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Calif Bill[_2_] August 10th 09 08:22 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 

"NotNow" wrote in message
...
CalifBill wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
On Aug 9, 8:32 pm, Jim wrote:
On Aug 9, 8:29 pm, "Don White" wrote:

"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.
The water temp seems almost the same as body temp although it is
really a cool 90 degrees in the Gulf of Mexico. On the way home, we
stop at the small spring that flows into the St. Marks River, cool,
clear 68 degree fresh water. It feels different and is actually
refreshing. I can really understand why people would choose lakes
over the ocean but when I look out to sea, it is like magnetism, it
just pulls me toward it.
You want refreshing water temperature???
Come on up... It's 56.3 F at this time at the harbour
mouth.http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=44258
There is a difference between refreshment and a religious
experience.....


You sure water doesnt have a phase change below 60 degrees?


Mr. Happy does.

Phase change and shrinkage are different!


Still a phase change.



Jim August 10th 09 09:09 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 
On Aug 9, 9:02*pm, Frogwatch wrote:
On Aug 9, 8:32*pm, Jim wrote:



On Aug 9, 8:29*pm, "Don White" wrote:


"Frogwatch" wrote in message


....


Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.
The water temp seems almost the same as body temp although it is
really a cool 90 degrees in the Gulf of Mexico. *On the way home, we
stop at the small spring that flows into the St. Marks River, cool,
clear 68 degree fresh water. *It feels different and is actually
refreshing. *I can really understand why people would choose lakes
over the ocean but when I look out to sea, it is like magnetism, it
just pulls me toward it.


You want refreshing water temperature???
Come on up... It's 56.3 F at this time at the harbour mouth.http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=44258


There is a difference between refreshment and a religious
experience.....


You sure water doesnt have a phase change below 60 degrees?


Um, yeah, it does - a fair bit below 60 degrees, but below 60
degrees... :)

D[_11_] August 11th 09 01:02 AM

Fresh vs salt water
 
Don White wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
On Aug 9, 8:32 pm, Jim wrote:
On Aug 9, 8:29 pm, "Don White" wrote:

"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.
The water temp seems almost the same as body temp although it is
really a cool 90 degrees in the Gulf of Mexico. On the way home, we
stop at the small spring that flows into the St. Marks River, cool,
clear 68 degree fresh water. It feels different and is actually
refreshing. I can really understand why people would choose lakes
over the ocean but when I look out to sea, it is like magnetism, it
just pulls me toward it.
You want refreshing water temperature???
Come on up... It's 56.3 F at this time at the harbour
mouth.http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=44258

There is a difference between refreshment and a religious
experience.....


You sure water doesnt have a phase change below 60 degrees?

Who knows...we seldom see it above 60 . ;-)



You certainly don't. You are clueless, as usual.

Carry on, dummy...

Richard Casady August 11th 09 01:06 AM

Fresh vs salt water
 
On Sun, 9 Aug 2009 18:02:19 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

You sure water doesnt have a phase change below 60 degrees?


Swimmers have a phase change from live to dead.

Casady

NotNow[_3_] August 11th 09 02:51 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 
D wrote:
Don White wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
On Aug 9, 8:32 pm, Jim wrote:
On Aug 9, 8:29 pm, "Don White" wrote:

"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...

Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.
The water temp seems almost the same as body temp although it is
really a cool 90 degrees in the Gulf of Mexico. On the way home, we
stop at the small spring that flows into the St. Marks River, cool,
clear 68 degree fresh water. It feels different and is actually
refreshing. I can really understand why people would choose lakes
over the ocean but when I look out to sea, it is like magnetism, it
just pulls me toward it.
You want refreshing water temperature???
Come on up... It's 56.3 F at this time at the harbour
mouth.http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=44258
There is a difference between refreshment and a religious
experience.....


You sure water doesnt have a phase change below 60 degrees?

Who knows...we seldom see it above 60 . ;-)


You certainly don't. You are clueless, as usual.

Carry on, dummy...

Damn, they don't have water heaters there? Don't they ever boil
anything? Must be pretty smelly in his house with no one taking a bath
or shower, especially the drunk kid.

D[_11_] August 12th 09 12:10 AM

Fresh vs salt water
 
NotNow wrote:
D wrote:
Don White wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
On Aug 9, 8:32 pm, Jim wrote:
On Aug 9, 8:29 pm, "Don White" wrote:

"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...

Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.
The water temp seems almost the same as body temp although it is
really a cool 90 degrees in the Gulf of Mexico. On the way home, we
stop at the small spring that flows into the St. Marks River, cool,
clear 68 degree fresh water. It feels different and is actually
refreshing. I can really understand why people would choose lakes
over the ocean but when I look out to sea, it is like magnetism, it
just pulls me toward it.
You want refreshing water temperature???
Come on up... It's 56.3 F at this time at the harbour
mouth.http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=44258
There is a difference between refreshment and a religious
experience.....

You sure water doesnt have a phase change below 60 degrees?

Who knows...we seldom see it above 60 . ;-)


You certainly don't. You are clueless, as usual.

Carry on, dummy...

Damn, they don't have water heaters there? Don't they ever boil
anything? Must be pretty smelly in his house with no one taking a bath
or shower, especially the drunk kid.


Imagine the stench in that pink Rav4 towing machine...

Richard Casady August 12th 09 03:07 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 
On Sun, 9 Aug 2009 16:58:33 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.


The last word on salt is corrosion. Corrosion, with cheap wiring,
creeping up every wire from the ends. Wires should be tinned, and
often aren't of course.
Aluminum boats like mine corrode like plastic in fresh water. Iowa has
the Mississippi for one border the Missouri another, and for
excitement you can dodge those 1/4 mile long lashups of barges.

Casady

H the K August 12th 09 03:23 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 
Richard Casady wrote:
On Sun, 9 Aug 2009 16:58:33 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.


The last word on salt is corrosion. Corrosion, with cheap wiring,
creeping up every wire from the ends. Wires should be tinned, and
often aren't of course.
Aluminum boats like mine corrode like plastic in fresh water. Iowa has
the Mississippi for one border the Missouri another, and for
excitement you can dodge those 1/4 mile long lashups of barges.

Casady



I find salt water very refreshing for swimming. Ocean water, not the bay
water around here.

it's me, Jim August 12th 09 04:03 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 
H the K wrote:
Richard Casady wrote:
On Sun, 9 Aug 2009 16:58:33 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.


The last word on salt is corrosion. Corrosion, with cheap wiring,
creeping up every wire from the ends. Wires should be tinned, and
often aren't of course. Aluminum boats like mine corrode like plastic
in fresh water. Iowa has
the Mississippi for one border the Missouri another, and for
excitement you can dodge those 1/4 mile long lashups of barges.

Casady



I find salt water very refreshing for swimming. Ocean water, not the bay
water around here.


As a bonus, salt water helps dry up those pesky pustules of Krauses.

NotNow[_3_] August 12th 09 04:55 PM

Fresh vs salt water
 
it's me, Jim wrote:
H the K wrote:
Richard Casady wrote:
On Sun, 9 Aug 2009 16:58:33 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

Yeah, salt water boating is more exciting but is rarely refreshing.

The last word on salt is corrosion. Corrosion, with cheap wiring,
creeping up every wire from the ends. Wires should be tinned, and
often aren't of course. Aluminum boats like mine corrode like plastic
in fresh water. Iowa has
the Mississippi for one border the Missouri another, and for
excitement you can dodge those 1/4 mile long lashups of barges.

Casady



I find salt water very refreshing for swimming. Ocean water, not the
bay water around here.


As a bonus, salt water helps dry up those pesky pustules of Krauses.


Actually, in the south, good old dark brown tannin water is the best for
sores of any type. It's a great thing for burns, especially. The local
native Americans knew of it's healing properties.


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