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#51
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"bonbon" wrote in message Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon That was how it was here last week. Northern California. We were still having highs in the 90s every day. One day of wind and we have switched to highs in the low 60.s. Hate sudden changes. And so does my very ****ed off cat who is out looking for a non-existant patch of sun. Jo |
#52
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"bonbon" wrote in message Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon That was how it was here last week. Northern California. We were still having highs in the 90s every day. One day of wind and we have switched to highs in the low 60.s. Hate sudden changes. And so does my very ****ed off cat who is out looking for a non-existant patch of sun. Jo |
#53
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In article ,
Cheryl Perkins wrote: bonbon wrote: snip Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) I don't know - but we've had an extremely, and very unusual, warm fall, by our standards, up here in Newfoundland, Canada. Nevertheless, I have turned on some of the heaters once or twice, so we must still be cooler than Houston! -- Cheryl I will get around to turning on the heat here in Tampa Bay probably around late November. Then I'll just throw another log on the air conditioner... LT |
#54
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In article ,
Cheryl Perkins wrote: bonbon wrote: snip Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) I don't know - but we've had an extremely, and very unusual, warm fall, by our standards, up here in Newfoundland, Canada. Nevertheless, I have turned on some of the heaters once or twice, so we must still be cooler than Houston! -- Cheryl I will get around to turning on the heat here in Tampa Bay probably around late November. Then I'll just throw another log on the air conditioner... LT |
#55
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In article ,
Cheryl Perkins wrote: bonbon wrote: snip Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) I don't know - but we've had an extremely, and very unusual, warm fall, by our standards, up here in Newfoundland, Canada. Nevertheless, I have turned on some of the heaters once or twice, so we must still be cooler than Houston! -- Cheryl I will get around to turning on the heat here in Tampa Bay probably around late November. Then I'll just throw another log on the air conditioner... LT |
#56
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bonbon wrote:
On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 21:39:26 -0700, Rrb wrote: Doe John wrote: At what temperature do people start to turn on their central heating? I normally wait til end of October when the daytime temp indoors is around 55 degrees. Now it is around 57 degrees indoors in the morning.Very cold. Catching colds constantly. I thought of turning it on a week ago when my cat would constanty climb on top of me because I was the best source of heat. I'm a walking elecrric blanket to her.Feels colder now than in the past since I lost about 40 pounds since last May. This is the recommendation of our local electric company (though according to them this is for energy efficiency while still keeping it at a comfortable temperature for most people): The best temperature for your heater's thermostat is 68°F or below. Before bedtime, turn it down to 55°F or lower (or even off) for more savings. And if you don't want to wake up to a cold house, let a setback thermostat turn the heat up an hour before you plan to wake up. If you have a heat pump, raising and lowering the thermostat could cause the electric heating strips to come on, significantly increasing your heating costs. Finally, thermostats should never be turned up high to heat a home in a hurry. It won't heat your home any faster. Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon The same way in Dallas righ tnow. I hate it! It was 92 degrees yesterday and it's supposed to stay in the 90's the next 3 days. We have a cold front moving in for the weekend which will drop the daytime highs into the 80's. Oh boy! Anyone out there want to send me some of your cooler weather? I'll take it in a heartbeat. I am seriously thinking of moving North. Bob |
#57
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bonbon wrote:
On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 21:39:26 -0700, Rrb wrote: Doe John wrote: At what temperature do people start to turn on their central heating? I normally wait til end of October when the daytime temp indoors is around 55 degrees. Now it is around 57 degrees indoors in the morning.Very cold. Catching colds constantly. I thought of turning it on a week ago when my cat would constanty climb on top of me because I was the best source of heat. I'm a walking elecrric blanket to her.Feels colder now than in the past since I lost about 40 pounds since last May. This is the recommendation of our local electric company (though according to them this is for energy efficiency while still keeping it at a comfortable temperature for most people): The best temperature for your heater's thermostat is 68°F or below. Before bedtime, turn it down to 55°F or lower (or even off) for more savings. And if you don't want to wake up to a cold house, let a setback thermostat turn the heat up an hour before you plan to wake up. If you have a heat pump, raising and lowering the thermostat could cause the electric heating strips to come on, significantly increasing your heating costs. Finally, thermostats should never be turned up high to heat a home in a hurry. It won't heat your home any faster. Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon The same way in Dallas righ tnow. I hate it! It was 92 degrees yesterday and it's supposed to stay in the 90's the next 3 days. We have a cold front moving in for the weekend which will drop the daytime highs into the 80's. Oh boy! Anyone out there want to send me some of your cooler weather? I'll take it in a heartbeat. I am seriously thinking of moving North. Bob |
#58
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bonbon wrote:
On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 21:39:26 -0700, Rrb wrote: Doe John wrote: At what temperature do people start to turn on their central heating? I normally wait til end of October when the daytime temp indoors is around 55 degrees. Now it is around 57 degrees indoors in the morning.Very cold. Catching colds constantly. I thought of turning it on a week ago when my cat would constanty climb on top of me because I was the best source of heat. I'm a walking elecrric blanket to her.Feels colder now than in the past since I lost about 40 pounds since last May. This is the recommendation of our local electric company (though according to them this is for energy efficiency while still keeping it at a comfortable temperature for most people): The best temperature for your heater's thermostat is 68°F or below. Before bedtime, turn it down to 55°F or lower (or even off) for more savings. And if you don't want to wake up to a cold house, let a setback thermostat turn the heat up an hour before you plan to wake up. If you have a heat pump, raising and lowering the thermostat could cause the electric heating strips to come on, significantly increasing your heating costs. Finally, thermostats should never be turned up high to heat a home in a hurry. It won't heat your home any faster. Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon The same way in Dallas righ tnow. I hate it! It was 92 degrees yesterday and it's supposed to stay in the 90's the next 3 days. We have a cold front moving in for the weekend which will drop the daytime highs into the 80's. Oh boy! Anyone out there want to send me some of your cooler weather? I'll take it in a heartbeat. I am seriously thinking of moving North. Bob |
#59
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"Bob M" wrote in message ... bonbon wrote: On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 21:39:26 -0700, Rrb wrote: Doe John wrote: At what temperature do people start to turn on their central heating? I normally wait til end of October when the daytime temp indoors is around 55 degrees. Now it is around 57 degrees indoors in the morning.Very cold. Catching colds constantly. I thought of turning it on a week ago when my cat would constanty climb on top of me because I was the best source of heat. I'm a walking elecrric blanket to her.Feels colder now than in the past since I lost about 40 pounds since last May. This is the recommendation of our local electric company (though according to them this is for energy efficiency while still keeping it at a comfortable temperature for most people): The best temperature for your heater's thermostat is 68°F or below. Before bedtime, turn it down to 55°F or lower (or even off) for more savings. And if you don't want to wake up to a cold house, let a setback thermostat turn the heat up an hour before you plan to wake up. If you have a heat pump, raising and lowering the thermostat could cause the electric heating strips to come on, significantly increasing your heating costs. Finally, thermostats should never be turned up high to heat a home in a hurry. It won't heat your home any faster. Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon The same way in Dallas righ tnow. I hate it! It was 92 degrees yesterday and it's supposed to stay in the 90's the next 3 days. We have a cold front moving in for the weekend which will drop the daytime highs into the 80's. Oh boy! Anyone out there want to send me some of your cooler weather? I'll take it in a heartbeat. I am seriously thinking of moving North. Bob Given our 60 mph winds today, I'd say we are sending you a change in the weather as fast as we can. Jo |
#60
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"Bob M" wrote in message ... bonbon wrote: On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 21:39:26 -0700, Rrb wrote: Doe John wrote: At what temperature do people start to turn on their central heating? I normally wait til end of October when the daytime temp indoors is around 55 degrees. Now it is around 57 degrees indoors in the morning.Very cold. Catching colds constantly. I thought of turning it on a week ago when my cat would constanty climb on top of me because I was the best source of heat. I'm a walking elecrric blanket to her.Feels colder now than in the past since I lost about 40 pounds since last May. This is the recommendation of our local electric company (though according to them this is for energy efficiency while still keeping it at a comfortable temperature for most people): The best temperature for your heater's thermostat is 68°F or below. Before bedtime, turn it down to 55°F or lower (or even off) for more savings. And if you don't want to wake up to a cold house, let a setback thermostat turn the heat up an hour before you plan to wake up. If you have a heat pump, raising and lowering the thermostat could cause the electric heating strips to come on, significantly increasing your heating costs. Finally, thermostats should never be turned up high to heat a home in a hurry. It won't heat your home any faster. Gosh, all this talk about heating, and thermostats! I'm starting to wonder if all of Houston has been beamed into the Twilight Zone or some other dimension..........I'm running my A/C at this very moment. Ok. I just took a reality check. I went out and looked at the electrical meter on the back of the house, and that kilowatt dial thingy is spinning like crazy, so we must still be with y'all. $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng $$ Ka-chinnng. Maybe Houston, with all the people, pavement, refineries, traffic, chili cook-offs, and BBQ pits has created it's own little climate or global warming effect and now we don't get winter anymore. (?) -bonbon The same way in Dallas righ tnow. I hate it! It was 92 degrees yesterday and it's supposed to stay in the 90's the next 3 days. We have a cold front moving in for the weekend which will drop the daytime highs into the 80's. Oh boy! Anyone out there want to send me some of your cooler weather? I'll take it in a heartbeat. I am seriously thinking of moving North. Bob Given our 60 mph winds today, I'd say we are sending you a change in the weather as fast as we can. Jo |
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