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#1
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Man! 2 degrees F in Florida. I'm going to go out and buy a pair of long
pants..........Just in case. "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 3, 4:58?pm, "Jim" wrote: All 50 states have freezing temps?"Chuck Gould" wrote in message http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wcstates.htm Yup. It has been down to as low as 12-degrees above zero in HI. In fact, Hawaii is the only state that has never recorded a sub-zero temperature- 32 or more degrees F below the freezing point of fresh water. Now, are all of those low temperatures occuring in places that would require a boat to be winterized? No. However, the statement by BoatU.S. is quite literally true; all 50 states experience freezing temperatures. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#2
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Jim wrote:
Man! 2 degrees F in Florida. I'm going to go out and buy a pair of long pants..........Just in case. "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 3, 4:58?pm, "Jim" wrote: All 50 states have freezing temps?"Chuck Gould" wrote in message http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wcstates.htm Yup. It has been down to as low as 12-degrees above zero in HI. In fact, Hawaii is the only state that has never recorded a sub-zero temperature- 32 or more degrees F below the freezing point of fresh water. Now, are all of those low temperatures occuring in places that would require a boat to be winterized? No. However, the statement by BoatU.S. is quite literally true; all 50 states experience freezing temperatures. It snowed once or twice in NE Florida when we lived there. Overnight temps in the 30s and once in a while in the 20s were not rare in December and January. |
#3
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![]() "HK" wrote in message . .. It snowed once or twice in NE Florida when we lived there. Overnight temps in the 30s and once in a while in the 20s were not rare in December and January. Snow is unheard of further south in Jupiter where we were. In the three winters we spent there, I recall *one* unusually cold morning that left very light frost on the windshield of my car ... until about 8 am. A few "cold" nights in mid winter with temps in the mid 40's were more the norm, warming back up to 70 degrees by 10 am. Chuck's Boat US report citing that all 50 states can have below freezing temps is no doubt correct, but I don't know of anyone in the southern parts of Florida that winterize a boat. In fact, I think you would be considered nuts. Eisboch |
#4
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On Thu, 4 Oct 2007 20:23:56 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
Chuck's Boat US report citing that all 50 states can have below freezing temps is no doubt correct, but I don't know of anyone in the southern parts of Florida that winterize a boat. In fact, I think you would be considered nuts. That's true but there was a hard freeze in Palm Beach back in the mid 80s. I had friends living there at the time and a lot of landscaping was damaged. That could have potentially damaged a non-winterized boat stored out of the water. The Tampa area gets freezing weather at least several times every winter. |
#5
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On Thu, 04 Oct 2007 21:49:12 -0400, Wayne.B wrote:
That's true but there was a hard freeze in Palm Beach back in the mid 80s. I had friends living there at the time and a lot of landscaping was damaged. That could have potentially damaged a non-winterized boat stored out of the water. The Tampa area gets freezing weather at least several times every winter. Yeah, Tampa's record cold day was 18 degrees. That's cold enough that it could cause damage. http://radar.meas.ncsu.edu/climatein...recordlow.html What surprises me more about Florida's weather, isn't the cold, it's the heat. I lived in Miami a couple of years, and it would be in the low nineties almost daily in the summer, or at least it seemed so, but Miami has *never* reached 100 degrees. That just seems odd to me. http://radar.meas.ncsu.edu/climatein...ecordhigh.html |
#6
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thunder wrote:
On Thu, 04 Oct 2007 21:49:12 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: That's true but there was a hard freeze in Palm Beach back in the mid 80s. I had friends living there at the time and a lot of landscaping was damaged. That could have potentially damaged a non-winterized boat stored out of the water. The Tampa area gets freezing weather at least several times every winter. Yeah, Tampa's record cold day was 18 degrees. That's cold enough that it could cause damage. http://radar.meas.ncsu.edu/climatein...recordlow.html What surprises me more about Florida's weather, isn't the cold, it's the heat. I lived in Miami a couple of years, and it would be in the low nineties almost daily in the summer, or at least it seemed so, but Miami has *never* reached 100 degrees. That just seems odd to me. http://radar.meas.ncsu.edu/climatein...ecordhigh.html It's the proximity of the ocean. It absorbs an incredible amount of heat. And in the winter, releases it. |
#7
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On Fri, 05 Oct 2007 06:50:13 -0400, HK wrote:
What surprises me more about Florida's weather, isn't the cold, it's the heat. I lived in Miami a couple of years, and it would be in the low nineties almost daily in the summer, or at least it seemed so, but Miami has *never* reached 100 degrees. That just seems odd to me. http://radar.meas.ncsu.edu/climatein...ecordhigh.html It's the proximity of the ocean. It absorbs an incredible amount of heat. And in the winter, releases it. Yeah, I understand that. It's just that it's 91-93 every damn day. You would think that just once in history, it would hit 100. :-) |
#8
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On Oct 4, 7:14?am, "Jim" wrote:
Man! 2 degrees F in Florida. I'm going to go out and buy a pair of long pants..........Just in case. "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 3, 4:58?pm, "Jim" wrote: All 50 states have freezing temps?"Chuck Gould" wrote in message http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wcstates.htm Yup. It has been down to as low as 12-degrees above zero in HI. In fact, Hawaii is the only state that has never recorded a sub-zero temperature- 32 or more degrees F below the freezing point of fresh water. Now, are all of those low temperatures occuring in places that would require a boat to be winterized? No. However, the statement by BoatU.S. is quite literally true; all 50 states experience freezing temperatures. -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Don't some of the Florida citrus growers have to run "smudge pot" heaters, sometimes, to prevent freeze damage to crops? |
#9
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On Thu, 04 Oct 2007 08:14:49 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: On Oct 4, 7:14?am, "Jim" wrote: Man! 2 degrees F in Florida. I'm going to go out and buy a pair of long pants..........Just in case. "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 3, 4:58?pm, "Jim" wrote: All 50 states have freezing temps?"Chuck Gould" wrote in message http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wcstates.htm Yup. It has been down to as low as 12-degrees above zero in HI. In fact, Hawaii is the only state that has never recorded a sub-zero temperature- 32 or more degrees F below the freezing point of fresh water. Now, are all of those low temperatures occuring in places that would require a boat to be winterized? No. However, the statement by BoatU.S. is quite literally true; all 50 states experience freezing temperatures. -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Don't some of the Florida citrus growers have to run "smudge pot" heaters, sometimes, to prevent freeze damage to crops? Especially a few years back when we had global cooling! |
#10
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On Thu, 04 Oct 2007 08:14:49 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: Don't some of the Florida citrus growers have to run "smudge pot" heaters, sometimes, to prevent freeze damage to crops? Most of them are now using the large circulating fans similar to the California vineyards. They keep cold pockets from forming in the hollows. Central Florida gets freezing weather down as far as Lake Okeechobee and a bit beyond. |
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