Manitoba Peregrines > Radisson Peregrines
Radisson - 2008 / Trey & Princess
bcbird:
Hey Pchemist, I've been wondering, does Pchemist=physical chemistry?
Last night over dinner our family was discussing the relative merits of degrees Farenheit, celcius and Kelvin. Oh well call us geeks.
deedream:
Oh I have to try and remember that conversion Pchemist,, I am always trying to convert it for Mom. We talk about weather a lot! lol My outdoor thermometer is celcius only (the other one I had that did both broke), so I say well it is 24C and she does not really know what that is until I say well its about 78F. lol
bcbird:
Brooke's last flight sounded so harsh. The photo is strangely bittersweet. I could see the gorgeous mature wild creature she was becoming, mixed with the young one she had been.
Too much projection of bird's lives onto our reality. It's grad party time, human teenagers
die because of lack of judgement over driving skills.
Fledging is indeed a dangerous time.
ballywing:
Awww that is so sad.. :'( - typical brothers, picking on their poor sister. Fledging is such a dangerous time for them, what a shame. :(
Pchemist:
--- Quote from: Liz on June 21, 2008, 01:44 ---It's 29 in my livingroom! That's what -- 84 in old people language? (fahrenheit, for oldies like me who aren't quite sure how hot is hot!)
--- End quote ---
Or in "american" language, since we do it in Fahrenheit. I use both, because we use Celcius in the lab - though Fahrenheit is a finer scale, Celcius is easier to convert to Kelvin (which is what we really use).
Easy conversion (for "normal-ish" temps is Celcius*2 + 30) so 29 would be 29*2+30 = 88. Not perfect, but easier to do in your head. To do it perfect it's Celcius*1.8+32. I have a quick way to do that too, but now I'm showing my geek-factor too much. ;)
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