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Oh I love you ^^^

my kind of reading too :devil:

LaVey is I think a big joke but still a good reading

16 minutes ago, Stormbringer said:

First Christmas gifts... finally :ninja: 

Considering previous years, I started early :ninja: 

:beating: Next year September. Did you get up getting anything I suggested?

5 minutes ago, Prettyphile said:

:beating: Next year September. Did you get up getting anything I suggested?

 

Not yet, but I'm considering some of those for probably my sisters and /or my mom.

Now I got a couple of little toy cars for my nephew, and my niece wanted specifically Harry Potter's second book, so I got that for her.

 

I'll try to start at least in November next year :rofl::rofl: 

Hair chalk for my niece

http://i.skyrock.net/3635/87403635/pics/3214999921_1_5_w0U5Rf16.jpg

 

 

And the most stupid gift you can buy to someone

 

SOCKS

fluffy ones

 

Now I can die with shame

 

@Sanni

Sonoma sits in a large valley with the Bay to it's South and the Ocean to the west by about 30ish miles - so those two factors often keep the area warmer then say somewhere like Lake Tahoe. If it does snow it's soooo minuscule that you don't even notice.

 

Quote

 

Climate

Sonoma has typical Mediterranean weather with hot, dry summers (although nights are comfortably cool) and cool, wet winters. In February, the normal high is 58.4 °F (14.7 °C) and the typical low is 37.3 °F (2.9 °C). In July, the normal high is 89.8 °F (32.1 °C) and the normal low is 51.9 °F (11.1 °C). There are an average of 58.1 days with highs of 90 °F (32 °C) or higher and 12.1 days with highs of 100 °F (38 °C). The highest temperature on record was 116 °F (47 °C) on July 13, 1972, and the lowest temperature was 13 °F (−11 °C) on December 22, 1990. Normal annual precipitation is 30.64 inches (778 mm). The wettest month on record was 20.29 inches (515 mm) in January 1995. The greatest 24-hour rainfall was 6.75 inches (171 mm) on January 4, 1982. There are an average of 68.6 days with measurable precipitation. Snow has rarely fallen, but 1.0 inch fell in January 1907; more recently, snow flurries were observed on February 5, 1976 and in the winter of 2001

 

 

^ Hah, love it! You’d have to go over a hundred years back to see real snow!

17 minutes ago, Prettyphile said:
Quote

 The highest temperature on record was 116 °F (47 °C) on July 13, 1972

 

 

:shocking: 

@Stormbringer I lived in Sacramento 2014 and for 7/8days straight our temps floated between 43.8 and 48.3 °C We had such bad and long lasting rolling black outs that you couldn't get the AC on for more then a hour before the grid went down, and when it went down it was down for days.... no air conditioning, no fans, and no relief from cold showers. You'd step out of the shower wet (fuck drying off), and within 10 minutes you were back to dry. I had two cats at that point, and one of them died due to the heat and my best efforts to keep them cool.  

 

When it cooled down we were still in the mid 100's (40°C)  On top of it we were in a severe drought so utilizing the water for long periods of time to try and cool off meant you were handed fines at the end of the month plus and astronomical bill. I think I was given a 200 dollar fine... so yeah, very little water either.

Quote

 

2014 was hottest year in Sacramento's history

Sacramento plodded through its hottest year on record in 2014, with an average high temperature a full degree above the city's next-hottest year, according to a Bee analysis of records from the National Climatic Data Center.

California also experienced its hottest year in 2014 as an historic drought caused by a coastal high-pressure ridge kept storms from reaching the state during much of last winter.

Temperatures were also aggravated by El Niño, the rise in water temperature in the equatorial Pacific Ocean that often disrupts weather throughout North America.

Average temperatures have increased statewide and in Sacramento during the last 100 years, a trend that most scientists attribute to climate change.

This chart shows the average high temperature at Sacramento's downtown weather station over the last 130 years.

 

 

 

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