earth when over 90F. (They say it is too
> Hot)...
>
> In the desert, those who have live there, never consider it to be
> Hot. They simply go about their lives, dusty as they may be, and
> forge forward with their interest.
>
> In the west it is not warm until it is over 105F, and it is only
> warming up when the mercury excedes 115F ... when the temp exceeds
> 120F, and this happens every year, then it is summer weather. Not a
> man alive will tell you that it's Hot. But you will find no one to
> talk to either.
>
> I just don't know.
>
> Hope this note is relative, too.
>
> James
> 78FC33SB "Old School"
> Orange Lake, Fl. (Partly sunny and partly cloudy)
>
> ___

Pete Masterson
aeon

Pete Masterson
aeonix1@...
'95 Bluebird Wanderlodge WBDA 4203
El Sobrante, CA

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






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

Pete Masterson

Howard,

At 1:30 PM Pacific Time, the fog has "burned off" and the sun is
shining. It's climbed to 77 degrees. Don't know what the humidity is,
as it's rarely reported. Doesn't matter as it's rarely a factor in
the comfort level. Gnats? I don't think we have any of them, either.
The sea breeze will kick up about 4 this afternoon and by dusk, the
fog will cover most of the bay. The nick-name for El Sobrante is "el
so windy" as the "marine incursion" attempts to move a mass of cold
air through the Carquinez Strait due to the "local low" caused by the
heat in the Sacramento Valley. The hotter it is in Sacramento (92
today, humidity around 20%-- or less...) the cooler it is here...

I suppose, however, that the local fireworks will be visible in your
area...

By the way ... I thought the whole point of having a WL was so you
could go where there is more pleasant weather?

On Jul 4, 2006, at 12:01 PM, Howard O. Truitt wrote:

> Pete,
> I really feel bad for you in the cool of San Pablo Bay, You need to
> come on down to deep south west Georgia. I just checked my digital
> temp gauge at 2:30 PM Eastern Standard Time, Temperature 104.3
> degrees, Relative humidity 44%. Gnat count 1200 per square inch.
> Pure Misery,
> Howard truitt
> Camilla, Ga.
> 86 PT40
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Pete Masterson
> To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2006 2:03 PM
> Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] General Relativity
>
> I guess I live in the wrong part of the world. It's 67 degrees
> (Fahrenheit) right now. It's expected to get up to 72 or 75 sometime
> today. The annual July 4th fireworks displays will (as almost every
> year) be viewed as flashes of light in the fog. As Mark Twain
> remarked, "the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San
> Francisco." (We get our hot weather in September and October.)
>
> On Jul 3, 2006, at 8:56 PM, orbitalsolutions wrote:
>
> > Excluding the warp of time, space, matter and light; it is present
> > while driving a bus about the States.
> >
> > What is Hot?
> >
> > In Florida they consider the summer as Hot. I have had the pleasure
> > of aquainting Floridian naitves who coward at the thought of
> > venturing forward about the earth when over 90F. (They say it is too
> > Hot)...
> >
> > In the desert, those who have live there, never consider it to be
> > Hot. They simply go about their lives, dusty as they may be, and
> > forge forward with their interest.
> >
> > In the west it is not warm until it is over 105F, and it is only
> > warming up when the mercury excedes 115F ... when the temp exceeds
> > 120F, and this happens every year, then it is summer weather. Not a
> > man alive will tell you that it's Hot. But you will find no one to
> > talk to either.
> >
> > I just don't know.
> >
> > Hope this note is relative, too.
> >
> > James
> > 78FC33SB "Old School"
> > Orange Lake, Fl. (Partly sunny and partly cloudy)
> >
> > ___
>
> .
>
>

Pete Masterson
aeonix1@...
'95 Bluebird Wanderlodge WBDA 4203
El Sobrante, CA






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

Gregory OConnor

That was Samuel Clemens , Mark Twain was his screen name. I never
understood the concept!
Gregory

--- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Pete Masterson
wrote:
>
> I guess I live in the wrong part of the world. It's 67 degrees
> (Fahrenheit) right now. It's expected to get up to 72 or 75
sometime
> today. The annual July 4th fireworks displays will (as almost
every
> year) be viewed as flashes of light in the fog. As Mark Twain
> remarked, "the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San
> Francisco." (We get our hot weather in September and October.)
>
> On Jul 3, 2006, at 8:56 PM, orbitalsolutions wrote:
>
> > Excluding the warp of time, space, matter and light; it is present
> > while driving a bus about the States.
> >
> > What is Hot?
> >
> > In Florida they consider the summer as Hot. I have had the
pleasure
> > of aquainting Floridian naitves who coward at the thought of
> > venturing forward about the earth when over 90F. (They say it is
too
> > Hot)...
> >
> > In the desert, those who have live there, never consider it to be
> > Hot. They simply go about their lives, dusty as they may be, and
> > forge forward with their interest.
> >
> > In the west it is not warm until it is over 105F, and it is only
> > warming up when the mercury excedes 115F ... when the temp exceeds
> > 120F, and this happens every year, then it is summer weather. Not
a
> > man alive will tell you that it's Hot. But you will find no one to
> > talk to either.
> >
> > I just don't know.
> >
> > Hope this note is relative, too.
> >
> > James
> > 78FC33SB "Old School"
> > Orange Lake, Fl. (Partly sunny and partly cloudy)
> >
> > ___
>
> Pete Masterson
> aeon
>
>
> Pete Masterson
> aeonix1@...
> '95 Bluebird Wanderlodge WBDA 4203
> El Sobrante, CA
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
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