I am sat outside in Sweden right now and can confirm that it is frickin’ hot. But not as hot as yesterday.
Yes, I'd much rather have a climate, and proper seasons, like Germany, insead of the boring, bland, 'is it March, August or October?' weather we've had this year.Dunno why you are including Germany there. Germany, at least the parts I know, has a fantastic continental climate which is far more predictable than ours. Warm sunny to hot days from April to October and then a cold hard winter with plenty of seasonal weather. It has great weather!
Visited Stockholm in early June, and basked in 26 C sunshine, having left cloudy, windy, drizzly, England at 17 CI am sat outside in Sweden right now and can confirm that it is frickin’ hot. But not as hot as yesterday.
If you find a smallish digger going spare, could you pop it in your hand luggage for me please? TVMI am sat outside in Sweden right now and can confirm that it is frickin’ hot. But not as hot as yesterday.
Looking forward to your harsh winter outdoor youtube vids alreadySweden is also warmer and sunnier than UK in the summer, and with harsher winters... goes for most countries that aren't islands thrown out in the Atlantic Ocean.
Third rule of being an ex-pat. Refer to yourself as an ex-pat, not an immigrantFirst rule of being an expat. Talk about the better quality of life.
Second rule of being an expat. Talk about the better weather.
Germany should be fine, but here in Sweden "proper seasons" mean you go into November knowing there's a 0% chance any little ray of light finds its way to the ground for the next five months. Its much better on TV and in theory than in reality. By the middle of February or so everyone wants to kill themselves.Yes, I'd much rather have a climate, and proper seasons, like Germany, insead of the boring, bland, 'is it March, August or October?' weather we've had this year.
I've been to Munich both in the summer - gloriously warm, although the nude sunbathing and naked mixed-sex volleyball in Englischer Garden was a culture shock - and in the winter, walking around the Christmas Market in Marianplatz drinking mulled wine while crunching through several inches of fresh snow.
Whereas here in Britain, the dismal weather encourages this feeling all year roundGermany should be fine, but here in Sweden "proper seasons" mean you go into November knowing there's a 0% chance any little ray of light finds its way to the ground for the next five months. Its much better on TV and in theory than in reality. By the middle of February or so everyone wants to kill themselves.
Absolutely.I've spent a fair bit of time in various places in Sweden in the summers, too - and the weather has always been absolutely GLORIOUS.
Ditto Iceland.Absolutely.
Only downside is that, whilst we all like long days, there is virtually no 'night time' in the summer - well at least in the north of Sweden.
Third rule is then tell the ‘Pats’ that remained how to run their country and pop back for a bit of NHSFirst rule of being an expat. Talk about the better quality of life.
Second rule of being an expat. Talk about the better weather.
The downside is that winters have about 22 hours of darkness - allegedly rendered tolerable by lots of drinking and shagging!
'Many [tragedies] are a result of owners exercising their dogs between 8am and 8pm when temperatures can be at their peak'
Dogs are pretty stupid…'Many [tragedies] are a result of owners exercising their dogs between 8am and 8pm when temperatures can be at their peak'
Blimey! Who knew?
Agree.Dogs really shouldn't be out in very hot weather. They find it hard to regulate temperature and can burn their paws on concrete.
23 degrees, however, is not very hot weather. No idea what the organisers are thinking of here.
See https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/pansy#:~:text=2-,a,or effeminate man or boyWhat a load of absolutely pansies the Brits have become.