Random Thread - Anything Goes
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There's a small bug type insect thing that is attracted to the light of my monitor and has landed on it.
I am presently trolling it by moving the cursor over to it, it responds by moving away. Rinse and repeat. -
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Spring has sprung here (5 min walk from my apartment)
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@MattSpeller said:
Spring has sprung here (5 min walk from my apartment)
Hush you! it's like 20 today here.
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@Dashrender @dafyre You should see all the tulips coming up!
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<insert music and lyrics to "It's the end of the world as we know it">
Plant's can't make up their mind what season it is... the weather can't make up its mind what season it is... Somebody tell me the world ain't flat, please?!
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@MattSpeller that's gorgeous.
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@dafyre said:
<insert music and lyrics to "It's the end of the world as we know it">
Plant's can't make up their mind what season it is... the weather can't make up its mind what season it is... Somebody tell me the world ain't flat, please?!
This is normal weather / flora for Victoria, BC, Canada
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Is it actually not cold up there?
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@dafyre said:
Is it actually not cold up there?
Correct. Gets to -1c (30f) maybe every other year and we'll maybe see snow under 1" about as often. Mostly it just rains. The island gets the most rain of anywhere in Canada, probably more than anywhere in North America.
"Henderson Lake on Canada's south-central Vancouver Island is the rainiest spot in North America with an average precipitation of 6,903 mm (271.8 in). In 1997 it received a record 9,307 mm (366.4 in) of rainfall, the wettest spot on the continent that year and an all-time record for Canada."
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I'm kinda surprised. I figured being up there in Canada and north of most of us that you'd be subject to winter conditions too, lol.
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@dafyre I translated it into historical units for you
The Native Americans on the island have something like 30 different words to describe precipitation.