For comparison, in my old SoCal town in the Mojave Desert, I would walk (generally 18,000 - 25,000 steps per day) up to 105F. There, the relative humidity was usually less than 25%. The temperature (105F) felt hotter, yes. Especially in the direct sunlight. But it wasn't as miserable.The dogs and I truncated the early walk at around 1,500 steps.
On the late walk, I did just barely reach 10,000 steps for the day ... just before it was so dark that I couldn't progress any more without a flashlight.
@gnu2 The problem with this POV is that people need a way to know when a person is able to make important decisions for themself. Age works well, as long as we acknowledge specific (and detectable) exceptions (such a mental / emotional handicap) and ethical quandries (boss / subordinate, instructor / student, etc).
I consider "age of consent" to be a subset of legal majority, the age when one is presumed to have an adult mind and therefore one can sign contracts. (Again, specific exceptions should exist, such as mental / emotional handicap and influential /negotiation / market power ... where one party is in a controlling position relative to the other.)
Grandson_3 & Grandson_4 like this one a lot. I prefer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vRFo72wuU6w and Grandson_6 likes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2msh0jut2Y (I try to keep him--well, all of them--away from screens as much as possible, but when a 6-month old is being ultra-fussy and you discover something that soothes him, you're going to go with it.)
I'll give it a couple of listens, but so far it doesn't really "grab" me. It may be a "you had to be there" thing. I was around, but quite busy with life in the 1980s and 1990s.
That's one of the things that is so worrisome about the current schemes promoted by educrats (educational bureaucrats). It isn't THEM or THEIR relatives who'll suffer the consequences of "common core" and the like, so they feel free to impose it on other people's kids.
That only works a little. There were once trees in portions of what is now the Sahara Desert, but trees need water to survive. I expect we have not yet found a way to increase that area's rainfall without transforming another area into a perpetual drought zone®.
I'm not sure if that is the one that I went to with one of my brothers and some of his friends (up to six people allowed per car). I don't even remember what movie we went to see, just that the 2nd feature was "Flesh Gordon" ... pretty surprising at the time.
(This was also the time when some pirate TV broadcaster known as "X3" would transmit "illicit content" on TV channel 3 late at night on weekends. Or so my friends at school claimed. I never saw it myself.)
@sun Yep. The first time I caught #COVID-19, it was because I was eating breakfast in the hotel dining room and some jerk coughed (again, repeatedly).
It was a hotel with "food can't leave the dining room" rules, or I wouldn't have still been there anyway. In fact, one family had a child that had to eat special food. They brought it with them to the dining room, and they had to show the hotel employees that it wasn't hotel-provided food when they wanted to take it with them.
A GNU+Linux bearing nomad migrating across a Windows-centric desert. I save the world from incompetent headquarters IT folks. I invite comment and discussion, but I dislike arguing.