Living in Midwest, I tried that, it didn’t work. Some of the programs I record in the fall don’t get around to being watched until Spring. One channel featured Christmas in July, in July, and it really messed me up.
When I was in the Army back in the 70s stationed at Fort Bliss in El Paso texas-which is at a higher elevation than Denver-I would get up some morning only to have the temperature already reading 100 degrees. Only thing that saved it was the extremely low humidity. That is also why a swamp cooler AC worked. If high humidity you would have to have a refrigerator type AC as a swamp cooler would not work
KEA over 6 years ago
Excellent!
zzeek over 6 years ago
I wish that it was ONLY approaching 100 degrees where I live. It was still 100 degrees at 9:00 P.M.
mmmmary over 6 years ago
Here in central California it has been over 100 for so many days in a row I have lost count! But, I do remember blizzards from my childhood in Ohio.
Jeff0811 over 6 years ago
Living in Midwest, I tried that, it didn’t work. Some of the programs I record in the fall don’t get around to being watched until Spring. One channel featured Christmas in July, in July, and it really messed me up.
whenlifewassimpler over 6 years ago
This is why we moved from Rochester NY to California
timbob2313 Premium Member over 6 years ago
When I was in the Army back in the 70s stationed at Fort Bliss in El Paso texas-which is at a higher elevation than Denver-I would get up some morning only to have the temperature already reading 100 degrees. Only thing that saved it was the extremely low humidity. That is also why a swamp cooler AC worked. If high humidity you would have to have a refrigerator type AC as a swamp cooler would not work
sbferg over 6 years ago
Watched a show I DVRd and was confused for a moment by the school closings scroller at the bottom. Then I remembered the recording was from January.