slept like a baby
Jul. 10th, 2006 09:42 amHmmm that is such a dumb saying. Babies wake up every 4 hours to wail.
Anyway, I slept really well last night. Lately I would wake in the middle of the night with my feet feeling terribly cold. On one night I even resorted to taking a hot water bottle back to bed with me. But last night I put an extra blanket on the bed and slep through in blissful comfort. This morning I feel wonderful, thanks to the uninterrupted slumber.
I know the nighttime temperature here is not really cold. 13°C (16°F) is not cold compared to how cold it gets in Melbourne or many places in the northern hemisphere, but after spending a while in sunny Queensland it sure feels cold. I'm starting to worry a little about how I'll handle the heat of summer. At least in winter you can pile more clothes and blankets on and exercise to warm up. In summer there is a limit to how much you can take off. When you're completely naked and still too hot... oh brother! Some trepidation here.
Anyway, I slept really well last night. Lately I would wake in the middle of the night with my feet feeling terribly cold. On one night I even resorted to taking a hot water bottle back to bed with me. But last night I put an extra blanket on the bed and slep through in blissful comfort. This morning I feel wonderful, thanks to the uninterrupted slumber.
I know the nighttime temperature here is not really cold. 13°C (16°F) is not cold compared to how cold it gets in Melbourne or many places in the northern hemisphere, but after spending a while in sunny Queensland it sure feels cold. I'm starting to worry a little about how I'll handle the heat of summer. At least in winter you can pile more clothes and blankets on and exercise to warm up. In summer there is a limit to how much you can take off. When you're completely naked and still too hot... oh brother! Some trepidation here.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-10 12:21 pm (UTC)I've been here for a couple of years, but don't much like the summer heat. Luckily I'm on the west of the range -- the Sunshine Coast hinterland -- where the humidity is less. I moved up from Melbourne to be near my wonderful family. They're on the coast. A few times last summer, when visiting them, I had the awful, panicky experience of feeling like I was drowning. The air was so humid!!! I'm sure I'd eventually get used to it... but oooh, not a nice feeling.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-10 06:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-11 12:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-13 06:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-18 08:00 am (UTC)Today, if I do get another bike it will still be a small one, though a little bigger than that... perhaps a 250cc.
There is a lot to be said for motorbikes. The major drawback is the danger that cars pose. Bikes by themselves are very safe, but sharing a road with cars, and worse, four-wheel-drives, becomes quite scary. I well remember times where I was unintentionally run off the road by oblivious car drivers.
I worked as a nurse years ago in a rehabilitation hospital. The part I worked in was for paraplegics and quadriplegics. All but one of the people in there were motorbike accident victims. (The one who wasn't had dived into a shallow pool.) That really scared me.
I've noticed the tide has started to turn for 4WD vehicles. Every day I see more of them with "For Sale" signs on them. They cost their owners far more than is comfortable in fuel. Hopefully the roads will be largely rid of them soon. Smaller cars are still dangerous, but not quite as bad.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-18 08:10 am (UTC)