Thursday, March 12, 2015

Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

They always ask at the doctor's reception why you are there,
And you have to answer in front of others what's wrong and
there's nothing worse than a Doctor's Receptionist who insists
You tell her what is wrong with you, in a room full of other
Patients.
I know most of us have experienced this, and I love the way
This old guy handled it.
A 75-year-old man walked into a crowded waiting room and
Approached the desk. The Receptionist said, Yes sir, what are
You seeing the Doctor for today?
There's something wrong with my penis, he replied.
The receptionist became irritated and said, 'You shouldn't
Come into a crowded waiting room and say things like that.
Why not, you asked me what was wrong and I told you,
He said.
The Receptionist replied; Now you've caused some
Embarrassment in this room full of people.  You should have
Said there is something wrong with your ear or something,
And discussed the problem further with the Doctor in private.
The man replied, You shouldn't ask people questions in a
Roomful of strangers if the answer could embarrass anyone.
The man then decided to walk out, waited several minutes,
And then re-entered.
The Receptionist smiled smugly and asked, Yes?
There's something wrong with my ear, he stated.
The Receptionist nodded approvingly and smiled, knowing
He had taken her advice. 

And what is wrong with your ear, Sir?
I can't p#$$ out of it, he replied.
 
From: Buzz Darcy
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:05 AM
Subject: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.
 
This post, more than partisan politics or football teams , could likely be the most controversial thing I've ever written about. I'm not joking. I'll bet this conjures up more back and forth than the stains on Monika Lewinsky's dress. Some things just have to be argued.
In my search for meaningful, pertinent, and interesting trends(and that's not as easy as it sounds), I have , once more , stumbled on a doozey, a list of the coldest cities in the U.S.  25 of them em, in all their glory. As a disclaimer, I have to say that not one of them is in California, Florida, or Hawaii- I want to make that clear from the git-go; and I only mention Florida because of family there.
Of the 25 , I have lived in 2 of them, one being the number 2 coldest- Grand Forks, North Dakota, and number 12, the twin cities of Minneapolis-St.Paul, Minnesota. Some of you will, no doubt, are living in areas that associate with cold, but don't make it to the list- I don't know why, but consider yourselves lucky. Some of you may argue that your city should be on the list, and to that I can only say," now's your chance to move...".
I know perfectly sane people that live in cold ares, but, when I really start to about it, they're not that sane at all- they're probably numb. Numb is an excuse I can relate to, having experienced it throughout my life as a way to combat the madness around me- I know that some of you were born Republican.
My friends, Gary and Michele Lindsey, actually met and married in North Dakota, and I think they turned out pretty well, judging from our correspondence. My friend Tracey and her hubby lived in Anchorage, Alaska,.. and lived! Amen. I used to think that the slush in late winter N.Y., out on Long Island, was the nastiest kind of cold to experience, but that was because I was out working in it with shitty boots and clothing. I always figured that's why God invented marijuana and hashish- that seemed to keep the cold at bay temporarily. in hindsight it would have been cheaper to invest in better cold weather gear- Polar Fleece was a few decades away. Grass worked.
When Kathy and I traveled to Ireland some years back, around Easter, we encountered gorgeous weather- in the 60's for the most part- and the locals kept telling us we lucked into something good. At a sporting goods store, in Dingle, the owner told me , "...that honestly, the winter weather here is miserable, horrid..." she'd lived there all her life. Lovely memory.
Let's face it; the only good part about cold is when you get out of it. Looking at the list of those 25 cold cities, all but 5 are in the Midwest. Sheridan, Wyoming, is a Western place in my mind. Alaska has 2- Fairbanks being the coldest in the U.S. on a regular basis, Concord , New Hampshire, and Burlington, Vermont, being the other outliers. What does that say about the Midwest?
Isn't there something we can do to help those places? Couldn't we , here in California, send them some kale or something? Washington D.C., could sent tons of bullshit-I've learned that piles of bullshit can create a lot of hot air- it's a symbiosis. Hell, with the hot air produced in Congress, we could turn North Dakota into a citrus producing power house and eliminate the need for fracking-the methane produced in D.C.would take care of that - no pun intended.
There is one very positive aspect of cold that perhaps I've neglected to mention- ice! You think that's folly? When was the last time you had a hot gin and tonic? Rum can be drunk in tropical climes at room temperature, but a rum and Coke- never. It's true, an oyster can be eaten either hot or cold, but what of an ice cream sandwich?
But wait, of global warming and the demise of polar bears? What of hot and cold then? How many meaningless words can I spout about warmth and the lack thereof,making light of it all, that will make any difference to the future that we- you and I- will not have to endure? That our children s children will inherit? Well, that's another aspect that I'd love to discuss, but, for today, let's keep it light, I'll reel you in soon enough and we can get into the real nitty gritty.
And please, if you don't want to hear me, please let me know- I have no judgement in that regard- though I love your input .
Well, regardless of what it may bring, that's what's trending at my house today.

Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

Buzz, Jim et al,

Good point about N. Iowa- I can see the snow fences now...

Thanks Buzz for touching on a controversial topic- just don't touch it like a tongue onto an aluminum storm door on a January Day in Chicago. I grew up there and left when I reached the age of dissent. Living in that climate as a kid is different from living in the place when one is of "a certain age".

Chicago does have extreme weather, as Jimmy said. When I go back to visit my sis, we're always hermetically sealed off from the miserably cold winter or the hot humid summer. The joke there is that are 2 seasons in Chicago- Winter and Road Construction Season.  As a kid, I loved winter because of ice skating, sledding or tobogganing, snowball fights, and the best thing- snow days. Since it's such a flat place, there were times a few of us would tie our sleds with ropes behind one of the nuttier dad's cars, and he'd pull us around the frozen streets- like water skiing gone strangely wrong. You'd never get away with that now. There would be law firms specifically dedicated to the injuries incurred, and that fun-loving dad would be thrown in the pokey instead of being a hero, which he was to us then.

I remember bringing my new SoCal girlfriend (and still my gal) Bobbi to Chicago to visit for the first time. We walked out of the Art Institute downtown, and "The Hawk" hit us- that brutal frigid wind off Lake Michigan. Her face had a frozen (literally)expression of surprise with a sprinkling of terror. She had never had her face quick-frozen before, or had that cold wind make its way through a heavy overcoat and then her semi-tropical SoCal getup.

Those knit masks are for more than robbing banks...

Tom Dooley
Santa Cruz



On 3/12/2015 2:42 PM, J.L. Darcy wrote:
30 years (30 winters) on a farm in northern Iowa......that's all I'm going to say.


CC: buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com; khdarcy@gmail.com; theoneandonlycody@gmail.com; lynayad@gmail.com; meredarcy@hotmail.com; kevinadarcy@gmail.com; rory_darcycollings@yahoo.com; liznjerry@sti.net; jldarcy1@hotmail.com; timothynewsham@gmail.com; tim@timmcgaffic.com; dooley_t@comcast.net; drbwollam@msn.com; stock.hilary4@gmail.com; darryl@integratedhealthcareclinic.com; garyllindsey@charter.net; qualitytops@comcast.net; travisfriendly@sbcglobal.net; tb@tracybimagery.com; mezzofrog@comcast.net; cpgaiser@comcast.net; blu@boulder.net; elainegubbins@gmail.com; rickmalmquist@att.net; gatrplbg@gmail.com; cspapini@msn.com; sean@seanconstantine.com; msutter55@comcast.net; gelder40@aol.com; christine@keeferpr.com; tourist54@yahoo.com; thom@tucantech.com; bobbi@kuumbwajazz.org; w8tilucme@gmail.com; northernlight1961@yahoo.com; ptnewman2001@yahoo.com; lyndaburbank@roadrunner.com; dcsinmaine@yahoo.com; hibler@juno.com; bjrosen8@gmail.com; buzzdarcy.coyote@blogger.com; james77ptrck@yahoo.com; jcgubbins@omg.ie; warrenluedecker@yahoo.com; djolsen@earthlink.net; mostrenco@rocketmail.com; fhpmc726light@aol.com
From: jclwc@sbcglobal.net
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.
Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2015 13:10:15 -0700
To: bfreeman64@comcast.net

LOL! I Could just see you & Cathleen, and the coats !! LOL ! Cold ass place, especially with the wind.

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 12, 2015, at 10:39 AM, Bill Freeman <bfreeman64@comcast.net> wrote:

Jimmy………..you are right about Chicago…………I used to travel all over the U.S. as Director of Marketing for FMC Corporation and many times I would fly to Florida, Mississippi, Texas, etc. and then my secretary in San Jose would call me in the middle of the week and tell me I had to get up to Chicago for an important meeting. Of course, I hadn't planned on going to the cold country so I didn't bring a top coat with me. When I got to Chicago I would go down to Richmond Brothers and buy another top coat………..always just like the last one I'd purchased there. The salesmen knew me……………I think I bought 5 or 6 of them. When I married Cathleen she wanted to know what  the hell all these identical top coats were doing in my closet………….fond memories………..

 

From: James [mailto:jclwc@sbcglobal.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 9:52 AM
To: Bill Freeman
Cc: Buzz Darcy; Katherine Darcy; Cody Oats; Naya; Mary Darcy; Kevin Darcy; Rory Collings; Liz and Jerry; J.L. Darcy; Tim Newsham; Tim McGaffic; Tom Dooley; Brion Wollam; Hilary Stock; Darryl Hobson; Gary Lindsey; Tim O'Neill; Steven Ames; Tracey Barbutes; Molly Moon Hudson; Carla Gaiser; Barbaralu Cohen; Elaine Gubbins Luedecker; Rick Malmquist; Stephen Cosbey; Carol Santos-Papini; Sean Constantine; Meredith Sutter; Ginny Elder; Christine Soderbergh; Anne Stevenson; Thomas OBryon; Bobbi Todaro; Nicky Ames; Paul Gill; Peter Newman; Lynda Gardner; David Seybold; Barb Hibler; Barbara Rosen; Buzz Blog; Jim Collins; J.C. Gubbins; Warren; DJ Olsen; Patrick Barnhill; Ralph Ralph
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

 

Remember Mark Twain saying "the coldest winter he ever spent in his life was a summer on San Francisco". LOL !

 

A lot of my friends in Monterey, Ca. are retired commercial fishermen fishing anywhere from Alaska to Mexico, and they swear that the coldest weather they ever experienced was fishing for mackerel in S.F. Bay in  Dec. or Jan. with an east wind coming off the distant mountains when they had snow on them. And as most of will probably contest, a damp cold, on or near the ocean, or a large lake, Chicago comes to mind here, always feel worse than a try cold no matter the temperature.

 

Chicago, if I'm not mistaken, has the most extreme weather of any major city in the U.S., that's where I experienced the coldest weather in my life. But another real bad experience I had, cold weather wise, was the first day I landed in Miami in Mar. of 68 in the wee hours, and it was a very unusual 28 degrees and windy, and with that dampness, dame that was cold !

   

Jimmy C.

Sent from my iPhone


On Mar 12, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Bill Freeman <bfreeman64@comcast.net> wrote:

Hi Buzzer………….enjoyed your commentary…………….one of the  coldest places I know of is where I took your cousin, Cathleen, on our honeymoon 47 years ago. We flew north from Nome, Alaska for about 45 minutes to a town above the Arctic Circle……………the name of the town was Kotzebue and it was inhabited by 150 Inupiat Eskimos. At any rate, let me tell you how cold it was………..I watched as a Siberian Husky stopped and squatted and started to take a crap…………..and in less than 5 seconds he turned into a monument…………..needless to say I was truly impressed with the temperatures up there………………….another cold place I can remember was standing  on the highway at Medicine Bow, Wyoming at 4 AM hitch-hiking home for Christmas in 1951. It was 33 below zero and I had ice forming on the back of my ears and had to keep breaking it off……………glad those days are over…………Bill Freeman

 

From: Buzz Darcy [mailto:buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:13 AM
To: Buzz Darcy; Katherine Darcy; Cody Oats; Naya; Mary Darcy; Kevin Darcy; Rory Collings; Liz and Jerry; J.L. Darcy; Tim Newsham; Tim McGaffic; Tom Dooley; Brion Wollam; Hilary Stock; Darryl Hobson; Bill Freeman; Gary Lindsey; Tim O'Neill; Steven Ames; Tracey Barbutes; Molly Moon Hudson; Carla Gaiser; Barbaralu Cohen; Elaine Gubbins Luedecker; Rick Malmquist; Stephen Cosbey; Carol Santos-Papini; Sean Constantine; Meredith Sutter; Ginny Elder; Christine Soderbergh; Anne Stevenson; Thomas OBryon; Bobbi Todaro; Nicky Ames; Paul Gill; Peter Newman; Lynda Gardner; David Seybold; Barb Hibler; Barbara Rosen; Buzz Blog; Jim Collins; Jim Collins; J.C. Gubbins; Warren; DJ Olsen; Patrick Barnhill; Ralph Ralph
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

 

Cody,Cody is on Maui- my bad

 

On Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:08 AM, Buzz Darcy <buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com> wrote:

 

 This post, more than partisan politics or football teams , could likely be the most controversial thing I've ever written about. I'm not joking. I'll bet this conjures up more back and forth than the stains on Monika Lewinsky's dress. Some things just have to be argued.

 In my search for meaningful, pertinent, and interesting trends(and that's not as easy as it sounds), I have , once more , stumbled on a doozey, a list of the coldest cities in the U.S.  25 of them em, in all their glory. As a disclaimer, I have to say that not one of them is in California, Florida, or Hawaii- I want to make that clear from the git-go; and I only mention Florida because of family there.

 Of the 25 , I have lived in 2 of them, one being the number 2 coldest- Grand Forks, North Dakota, and number 12, the twin cities of Minneapolis-St.Paul, Minnesota. Some of you will, no doubt, are living in areas that associate with cold, but don't make it to the list- I don't know why, but consider yourselves lucky. Some of you may argue that your city should be on the list, and to that I can only say," now's your chance to move...".

 I know perfectly sane people that live in cold ares, but, when I really start to about it, they're not that sane at all- they're probably numb. Numb is an excuse I can relate to, having experienced it throughout my life as a way to combat the madness around me- I know that some of you were born Republican.

 My friends, Gary and Michele Lindsey, actually met and married in North Dakota, and I think they turned out pretty well, judging from our correspondence. My friend Tracey and her hubby lived in Anchorage, Alaska,.. and lived! Amen. I used to think that the slush in late winter N.Y., out on Long Island, was the nastiest kind of cold to experience, but that was because I was out working in it with shitty boots and clothing. I always figured that's why God invented marijuana and hashish- that seemed to keep the cold at bay temporarily. in hindsight it would have been cheaper to invest in better cold weather gear- Polar Fleece was a few decades away. Grass worked.

 When Kathy and I traveled to Ireland some years back, around Easter, we encountered gorgeous weather- in the 60's for the most part- and the locals kept telling us we lucked into something good. At a sporting goods store, in Dingle, the owner told me , "...that honestly, the winter weather here is miserable, horrid..." she'd lived there all her life. Lovely memory.

 Let's face it; the only good part about cold is when you get out of it. Looking at the list of those 25 cold cities, all but 5 are in the Midwest. Sheridan, Wyoming, is a Western place in my mind. Alaska has 2- Fairbanks being the coldest in the U.S. on a regular basis, Concord , New Hampshire, and Burlington, Vermont, being the other outliers. What does that say about the Midwest?

 Isn't there something we can do to help those places? Couldn't we , here in California, send them some kale or something? Washington D.C., could sent tons of bullshit-I've learned that piles of bullshit can create a lot of hot air- it's a symbiosis. Hell, with the hot air produced in Congress, we could turn North Dakota into a citrus producing power house and eliminate the need for fracking-the methane produced in D.C.would take care of that - no pun intended.

 There is one very positive aspect of cold that perhaps I've neglected to mention- ice! You think that's folly? When was the last time you had a hot gin and tonic? Rum can be drunk in tropical climes at room temperature, but a rum and Coke- never. It's true, an oyster can be eaten either hot or cold, but what of an ice cream sandwich?

 But wait, of global warming and the demise of polar bears? What of hot and cold then? How many meaningless words can I spout about warmth and the lack thereof,making light of it all, that will make any difference to the future that we- you and I- will not have to endure? That our children s children will inherit? Well, that's another aspect that I'd love to discuss, but, for today, let's keep it light, I'll reel you in soon enough and we can get into the real nitty gritty.

 And please, if you don't want to hear me, please let me know- I have no judgement in that regard- though I love your input .

 Well, regardless of what it may bring, that's what's trending at my house today.

 

 


RE: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

30 years (30 winters) on a farm in northern Iowa......that's all I'm going to say.


CC: buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com; khdarcy@gmail.com; theoneandonlycody@gmail.com; lynayad@gmail.com; meredarcy@hotmail.com; kevinadarcy@gmail.com; rory_darcycollings@yahoo.com; liznjerry@sti.net; jldarcy1@hotmail.com; timothynewsham@gmail.com; tim@timmcgaffic.com; dooley_t@comcast.net; drbwollam@msn.com; stock.hilary4@gmail.com; darryl@integratedhealthcareclinic.com; garyllindsey@charter.net; qualitytops@comcast.net; travisfriendly@sbcglobal.net; tb@tracybimagery.com; mezzofrog@comcast.net; cpgaiser@comcast.net; blu@boulder.net; elainegubbins@gmail.com; rickmalmquist@att.net; gatrplbg@gmail.com; cspapini@msn.com; sean@seanconstantine.com; msutter55@comcast.net; gelder40@aol.com; christine@keeferpr.com; tourist54@yahoo.com; thom@tucantech.com; bobbi@kuumbwajazz.org; w8tilucme@gmail.com; northernlight1961@yahoo.com; ptnewman2001@yahoo.com; lyndaburbank@roadrunner.com; dcsinmaine@yahoo.com; hibler@juno.com; bjrosen8@gmail.com; buzzdarcy.coyote@blogger.com; james77ptrck@yahoo.com; jcgubbins@omg.ie; warrenluedecker@yahoo.com; djolsen@earthlink.net; mostrenco@rocketmail.com; fhpmc726light@aol.com
From: jclwc@sbcglobal.net
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.
Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2015 13:10:15 -0700
To: bfreeman64@comcast.net

LOL! I Could just see you & Cathleen, and the coats !! LOL ! Cold ass place, especially with the wind.

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 12, 2015, at 10:39 AM, Bill Freeman <bfreeman64@comcast.net> wrote:

Jimmy………..you are right about Chicago…………I used to travel all over the U.S. as Director of Marketing for FMC Corporation and many times I would fly to Florida, Mississippi, Texas, etc. and then my secretary in San Jose would call me in the middle of the week and tell me I had to get up to Chicago for an important meeting. Of course, I hadn't planned on going to the cold country so I didn't bring a top coat with me. When I got to Chicago I would go down to Richmond Brothers and buy another top coat………..always just like the last one I'd purchased there. The salesmen knew me……………I think I bought 5 or 6 of them. When I married Cathleen she wanted to know what  the hell all these identical top coats were doing in my closet………….fond memories………..

 

From: James [mailto:jclwc@sbcglobal.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 9:52 AM
To: Bill Freeman
Cc: Buzz Darcy; Katherine Darcy; Cody Oats; Naya; Mary Darcy; Kevin Darcy; Rory Collings; Liz and Jerry; J.L. Darcy; Tim Newsham; Tim McGaffic; Tom Dooley; Brion Wollam; Hilary Stock; Darryl Hobson; Gary Lindsey; Tim O'Neill; Steven Ames; Tracey Barbutes; Molly Moon Hudson; Carla Gaiser; Barbaralu Cohen; Elaine Gubbins Luedecker; Rick Malmquist; Stephen Cosbey; Carol Santos-Papini; Sean Constantine; Meredith Sutter; Ginny Elder; Christine Soderbergh; Anne Stevenson; Thomas OBryon; Bobbi Todaro; Nicky Ames; Paul Gill; Peter Newman; Lynda Gardner; David Seybold; Barb Hibler; Barbara Rosen; Buzz Blog; Jim Collins; J.C. Gubbins; Warren; DJ Olsen; Patrick Barnhill; Ralph Ralph
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

 

Remember Mark Twain saying "the coldest winter he ever spent in his life was a summer on San Francisco". LOL !

 

A lot of my friends in Monterey, Ca. are retired commercial fishermen fishing anywhere from Alaska to Mexico, and they swear that the coldest weather they ever experienced was fishing for mackerel in S.F. Bay in  Dec. or Jan. with an east wind coming off the distant mountains when they had snow on them. And as most of will probably contest, a damp cold, on or near the ocean, or a large lake, Chicago comes to mind here, always feel worse than a try cold no matter the temperature.

 

Chicago, if I'm not mistaken, has the most extreme weather of any major city in the U.S., that's where I experienced the coldest weather in my life. But another real bad experience I had, cold weather wise, was the first day I landed in Miami in Mar. of 68 in the wee hours, and it was a very unusual 28 degrees and windy, and with that dampness, dame that was cold !

   

Jimmy C.

Sent from my iPhone


On Mar 12, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Bill Freeman <bfreeman64@comcast.net> wrote:

Hi Buzzer………….enjoyed your commentary…………….one of the  coldest places I know of is where I took your cousin, Cathleen, on our honeymoon 47 years ago. We flew north from Nome, Alaska for about 45 minutes to a town above the Arctic Circle……………the name of the town was Kotzebue and it was inhabited by 150 Inupiat Eskimos. At any rate, let me tell you how cold it was………..I watched as a Siberian Husky stopped and squatted and started to take a crap…………..and in less than 5 seconds he turned into a monument…………..needless to say I was truly impressed with the temperatures up there………………….another cold place I can remember was standing  on the highway at Medicine Bow, Wyoming at 4 AM hitch-hiking home for Christmas in 1951. It was 33 below zero and I had ice forming on the back of my ears and had to keep breaking it off……………glad those days are over…………Bill Freeman

 

From: Buzz Darcy [mailto:buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:13 AM
To: Buzz Darcy; Katherine Darcy; Cody Oats; Naya; Mary Darcy; Kevin Darcy; Rory Collings; Liz and Jerry; J.L. Darcy; Tim Newsham; Tim McGaffic; Tom Dooley; Brion Wollam; Hilary Stock; Darryl Hobson; Bill Freeman; Gary Lindsey; Tim O'Neill; Steven Ames; Tracey Barbutes; Molly Moon Hudson; Carla Gaiser; Barbaralu Cohen; Elaine Gubbins Luedecker; Rick Malmquist; Stephen Cosbey; Carol Santos-Papini; Sean Constantine; Meredith Sutter; Ginny Elder; Christine Soderbergh; Anne Stevenson; Thomas OBryon; Bobbi Todaro; Nicky Ames; Paul Gill; Peter Newman; Lynda Gardner; David Seybold; Barb Hibler; Barbara Rosen; Buzz Blog; Jim Collins; Jim Collins; J.C. Gubbins; Warren; DJ Olsen; Patrick Barnhill; Ralph Ralph
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

 

Cody,Cody is on Maui- my bad

 

On Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:08 AM, Buzz Darcy <buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com> wrote:

 

 This post, more than partisan politics or football teams , could likely be the most controversial thing I've ever written about. I'm not joking. I'll bet this conjures up more back and forth than the stains on Monika Lewinsky's dress. Some things just have to be argued.

 In my search for meaningful, pertinent, and interesting trends(and that's not as easy as it sounds), I have , once more , stumbled on a doozey, a list of the coldest cities in the U.S.  25 of them em, in all their glory. As a disclaimer, I have to say that not one of them is in California, Florida, or Hawaii- I want to make that clear from the git-go; and I only mention Florida because of family there.

 Of the 25 , I have lived in 2 of them, one being the number 2 coldest- Grand Forks, North Dakota, and number 12, the twin cities of Minneapolis-St.Paul, Minnesota. Some of you will, no doubt, are living in areas that associate with cold, but don't make it to the list- I don't know why, but consider yourselves lucky. Some of you may argue that your city should be on the list, and to that I can only say," now's your chance to move...".

 I know perfectly sane people that live in cold ares, but, when I really start to about it, they're not that sane at all- they're probably numb. Numb is an excuse I can relate to, having experienced it throughout my life as a way to combat the madness around me- I know that some of you were born Republican.

 My friends, Gary and Michele Lindsey, actually met and married in North Dakota, and I think they turned out pretty well, judging from our correspondence. My friend Tracey and her hubby lived in Anchorage, Alaska,.. and lived! Amen. I used to think that the slush in late winter N.Y., out on Long Island, was the nastiest kind of cold to experience, but that was because I was out working in it with shitty boots and clothing. I always figured that's why God invented marijuana and hashish- that seemed to keep the cold at bay temporarily. in hindsight it would have been cheaper to invest in better cold weather gear- Polar Fleece was a few decades away. Grass worked.

 When Kathy and I traveled to Ireland some years back, around Easter, we encountered gorgeous weather- in the 60's for the most part- and the locals kept telling us we lucked into something good. At a sporting goods store, in Dingle, the owner told me , "...that honestly, the winter weather here is miserable, horrid..." she'd lived there all her life. Lovely memory.

 Let's face it; the only good part about cold is when you get out of it. Looking at the list of those 25 cold cities, all but 5 are in the Midwest. Sheridan, Wyoming, is a Western place in my mind. Alaska has 2- Fairbanks being the coldest in the U.S. on a regular basis, Concord , New Hampshire, and Burlington, Vermont, being the other outliers. What does that say about the Midwest?

 Isn't there something we can do to help those places? Couldn't we , here in California, send them some kale or something? Washington D.C., could sent tons of bullshit-I've learned that piles of bullshit can create a lot of hot air- it's a symbiosis. Hell, with the hot air produced in Congress, we could turn North Dakota into a citrus producing power house and eliminate the need for fracking-the methane produced in D.C.would take care of that - no pun intended.

 There is one very positive aspect of cold that perhaps I've neglected to mention- ice! You think that's folly? When was the last time you had a hot gin and tonic? Rum can be drunk in tropical climes at room temperature, but a rum and Coke- never. It's true, an oyster can be eaten either hot or cold, but what of an ice cream sandwich?

 But wait, of global warming and the demise of polar bears? What of hot and cold then? How many meaningless words can I spout about warmth and the lack thereof,making light of it all, that will make any difference to the future that we- you and I- will not have to endure? That our children s children will inherit? Well, that's another aspect that I'd love to discuss, but, for today, let's keep it light, I'll reel you in soon enough and we can get into the real nitty gritty.

 And please, if you don't want to hear me, please let me know- I have no judgement in that regard- though I love your input .

 Well, regardless of what it may bring, that's what's trending at my house today.

 

 

Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

LOL! I Could just see you & Cathleen, and the coats !! LOL ! Cold ass place, especially with the wind.

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 12, 2015, at 10:39 AM, Bill Freeman <bfreeman64@comcast.net> wrote:

Jimmy………..you are right about Chicago…………I used to travel all over the U.S. as Director of Marketing for FMC Corporation and many times I would fly to Florida, Mississippi, Texas, etc. and then my secretary in San Jose would call me in the middle of the week and tell me I had to get up to Chicago for an important meeting. Of course, I hadn't planned on going to the cold country so I didn't bring a top coat with me. When I got to Chicago I would go down to Richmond Brothers and buy another top coat………..always just like the last one I'd purchased there. The salesmen knew me……………I think I bought 5 or 6 of them. When I married Cathleen she wanted to know what  the hell all these identical top coats were doing in my closet………….fond memories………..

 

From: James [mailto:jclwc@sbcglobal.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 9:52 AM
To: Bill Freeman
Cc: Buzz Darcy; Katherine Darcy; Cody Oats; Naya; Mary Darcy; Kevin Darcy; Rory Collings; Liz and Jerry; J.L. Darcy; Tim Newsham; Tim McGaffic; Tom Dooley; Brion Wollam; Hilary Stock; Darryl Hobson; Gary Lindsey; Tim O'Neill; Steven Ames; Tracey Barbutes; Molly Moon Hudson; Carla Gaiser; Barbaralu Cohen; Elaine Gubbins Luedecker; Rick Malmquist; Stephen Cosbey; Carol Santos-Papini; Sean Constantine; Meredith Sutter; Ginny Elder; Christine Soderbergh; Anne Stevenson; Thomas OBryon; Bobbi Todaro; Nicky Ames; Paul Gill; Peter Newman; Lynda Gardner; David Seybold; Barb Hibler; Barbara Rosen; Buzz Blog; Jim Collins; J.C. Gubbins; Warren; DJ Olsen; Patrick Barnhill; Ralph Ralph
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

 

Remember Mark Twain saying "the coldest winter he ever spent in his life was a summer on San Francisco". LOL !

 

A lot of my friends in Monterey, Ca. are retired commercial fishermen fishing anywhere from Alaska to Mexico, and they swear that the coldest weather they ever experienced was fishing for mackerel in S.F. Bay in  Dec. or Jan. with an east wind coming off the distant mountains when they had snow on them. And as most of will probably contest, a damp cold, on or near the ocean, or a large lake, Chicago comes to mind here, always feel worse than a try cold no matter the temperature.

 

Chicago, if I'm not mistaken, has the most extreme weather of any major city in the U.S., that's where I experienced the coldest weather in my life. But another real bad experience I had, cold weather wise, was the first day I landed in Miami in Mar. of 68 in the wee hours, and it was a very unusual 28 degrees and windy, and with that dampness, dame that was cold !

   

Jimmy C.

Sent from my iPhone


On Mar 12, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Bill Freeman <bfreeman64@comcast.net> wrote:

Hi Buzzer………….enjoyed your commentary…………….one of the  coldest places I know of is where I took your cousin, Cathleen, on our honeymoon 47 years ago. We flew north from Nome, Alaska for about 45 minutes to a town above the Arctic Circle……………the name of the town was Kotzebue and it was inhabited by 150 Inupiat Eskimos. At any rate, let me tell you how cold it was………..I watched as a Siberian Husky stopped and squatted and started to take a crap…………..and in less than 5 seconds he turned into a monument…………..needless to say I was truly impressed with the temperatures up there………………….another cold place I can remember was standing  on the highway at Medicine Bow, Wyoming at 4 AM hitch-hiking home for Christmas in 1951. It was 33 below zero and I had ice forming on the back of my ears and had to keep breaking it off……………glad those days are over…………Bill Freeman

 

From: Buzz Darcy [mailto:buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:13 AM
To: Buzz Darcy; Katherine Darcy; Cody Oats; Naya; Mary Darcy; Kevin Darcy; Rory Collings; Liz and Jerry; J.L. Darcy; Tim Newsham; Tim McGaffic; Tom Dooley; Brion Wollam; Hilary Stock; Darryl Hobson; Bill Freeman; Gary Lindsey; Tim O'Neill; Steven Ames; Tracey Barbutes; Molly Moon Hudson; Carla Gaiser; Barbaralu Cohen; Elaine Gubbins Luedecker; Rick Malmquist; Stephen Cosbey; Carol Santos-Papini; Sean Constantine; Meredith Sutter; Ginny Elder; Christine Soderbergh; Anne Stevenson; Thomas OBryon; Bobbi Todaro; Nicky Ames; Paul Gill; Peter Newman; Lynda Gardner; David Seybold; Barb Hibler; Barbara Rosen; Buzz Blog; Jim Collins; Jim Collins; J.C. Gubbins; Warren; DJ Olsen; Patrick Barnhill; Ralph Ralph
Subject: Re: The Coldest Fooking Place in the U.S. of A.

 

Cody,Cody is on Maui- my bad

 

On Thursday, March 12, 2015 12:08 AM, Buzz Darcy <buzzdarcy@rocketmail.com> wrote:

 

 This post, more than partisan politics or football teams , could likely be the most controversial thing I've ever written about. I'm not joking. I'll bet this conjures up more back and forth than the stains on Monika Lewinsky's dress. Some things just have to be argued.

 In my search for meaningful, pertinent, and interesting trends(and that's not as easy as it sounds), I have , once more , stumbled on a doozey, a list of the coldest cities in the U.S.  25 of them em, in all their glory. As a disclaimer, I have to say that not one of them is in California, Florida, or Hawaii- I want to make that clear from the git-go; and I only mention Florida because of family there.

 Of the 25 , I have lived in 2 of them, one being the number 2 coldest- Grand Forks, North Dakota, and number 12, the twin cities of Minneapolis-St.Paul, Minnesota. Some of you will, no doubt, are living in areas that associate with cold, but don't make it to the list- I don't know why, but consider yourselves lucky. Some of you may argue that your city should be on the list, and to that I can only say," now's your chance to move...".

 I know perfectly sane people that live in cold ares, but, when I really start to about it, they're not that sane at all- they're probably numb. Numb is an excuse I can relate to, having experienced it throughout my life as a way to combat the madness around me- I know that some of you were born Republican.

 My friends, Gary and Michele Lindsey, actually met and married in North Dakota, and I think they turned out pretty well, judging from our correspondence. My friend Tracey and her hubby lived in Anchorage, Alaska,.. and lived! Amen. I used to think that the slush in late winter N.Y., out on Long Island, was the nastiest kind of cold to experience, but that was because I was out working in it with shitty boots and clothing. I always figured that's why God invented marijuana and hashish- that seemed to keep the cold at bay temporarily. in hindsight it would have been cheaper to invest in better cold weather gear- Polar Fleece was a few decades away. Grass worked.

 When Kathy and I traveled to Ireland some years back, around Easter, we encountered gorgeous weather- in the 60's for the most part- and the locals kept telling us we lucked into something good. At a sporting goods store, in Dingle, the owner told me , "...that honestly, the winter weather here is miserable, horrid..." she'd lived there all her life. Lovely memory.

 Let's face it; the only good part about cold is when you get out of it. Looking at the list of those 25 cold cities, all but 5 are in the Midwest. Sheridan, Wyoming, is a Western place in my mind. Alaska has 2- Fairbanks being the coldest in the U.S. on a regular basis, Concord , New Hampshire, and Burlington, Vermont, being the other outliers. What does that say about the Midwest?

 Isn't there something we can do to help those places? Couldn't we , here in California, send them some kale or something? Washington D.C., could sent tons of bullshit-I've learned that piles of bullshit can create a lot of hot air- it's a symbiosis. Hell, with the hot air produced in Congress, we could turn North Dakota into a citrus producing power house and eliminate the need for fracking-the methane produced in D.C.would take care of that - no pun intended.

 There is one very positive aspect of cold that perhaps I've neglected to mention- ice! You think that's folly? When was the last time you had a hot gin and tonic? Rum can be drunk in tropical climes at room temperature, but a rum and Coke- never. It's true, an oyster can be eaten either hot or cold, but what of an ice cream sandwich?

 But wait, of global warming and the demise of polar bears? What of hot and cold then? How many meaningless words can I spout about warmth and the lack thereof,making light of it all, that will make any difference to the future that we- you and I- will not have to endure? That our children s children will inherit? Well, that's another aspect that I'd love to discuss, but, for today, let's keep it light, I'll reel you in soon enough and we can get into the real nitty gritty.

 And please, if you don't want to hear me, please let me know- I have no judgement in that regard- though I love your input .

 Well, regardless of what it may bring, that's what's trending at my house today.