I skied in -75 degrees wind chill at Whiteface once upon a time on a President's Day weekend. Ski patrol was at the start of all the lift lines checking for frostbite and requiring a trip to the lodge between every run to warm exposed skin. Skiers that gave the ski patrol any lip got their lift ticket snipped off with the an explanation, "We want to see back next year with all your fingers and toes and a nose. Bring back a receipt for hot chocolate or coffee from the lodge in 20 minutes or longer and you will have you lift ticket re-validated." They only had to snip a few tickets for the word to spread quickly on the mountain. The lodge did a booming business in
Wow! BGIF.
I have always wondered something. As crazy as it sounds similar temperatures feel different in various places. Might it be the general effect of local climate?
I was in Quebec, PQ, Canada several times, once within a couple of years of when NWO had some of it's coldest recorded temperatures (until then), and it was regularly 20 to 25 degrees below zero. People walked around with their winter coats open. I joined them, (with a heavy wool sweater underneath!)
And I have been to Eek, Alaska. Really, there is such a place. In truthfulness I believe it is warmer than Toledo, today. Where the river flows into the bay, winds sweep in from the Bering Sea, people on ice skates would open their jackets to make sails and race like the wind. This involved taking off your outer layer of clothing, and inverting it over your head between your arms to make a sail. I tried it. It wasn't bad.
Now I know we are all tougher when we are kids, or so I suspect, but I don't remember it feeling so bad. I always remember times in Toledo, or the Irish Hills, where the temperature must have been higher, (at least 20 degrees), that seemed colder.
Conversely, I remember one time on a DE in the Bering Sea, where the raw temperature was much higher than that of which we speak, but with the sea spray and other weather conditions, I must say, I felt the most miserably cold in my life. Kind of like the ND Spring Game about five years ago.
Maybe someone with the scientific background could explain this phenomenon to me. (Better not hear from some crackpot pop-psychologist, will not find that humorous, lol.)