Frazz by Jef Mallett for October 05, 2013
Transcript:
Mr. Spaetzle: You swim across Lac Froide? In October? Frazz: Well, I'm thinking about going to swim Alcatraz again. Mr. Spaetzle: You're crazy Frazz: Crazy is relative. Mr. Spaetzle: I'm dying to know what's crazier. Frazz: Any sport where you have to wear a cup comes to mind.
oranaiche about 11 years ago
Lac Froide = French for “cold lake.”
TheSkulker about 11 years ago
Yes, but like whales and such, it requires a layer of fat. Something Frazz is in short supply.
Varnes about 11 years ago
fear-ciuil, thank you….
Varnes about 11 years ago
Frazz does make a good point…
frumdebang about 11 years ago
Totally useless trivia: our British cousins call a cup a “box.”
PuckerbrushCity about 11 years ago
Not to be a boring pedagogue or anything, but the Humboldt Current is an upwelling current that runs north from Chile to Peru and then curves west at the equator…sorry, just sayin’.
x_Tech about 11 years ago
Let’s see. You need a cup for Lair’s Dice, but you don’t wear it.
Jkiss about 11 years ago
Gosh, I guess the sky is the limit for me then. Being a gal, no cup required. Thanks Frazz.
androscoggin about 11 years ago
Swimming is a sport in the Olympics. So are sledding, skiing, ice skating… Depends on how you do it.
androscoggin about 11 years ago
P.S. Synonyms for froide: cold, inhospitable, inaccessible, distant, intemperate, rigorous. Swimming Lac Froide doesn’t sound like a hobby to me!
hippogriff about 11 years ago
In BC, it is still called the Japan current, and at least in Vancouver is well above 42°F. Standard Celsius readings for air temperature: 25° go to the beach, 30° go in the water, 35° have to go in the water.
Stephen Gilberg about 11 years ago
Disagreed, Frazz. In, say, soccer, you MIGHT get hit in the groin, and the cup will serve its purpose. In swimming Lac Froide, you WILL get very cold.
K M about 11 years ago
I mentioned this somewhere else, probably on this site, a month or two ago: Got behind a car with one of those Euro oval stickers that read, in a rough handwriting typeface, “13.1 because I’m only half crazy.” However, across the top of the back window was one of those stick-figure family types, except these stick figures represented swimming, bicycling, and running, the components of a triathlon. I wanted to catch up to the occupants of that car and ask, “OK, which one of you is half crazy and which one is way beyond crazy!?”