| Abby ( @ 2006-05-31 10:12:00 |
Temperature
Going to Santa Cruz today with my friend Emily. I checked the weather to see what it would be like and the funniest thing about it was this feature that supposedly tells you what the temperature will "feel like" as opposed to what it really is. So, tonight in Santa Cruz it will be 59 degrees, but it will only "feel like" 58. What the hell is that? Who are these walking barometers who can tell you what a degree of difference feels like? How is that useful information to the general public? I get this mental picture of a bunch of weater guys standing around in those sexy parkas they wear when they cover disatrous storms debating about the "feels like" temperature. One says 65 the other says 66 and just when it's about to come to blows, a new guy walks into the picture with a swollen elbow and says "You're both wrong! This only happens when it's 64 and 15 percent humidity and you know it!!"
Anyway, the beach should be fun.
Going to Santa Cruz today with my friend Emily. I checked the weather to see what it would be like and the funniest thing about it was this feature that supposedly tells you what the temperature will "feel like" as opposed to what it really is. So, tonight in Santa Cruz it will be 59 degrees, but it will only "feel like" 58. What the hell is that? Who are these walking barometers who can tell you what a degree of difference feels like? How is that useful information to the general public? I get this mental picture of a bunch of weater guys standing around in those sexy parkas they wear when they cover disatrous storms debating about the "feels like" temperature. One says 65 the other says 66 and just when it's about to come to blows, a new guy walks into the picture with a swollen elbow and says "You're both wrong! This only happens when it's 64 and 15 percent humidity and you know it!!"
Anyway, the beach should be fun.