-
3rd August 25, 07:12 AM
#31
 Originally Posted by jsrnephdoc
Las Vegas [...] 55 and older residential community where the residents were ecstatic about all the social interactions enabled by the amenities in the community—so here we are.
Sorry about your original house.
I hope things works out well. I bet LOTS of fellow ex-CA residents there with you. SoCal -> Vegas has been a big trend for quite a while hasn't it ?
Its hot here in Texas, but its REALLY hot in Vegas. Funny you mentioned the irony of freezing to death inside with all the AC. That's my recollection of visiting the Casinos too. So its not just casinos that freeze you ? We finally learned and brought jackets with us.
-
-
3rd August 25, 07:33 AM
#32
 Originally Posted by CBH
Sorry about your original house.
I hope things works out well. I bet LOTS of fellow ex-CA residents there with you. SoCal -> Vegas has been a big trend for quite a while hasn't it ?
Its hot here in Texas, but its REALLY hot in Vegas. Funny you mentioned the irony of freezing to death inside with all the AC. That's my recollection of visiting the Casinos too. So it's not just casinos that freeze you ? We finally learned and brought jackets with us.
During my years in medical practice, I attended numerous medical conventions in Las Vegas, held there because of the huge cluster of hotels that could house attendees of gatherings small or enormous. Only ONE occurred in the summer, and I immediately concluded that Las Vegas was one place I could NEVER live. One oddity of that particular experience was an evening outdoor reception, held outside adjacent to an enormous swimming pool at one of those hotels famous for imitating some other iconic location (Paris, New York, Egypt, etc}. The heat was almost unbearable; to combat it, one could wander beneath grids of mist emitters, but the whole experience was akin to putting one's head in an oven, except there was no way to remove your head from the baking. The curious thing about that is that people who suffer in summer in Florida, New Orleans, and Texas are fond of declaring that their special vernal hell is because "it's not the heat—it's the HUMIDITY." Yet, in Las Vegas, what brings relief is WATER. We've been here less than a month, and we've endured one tsunami light, sound, and water show: arly morning sunrise, just as usual, temperature already 37°C, but by noon clouds appearing seemingly from nowhere, darkening the sky and whipping up prodigious winds, lightning bolts, and thunderclaps, announcing an unbelievable deluge that turns the Medusa head of Las Vegas freeways into rivers in just minutes. It lasts perhaps 30 minutes, but when it stops, the air is still SO dry that the only residual evidence that it's happened is that an hour later the outdoor temperatures are as much as 15°C cooler than they were before the show began.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks