ThirdOfFive |
07-19-2022 06:43 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by eweissenbach
(Post 2116813)
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I'm probably like a lot of people. Having lived my just about my entire life up on The Tundra (AKA Minnesota) I had heard the stories about the HORRIBLE HEAT in the "deep south". Northern media love to run stories about people dying from the heat (I suppose southern media love to run stories about people freezing to death in places like Minnesota, Montana, Maine, etc.). But we're nearing our second year in TV and I found out that I LOVE the summers down here.
Several reasons for that, I guess. One is that as Florida is DEEPER than the "deep south" what goes on in Texas or the middle of gulf states doesn't necessarily apply to Florida. Also being a peninsula, the only time that the wind ISN'T off the ocean is if it is coming from the north. I did some research: the part of Minnesota where I lived has more 100 degree days in any given year than this part of Florida.
Second, The weather here is predictable. Five months of the year it's warm and clear in the morning, cloudy and getting warmer by noon, mid-90's by 3 PM and then rain. Other five months--cool and dry. Two transitional months where you just don't know. And of course the odd hurricane. But Minnesota can have a range of temps in a year that can hit 115 degrees above zero to 60 degrees BELOW zero. That's a span of 175 degrees. I'll take the 60-or-so span possible in Florida over that, any day.
Third, Summers here are not crowded. Tee times just by calling the course instead of reserving one three days in advance. Shorter lines at restaurants and Publix checkout lines. Stuff like that. We'd seriously considered spending June-July-August up in MN (I have a friend who owns a resort near the Canadian border) but that's not on the list any more. Instead we're thinking of using high-snowbird season to travel.
Fourth, great tan.
Many reasons to love TV.
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