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Ready for the BRUTAL Florida winter!
#1


Hey... I'm Puerto Rican, anything below 70*F feels kinda' Artic to me.
Big Grin
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#2
ROFL poor baby. We are looking at the 20's in the morning..and did you see CA's pic in the weather thread?

Anyhow nice looking jacket and gloves! What does the Butane mean?
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#3
Nice gear, but a brutal winter in Florida??? ROFL
If you want to see brutal, this was my driveway last February.

[url=http://s392.photobucket.com/user/Rock500_2008/media/Cabot%20Trail%202008/IMG_0171.jpg.html]
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#4
It stays so cold for so long in our North Dakota winters, that when April rolls around and the temps get into the 30s you see a lot of people wearing shorts and T-shirts, including me. After many months of sub-zero temperatures your body really does adapt to it, and anything over 30 seems pretty livable, I kid you not. Still, I'll be happy to trade places with you , Nemo!
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#5
A riding buddy from Maine once told me there are only two seasons in Maine, July and winter. Any day below 50 is a cold one at my place.
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#6
Don't hate, guys! I've seen temps in the teens here in JAX and one of those nasty cold days I think I saw flurries outside my office window, but in the time it took me to take the elevator to go outside any proof had melted. Confused

You don't understand... The record cold in Puerto Rico is 41*F for about half hour. People thought the world was coming to an end.

ROFL

Ferret, the jacket and gloves are FLY brand and the jacket model is Butane 4.

Rocky, Scooby, Ferret, you're better men than me. The most I can withstand of icy conditions are the 2 cubes in my scotch. Too much of a tropical bird for that kind of climate.

Stay warm,
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#7
I feel you Nemo. In the last few weeks I finally had to pull my jacket and gloves out of the closet for my daily ride to work. Today I ordered a new National Cycle Plexistar to replace the one Bambi destroyed over the summer. It's a must to cope with the brutal winter here in the desert Big Grin
(11-21-2015, 05:33 AM)Scoobynut_imp Wrote: It stays so cold for so long in our North Dakota winters, that when April rolls around and the temps get into the 30s you see a lot of people wearing shorts and T-shirts, including me. After many months of sub-zero temperatures your body really does adapt to it, and anything over 30 seems pretty livable, I kid you not. Still, I'll be happy to trade places with you , Nemo!

I've seen this phenomenon in AZ. On a cold winter day at the airport (50s or 60s) it's not unusual to see a plane land and a bunch of upper midwesterners hop out wearing shorts, sunglasses and flip flops, while the locals are bundled up like Alaskans.
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#8
Long time ago, we visited a German friend, who was working in Orlando. It was end of February, beginning of March. We also visited the Daytona bike week.

As we took a bath at Daytona beach, some locals asked us, if we would be Alaskans by any chance, 'cause these were the only ones known, to take a bath there in the Atlantic ocean during winter time.

Water temperature was about 24°C, if memory serves right.
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#9
(11-21-2015, 07:02 PM)Flynrider_imp Wrote: I feel you Nemo. In the last few weeks I finally had to pull my jacket and gloves out of the closet for my daily ride to work. Today I ordered a new National Cycle Plexistar to replace the one Bambi destroyed over the summer. It's a must to cope with the brutal winter here in the desert Big Grin
(11-21-2015, 05:33 AM)Scoobynut_imp Wrote: It stays so cold for so long in our North Dakota winters, that when April rolls around and the temps get into the 30s you see a lot of people wearing shorts and T-shirts, including me. After many months of sub-zero temperatures your body really does adapt to it, and anything over 30 seems pretty livable, I kid you not. Still, I'll be happy to trade places with you , Nemo!

I've seen this phenomenon in AZ. On a cold winter day at the airport (50s or 60s) it's not unusual to see a plane land and a bunch of upper midwesterners hop out wearing shorts, sunglasses and flip flops, while the locals are bundled up like Alaskans.

Haha, that's some funny stuff. When you live on the arctic tundra you feel kind of like an animal coming out of hibernation in the springtime.
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#10
Big Grin
This is good stuff!
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