• If you need help identifying a pepper, disease, or plant issue, please post in Identification.

My friendly new employee

D3monic said:
It was -13 with a wind chill of -40. It counts if you're working in it lol
 
     -13 with wind is definitely an obstacle and can be downright dangerous if you're not prepared, but I can't help but just shake my head when people (weather forecasters, mostly) report absurdly low temps without informing people that they're talking about the windchill.
     Windchill is a scientifically "fuzzy" number that has little value besides getting ratings for the Weather Channel. Humidity, sunshine, precipitation, level of physical avtivity/movement, clothing choices, etc. all have similar, if not much greater, influence on perceived coldness.
     I went out snowshoeing in a blizzard last night for a few hours. It was 0F with 45 mph wind. If I'm dressed appropriately, I'd take that (-35 windchill) any day over plain ol' -35. At -35, holding anything metal, even with thick mittens on, is soon painful. It's hard to keep warm with physical activity because breathing -35 air starts to hurt.
     When I got in from snowshoeing last night, my lips and nose were red and swollen from frostnip - mainly because all the snow made my facemask keep freezing to my face. But I know that three hours out in real -35 weather would have been a different story.  
     Don't get me wrong, working a shift outdoors in below zero weather, doing what you do, is badass. I can't imagine it's easy to keep your hands warm while handling steel piping and levers and whatnot. But windchill doesn't equate to real temperature. There are just too many other variable left out of the equation. It's just a number weathermen came up with to tell us how they think we will feel.
 
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/recycled/2008/12/wind_chill_blows.html
 
 
 
I'll never forget February of 2015 until the day I die, lol. Working the night shift (9pm-7am) in New Haven, CT, literally right in Long Island Sound, erecting all the new bridges that make up I-95.

We were working anywhere from 60-110ft off the ground, with the wind ripping in off the water. Pulling into the job site at 9pm, the thermometer in my truck was already reading -11*F. Ended up getting down to like -22*F for like 10 days straight by 3am, lol

Walking around on the steel bridge girders all night made your feet feel like frozen blocks of ice. Toes hurt so freakin' bad, lol. That "little" yellow machine below me is a 60 ton crane
IMG_2213.PNG


Every tool I use (besides the hammer handle) is made of metal, lol
IMG_2212.PNG


I feel your pain, guys!
:cheers:
 
     Dag, yo. It's hard enough climbing trees in below zero weather, but at least they're made of wood! Working with nothing but steel in -20 must be absolute hell. (Plus climb saws make good handwarmers. :metal: )
 
Lol cold toes suck why is it so hard to keep feet warm? My damn feet are always cold :(


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I do feel for you all in the frigid areas. I am not happy to go out in 35f, much less lower... Then in the morning after a night time low of 29F.. I'm like cursing under my lips, son of a b.... my mango trees, damn my mangoes. ...screw this, no more.  Bastards. No more. 
 
I feel you, man. Us on the gulf coast don't feel quite right if it's not humid as shit 24/7.

I'm not saying I like it, it just is what it is.
 
Back
Top