I am from Connecticut, in New England,
It is currently 19:39, 24°c and 38% humidity here.
It's not bad. How about you?
I'm from Lambton County in Ontario, Canada.
It is -4 hours from the posted time. 22°C and 41% humidity.
It's dull, but peaceful. How about you?
I am from Washington, DC, US.
It's 77°F at 36% humidity.
Sydney, Australia.
15°c apparently. It's 1:22PM.
Gee, I thought Sydney was hot, but I guess it's winter for you guys...
How strange. The Southern Hemisphere is for weirdos.
Newcastle, Australia
17°C and it's 10:23PM.
Right now I'm in Walmer, Kent, UK. I have no thermometer but I can tell you it is incredibly bright and sunny here. Warm with a sensibly cool breeze. Birds are making bird noises. The sea is blue and shiny. The weather at this location tends to be an aberration compared to what's going on in the rest of England.
I'm from London. Not sure what it's like there now. BBC.co.uk says it's a bit rainy and a bit sunny.
I'm presently in Oakland, in the San Francisco Bay Area of California (a region sometimes called Northern California despite the fact that from a strict latitudinal perspective it's closer to the center of the state, in part to distinguish it from the suburban wasteland that is Southern California).
The sky is blue and the temperature is coolish but basically perfect, around 70 degrees (20 degrees C). No humidity, because there never is here, unless it's raining. It will be like this almost without exception for the next two months or so, although we'll probably have some hot days, and possibly a couple of very hot days, come September.
I actually live across the Bay in San Francisco, which is smug and OUTRAGEOUSLY expensive but as beautiful and interesting as cities get. It will be cooler and less clear in SF (foggy, not rainy-- it shouldn't rain again until October) for much of the summer, as it always is.
It's the best climate on earth, in my biased opinion. To those that say "I like the seasons," I say, I'm a native New Englander and lived briefly in Wisconsin and less briefly in a hot part of Asia. I have seen most of what meteorology has to offer, and seasons are overrated. I will take a perpetual spring with hints of autumn (that's what it always feels like here) over hot sticky summers or gray slushy March weather any day.
Lynchburg, VA.
82°F, which is better than other days have been. Cloudless. Mild humidity.
The middle of nowhere, but infinitely better since Falwell died. Not tangible, but definitely better.
I'm on the Internet.
It smells funny.
Little Rock, AR. Temperatures should hit low 90's F today.
I like living here, but winters suck - we never get any snow at all. And I would like to get another Alaskan Malamute, but I wouldn't want them to suffer in the hot summer here. That's why I want to move to northwest Arkansas some day.
The whole world has been intangibly improved since Falwell died. I only wish there were a hell, so he could be surprised to find himself in it.
Not as much as this place has.
Though his hueg church, hueg "university," and hueg stupid-looking monogram visible from all around are still detriments.
>>8
I currently live 30 miles south of you in Palo Alto. It's even more smug, even more outrageously expensive, and not particularly beautiful or interesting. I will be joining you in San Francisco in a couple of weeks; I look forward to being able to walk or bus most everywhere I need to go, and getting Chinese food for 1/3 the price.
Seems a bit hotter here then it is in Oakland, from the sound of it. It often goes above 80 in the day and some nights it's too hot to sleep.
Above 80 during the day is something to complain about?
I just happened to be lurking, when I saw "Connecticut."
I'm in Colorado Springs, Colorado, US. The weather's nice, if you don't mind cold winters, and I happen to like cold weather. The sun is very strong, and it is quite dry. I don't mind either of these things because I hate humidity. The mountains make for great scenery. People here are pretty friendly, too - the only complaint I have about Colorado are the redneck cowboys, but there are surprisingly few of those around here and I don't have to deal with them.
Also, on summer nights with my window open, it smells great. Of all the places I've lived, the only one I liked more was Japan (yeah, wapanese, I know.)
>>17
Yes. A shocking number of houses here don't have air conditioning, including mine, so above 80 in the day can mean above 90-100 indoors.
I prefer cold to hot generally. You can put on as many layers of clothes as you want, but you can only take off a few.
How's living in, as Wikipedia terms it, the "Evangelical Vatican?"
>>22
Even though religion is a big deal, I have yet to meet any in-your-face fundamentalists. The most it has ever impacted me was when there was the Ted Haggard thing, but all that really did was make him the butt of gay jokes for a few weeks. The only time I've been religiously confronted was by a teenage Mormon at my doorstep, they ride around neighborhoods in suits and on bicycles trying to preach their gospel.
Just like most places, once you actually live there you realize it's not really as bad as the media makes it out to be.
Apparently 9.5% of 4-ch users come from Italy.
Germany; 7.9%
Japan; 6.3%
I'm from Japan.
BRB, fucking my little sister