caseydog wrote:Fenlason wrote:caseydog wrote:It's after five CDT, and after six EDT. Where is the late afternoon-early evening shift?
It's still too hot for me to go outside and play with psycho poodle. I just watched yesterday's Daily Show, and not much else is going on.
Being a dog, you better not let me get bored, or who knows what I'll get into.
CD
I was out on a bike ride.. making people suck air like a hoover...

You need to come down here, and jump on a bike. You'll be sucking air like a Hoover -- or sucking water like a sump pump.
At your next sweat lodge, be sure to think about the fact that you are experiencing a normal summer afternoon in my backyard. It is 9 PM, and it is still in the 90's here.
I'd love to visit Maine in the winter. Would you like to visit Texas in the summer?
C'mon down, we'll go camping.
BTW, del survived it. So it should be easy for a sheep alien.
CD

Apparently you have no idea how hot a sweat lodge gets do you..
We don't use thermometers or anything like that in the lodge..and it really is not about that. I have done saunas at 200.
In a good sweat lodge.. I can loose 8 to 10 pounds of sweat!!
I have experienced some southern heat.. I was stationed in 29 Palms for a bit.. at times our night time lows were in the 90's.. We had no air conditioning.. and I would go out during the day for 10 mile runs in the desert. I have 100+ temps bike rides in Phoenix. Admittedly those places were a dry heat.. and I will take that over the humid stuff. I have been in Texas in the summer.
I was also stationed at Paris Island. Where drill instructors ignored the heat index warnings and more than half the group dropped during force marches.
I prefer our weather.
The people last night were not sucking air because of any heat issues, it was quite comfortable last night.. it's just that the ride was a little fast..
