Beau":39rxjqz9 said:
sunnybob":39rxjqz9 said:
I worked outdoors through the 77 and 78 blizzards in the west country. That hit minus 25 a few times.
Many early mornings I saw bath water frozen as it exited a house waste pipe and before it could fall into the collector. On getting home each day I had to run my hands under the cold tap (3c) to warm them up before I could put them in warm water to avoid chillblains.
It's why I now live in Cyprus, and am known as "sunny", and also why I am dreading the next three weeks.
Good luck with your northern winters.
Did it get that cold? I remember the massive snow drifts living up on the moors but not how cold it was but then I was only a youngun so pretty impervious to cold. Gone soft these days.
Working out in -20C -25C sound hideous but then cold comes with damp in the UK so I guess lower humidity makes it slight less savage. Still hats of to you heimlaga
From Wiki - The sea's influence in the south-west usually prevents cold temperatures, however temperatures can plummet during periods of cold easterly air flow: all of which have been recorded in January. In 1987 the minimum temperature recorded at St Mawgan, Cornwall was −9 °C (16 °F) and −7.2 °C (19.0 °F) was noted on the Isles of Scilly. Inland areas have experienced even colder conditions with −15 °C (5 °F) at Exeter International Airport, Devon in 1958 and at Bastreet, Cornwall in 1979. Further to the north-east of the region, temperatures reached −16.1 °C (3.0 °F) in Yeovilton, Somerset in 1982.