My Stepmother's Lasapsa used to do that. Spread eagle on the lenolium.
After hitting 100 on Monday and 97 on Tuesday it's 79 today in STL.
I prefer the cold of winter to the hot of summer, it is much cheaper to heat a house in the winter than to cool it down in the summer. Although my ancestors were Vikings; "we come from the land of the ice and snow, from the midnight sun where the hot springs blow." Although I very much enjoy the seasons, I wouldn't give away any of them.the Gray wrote:I think the average temperature in July for Ontario will end up being around 30. It was insane early in the month, 35+ and is only now getting down into the mid 20's.
I don't mind though, as it's SUMMER and I have to deal with the damn cold all winter.
How the heck do you figure that one?The Seeker wrote:It is much cheaper to heat a house in the winter than to cool it down in the summer.
Not necessarily. Heating something is easy; we've been heating buildings for millenia. At its most basic, all you need is fire and some means to distribute the heat. There's no "wasted" energy because all heat output is useful for heating the building.Flip wrote:Plus, in the winter you are changing the temperature in your house by +60-70 degrees, in the summer you are only cooling it -10 or -20... Wouldnt it make sense that you would use more electricity for such a larger degree difference?