From: blackstucco on
On Jul 13, 2:28 pm, "Big Mikey" <lvseminolenospam...(a)aol.com> wrote:
> Like I said (and you can bullshit yourself all you want) but the political
> threads outdo anything Las Vegas vacation related here..  

So you decided to start another one?
Good thinking.

A*
From: tom ronson on
Ray in Nashvegas wrote:

> Vegas heat sounds refreshing to me today.

really? <grin>

An excessive heat watch remains in effect from Friday afternoon
through Saturday evening.

The excessive heat watch covers Clark and southern Nye counties in
southern Nevada... southern Mohave County in Arizona... the deserts
of San Bernardino County as well as Death Valley National Park and
Owens Valley in eastern California.

* Expected temperature: 112 to 115 degrees at Las Vegas... Pahrump
and Barstow... 113 to 119 degrees from Mesquite south down the
Colorado River to Lake Havasu City... 123 to 125 degrees at
furnace creek in Death Valley National Park and 104 to 108
degrees at Kingman and Bishop.

* Greatest impact areas: the hottest temperatures will occur
within the Colorado River valley and Death Valley National
Park. Plan any outdoor activities in the early morning or
evening after sunset.

--

"How can one little Street swallow so many lives?" -- The Offspring, The
Kids Aren't Alright

--tr
From: Marsha L on

"tom ronson" <theavlv.ronson(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:i1n8vv$g4j$1(a)news.eternal-september.org...
> Ray in Nashvegas wrote:
>
>> Vegas heat sounds refreshing to me today.
>
> really? <grin>
>
> An excessive heat watch remains in effect from Friday afternoon
> through Saturday evening.
>
> The excessive heat watch covers Clark and southern Nye counties in
> southern Nevada... southern Mohave County in Arizona... the deserts
> of San Bernardino County as well as Death Valley National Park and
> Owens Valley in eastern California.
>
> * Expected temperature: 112 to 115 degrees at Las Vegas... Pahrump
> and Barstow... 113 to 119 degrees from Mesquite south down the
> Colorado River to Lake Havasu City... 123 to 125 degrees at
> furnace creek in Death Valley National Park and 104 to 108
> degrees at Kingman and Bishop.
>
> * Greatest impact areas: the hottest temperatures will occur
> within the Colorado River valley and Death Valley National
> Park. Plan any outdoor activities in the early morning or
> evening after sunset.
>
> --
>
> "How can one little Street swallow so many lives?" -- The Offspring, The
> Kids Aren't Alright
>
> --tr

"But it's a dry heat"

(sorry)


From: tom ronson on
Marsha L wrote:

> "But it's a dry heat"

lol --- that it is.

> (sorry)

as well you should be ;)

--

"How can one little Street swallow so many lives?" -- The Offspring, The
Kids Aren't Alright

--tr
From: Kurt Ullman on
In article <i1nh0u$p79$1(a)news.eternal-september.org>,
tom ronson <theavlv.ronson(a)yahoo.com> wrote:

> Marsha L wrote:
>
> > "But it's a dry heat"
>
> lol --- that it is.
>
> > (sorry)
>
> as well you should be ;)

Can someone please explain to me why it is better to live in a
convection oven instead of a bamboo steamer? Neither seems all that nice
to me!

--
I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator
and name it after the IRS.
Robert Bakker, paleontologist