A friend of mine was outside last night pulling anything in pots inside and covering her irises. We’re usually safe by this time, but this year seems to be determined to make us feel like we’re living in a tombola drum
Snow in May
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Re: Snow in May
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Re: Snow in May
I've seen it snow in Utah in May.
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Re: Snow in May
It snowed a couple times when I lived in Atlanta.
Seems newsworthy. "Hotlanta" is not true all year 'round; that's for sure.
Seems newsworthy. "Hotlanta" is not true all year 'round; that's for sure.
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Re: Snow in May
Snow? What's that? I live in California's Central Valley, where it hardly ever snows.
Seriously, though, some incurious people raised until adulthood in Southern California are amazingly clueless about Snow. I met a missionary in Denmark who had been born and raised all his life in Los Angeles and had never seen snow before coming to Denmark. He knew, of course, that it was a form of frozen water, but he was amazed the first time he saw snow falling from the sky. He had somehow gotten the impression that snow was something that came up from the ground whenever it got cold enough. I guess the closest thing he had ever seen to snow was frost. This same guy was equally stunned one sunny summer day when he happened to look up in the sky and saw the moon. Somehow, he had managed to grow to adulthood without ever noticing that whenever the moon is overhead, it can be seen even during daylight hours on a sunny day. Maybe the persistent smog in his hometown, Los Angeles, had something to do with that.
Seriously, though, some incurious people raised until adulthood in Southern California are amazingly clueless about Snow. I met a missionary in Denmark who had been born and raised all his life in Los Angeles and had never seen snow before coming to Denmark. He knew, of course, that it was a form of frozen water, but he was amazed the first time he saw snow falling from the sky. He had somehow gotten the impression that snow was something that came up from the ground whenever it got cold enough. I guess the closest thing he had ever seen to snow was frost. This same guy was equally stunned one sunny summer day when he happened to look up in the sky and saw the moon. Somehow, he had managed to grow to adulthood without ever noticing that whenever the moon is overhead, it can be seen even during daylight hours on a sunny day. Maybe the persistent smog in his hometown, Los Angeles, had something to do with that.