Welcome to Edmonton, your temperature is now a balmy -41 degrees centigrade. Your face will freeze off in less that two minutes if you are not careful. Rubber will snap like glass, the snow makes a new sound when you walk on it and if you have not plugged your car in well… enjoy your indoor stay.
Days like today are good for only one thing. Multiple blankets, cats, hot chocolate (preferably with peppermint schnapps) and a good book and warm radio.
Or you can be like me and have a choral concert to attend to. *sigh* The things I do to sing.
Oh hey, I found the windchill chart from Environment Canada posted here in all of its frosty glory. Make note of the helpful chart at the end we are almost in the red-zone, woo-haa.
*update* – The choral concert was a smash hit! A 2 minute standing O for us, it was great. Almost worth the frozen extremities.
Wind Chill ProgramWind Chill Calculation Chart
where 1. For a given combination of temperature and wind speed, the wind chill index corresponds roughly to the temperature that one would feel in a very light wind. For example, a temperature of -25°C and a wind speed of 20 km/h give a wind chill index of -37. This means that, with a wind of 20 km/h and a temperature of -25°C, one would feel as if it were -37°C in a very light wind. 2. Wind chill does not affect objects and does not lower the actual temperature. It only describe how a human being would feel in the wind at the ambient temperature. 3. The wind chill index does not take into account the effect of sunshine. Bright sunshine may reduce the effect of wind chill (make it feel warmer) by 6 to 10 units. Back to first table
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5 comments
December 12, 2009 at 10:45 am
Rob F
Starting just after this time last year, we got a lot of snow here the Lower Mainland. There was so much snow, that I saw someone cross-country skiing down the street. It didn’t get that cold here, though, due to being next to the Ocean.
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December 12, 2009 at 12:30 pm
The Arbourist
It really is a toss up between which is more annoying, lots of snow or lots of cold.
I think that once you shovel the snow, you don’t have to worry about it so much and is indeed the lesser of two evils.
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December 12, 2009 at 7:04 pm
The Anti-Social Socialist
Bloody hell, even here in Medicine Hat we’re getting frozen. It’s unreal.
Reminds me of home back in North Ontario, but damn…
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December 12, 2009 at 10:10 pm
bckcntry
Rob F, I just got back from the coast (I’m from the East Kootenays) and was loving the balmy 0 degree weather.
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December 13, 2009 at 8:20 am
The Arbourist
Boo!
*west coast envy*
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