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Old March 12th 13, 11:46 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
Graham P Davis Graham P Davis is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Oct 2004
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Default South Devon - missed

On Tue, 12 Mar 2013 10:57:16 +0000
John Hall wrote:

In article ,
Adam Lea writes:
I also don't know how he manages to have an east facing
bedroom window open in these conditions and still manages to
sleep comfortably. It must get well down into single figures in his
bedroom. I would suspect this would put him close to a nationwide
record in terms of cold tolerance :-).


He would have been well suited to the 19th and earlier centuries, when
poorer standards of heating and insulation meant that in severe
winters bedrooms would get so cold that the contents of chamber pots
would occasionally freeze. I suppose a lot depends on how warm your
bedclothes and pyjamas are.


No need to go that far back. I had snow lying on the window-ledge in my
bedroom for three days in '61-2 winter and temperature in that room
dropped to -10C the following winter. Our house only had a single room
heated and that only during the day; that was typical for those times.
Mind you, we were luckier than many in having an indoor toilet so
frozen chamberpots was not a problem, though frozen water pipes occurred
most winters when I was a child. Central heating was only installed in
'75.

--
Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks.
Carlos Seixas, Sonata nÂș 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXox7vonfEg
And for something completely different, Cumberland Gap:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AsU-LTwx8Co