Originally Posted by DJ's left nut:
Like I said - Buffalo is the only team in the AFC, and maybe the Chargers, that worry me.
But the Chargers are likely to Charger it up. And Buffalo can simply lose their way at any given time. Josh Allen remains fairly erratic and in any given half he can just shoot them right out of a game.
We good.
No Pat's? They should worry you. We can't score much against some shit teams. NE has the defense to shut us out. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Coochie liquor:
I never even use my ac in my work truck.
I started leaving it off when I moved here.... 90-95° and 10% humidity and I can actually feel the sweat on my skin. There's apparently this cooling technique your body uses whenever it's hot and humidity isn't 60%+. :-)
That's the thing about Florida though, I couldn't do it because any sweat isn't even noticeable until I step inside into the relatively dry indoors, then I have to peel off clothes. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Coochie liquor:
I never even use my ac in my work truck. I hate having cold air blowing in my face. When I’m with my wife she can’t live without ac don’t have to deal with it. I’d rather be getting my tan on with only shorts, and sweating my ass off, than having to apply multiple layers to try and stay warm. But that’s why we’re all different. I would die in Alaska, I’m sure Alaskans would be very unhappy with Florida weather.
Fair points. To each their own. Don't get me wrong, while I prefer the cold, I would be miserable in Alaska. I didn't always hate the heat though. I think three tours in Iraq in full gear in melt you heat and one tour in equatorial Africa changed my mind on the heat. [Reply]
Originally Posted by tredadda:
Fair points. To each their own. Don't get me wrong, while I prefer the cold, I would be miserable in Alaska. I didn't always hate the heat though. I think three tours in Iraq in full gear in melt you heat and one tour in equatorial Africa changed my mind on the heat.
Now I get it lol. Yeah, I’m sure that is some hot heat, especially adding in all the extra stuff you had to wear/carry. When I lived in MO, and the year I froze my ass off in MN, I worked in foundries. The one in St Louis was iron and steel, and that shit was hot. I worked in the melt and pour department, we ran the furnaces to melt the material, then poured it into molds. Most of the metal came out of the furnaces between 2700-3500 degrees. That shit was insanely hot. The one in MN was aluminum, still over 1000 degrees, but NOWHERE near as hot as that St Louis foundry. [Reply]