Author Topic: Everyday Occurances  (Read 54915 times)

ric

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #90 on: June 07, 2017, 10:30:05 AM »
the tradition is still alive and kicking  ,   decent MUG of tea is far more refreshing than most soft drinks

personally i dont see the point of cups, and why bother with saucers.

Davie

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #91 on: June 07, 2017, 12:08:40 PM »
China cups and saucers, a small plate and cucumber sandwiches with of course the crusts removed. If its good enough for Her Majesty who are we to argue...

We have friends in Germany. We arrived one hot afternoon and was offered some sort of cold drink or and I think this was added as a joke, tea. I chose tea. I've never seen such a performance to make a cup, saucepan on stove, water heated, fiddled with tea bag, saucepan off stove, teabag put in, saucepan back on stove etc. and then served in a tiny cup! It was more refreshing than the soft drink but it was such a palaver I didn't ask again. There're lovely people though.

Davie  8)

Greenbare Woods

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #92 on: June 07, 2017, 04:06:20 PM »
There is (or was) a folk tradition in my childhood that a cup of tea was much more cooling than a cold drink - but we didn't have the high temperatures you get in parts of southern USA.


Half a century ago there were several movies about British explorers venturing into jungles in Africa and such places.  It was said that the British definition of "roughing it" meant going without lemon for afternoon tea.



Human bodies are natural, comfortable, and green.
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eyesup

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #93 on: June 07, 2017, 05:42:49 PM »
Quote from: JOhnGW
There is (or was) a folk tradition in my childhood that a cup of tea was much more cooling than a cold drink . .
Tea and coffee are stimulants and vasodilators. When your blood vessels dilate that increases blood flow and more efficient cooling. It’s counterintuitive but it works. On a hot day you will notice it.

When I get a serious allergy episode I can have a cup of strong tea an it helps with the stuffed nasal passages. And it’s a delicious drink.


Davie, many people are probably anxious about getting the whole ‘tea thing’ right, especially if the friend is from the Orient, so they go over the top. With all the process and some people have an entire ritual.

I always ask if I don’t know something. I don't mind admitting I am ignorant as long as I can learn something, I prefer to get it right if it is important.

Duane

« Last Edit: June 07, 2017, 05:45:11 PM by eyesup »

jbeegoode

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #94 on: June 07, 2017, 06:06:41 PM »
Tea, or soft drinks, or water for refreshment? Hot, warm or cold? I don’t know if it makes a difference in practice, just preference in the moment.

For me, warm tea when cold, usually in the evenings. I try to stay away from the caffeind. Cool drinks when it is hot. On the trail, I usually don’t want to take the time to hassle with such as tea. All I need is just water, no matter what temperature…wet. I enjoy a cold iced drink on a hot day, but on the trail, it doesn’t seem to matter. Even the warm water, is wet and matches my temp.

At camp, tea is a treat, but later at night, it only creates the hassle of getting up out of the tent, and wandering around in the dark and often cold in the middle of the night. So, if it is comfortable enough to be naked, the temp in the mug doesn’t seem to be an issue.

When I am very thirsty on a hot day, I crave cold soda. I used to crave beer. When we got back from Romero and it was nearing 100 the other day, the water left in the car was HOT! I craved and bee lined to a fast food place for an iced soda, with mild caffiend. I saw a Mountain Dew, lemonade/ prickly pear thing called spike. We got two as a slushy. I have no idea what weird chemical concoction was in there with the sugar, but I figured once couldn’t hurt much. DF got an immediate brain freeze in our shared gluttonous state. I lucked out. I drank the whole thing and finished the other half of hers. It was cool and refreshing, so was the air-conditioner in the car.

Anybody have any science on this? The military must have some definitive study. I think that hydration is necessary, but the liquid’s temp becomes body temp in no time, once ingested. There is an initial jolt from the contrast, but....
Jbee
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ric

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #95 on: June 07, 2017, 06:45:22 PM »
just what is "brain freeze"   our kids use the expression but will never explain what they mean.

jbeegoode

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #96 on: June 07, 2017, 06:54:14 PM »
just what is "brain freeze"   our kids use the expression but will never explain what they mean.
The cold goes right up in between the eyes to the frontal cortex. There is discomfort there in the head as if the brain has frozen. A straw seems to augment this, colder stuff like a milkshake gets there often. It is too much, too quick, particularly on a hot day.
Jbee
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eyesup

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #97 on: June 07, 2017, 10:43:00 PM »
Just What the Heck Is Brain Freeze.

I always had heard it was caused by an over-stimulated nerve in the mouth when you eat ice cream and allow it to touch the roof of your mouth. After reading that article, I’ll just stick with “brain-freeze”.

If you’ve never experienced it, and apparently some don’t, the best way to explain it is it’s similar to when you walk outside in subzero temps that are so cold, your skin attempts to retract inside your body. Except that it’s happening on your upper jaw and forehead.

Enjoy the ice cream!

Duane

jbeegoode

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #98 on: June 07, 2017, 11:24:11 PM »
Holy freeze warp Eyesup! That sounds akin to taking my lower lip and pulling it over my head. I just get a numb, stiff, headache kinda thing, right up front. Heaven help us all!!! ;D
Jbee
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nuduke

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #99 on: June 08, 2017, 12:06:54 AM »

Beats me why you do any mowing at all, Bob.
You seem to inhabit a large and lovely piece of natural woodland, uncultivated, so why attack innocent, unsuspecting areas of natural grassland?
John

nuduke

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #100 on: June 08, 2017, 12:28:20 AM »

On the dogleg of discussion about hot Tea being better for cooling you down, my experience is that it does.  My version of understanding is not about the caffeine or whatever (as described by JOhnGW) but drunk the proletarian  English way i.e. a decent mug of strong, steaming, milky brew, the hot liquid ingested into the stomach releases its heat and raises the core temperature a little which the body reacts to by sweating more.  What is sweating for?  To cool you naturally.  And that's what it does in my experience.  I believe there has been research to prove this.  Perhaps the vasodilation effect works in tandem - I just haven't got that fact under my belt over the years.  JOhn's wisdom is pretty unassailable (He is the Kevin Ashman of Naturists!) so I assume the caffeine explanation is also correct. 


I tend to take cold drinks, sodas etc. in the heat, when very thirsty as well.  I've never been much of a fan of ice in drinks.  Dulls the flavour and gives me cold sensitivity on the teeth occasionally - but chilled drinks are fine :)
John

JOhnGw

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #101 on: June 08, 2017, 10:39:04 AM »
I had to look up  Kevin Ashman - it's certainly better than being called Forrest Gump as one of my bosses did.
JOhn

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
George Bernard Shaw, Maxims for Revolutionaries

ric

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #102 on: June 08, 2017, 10:47:29 AM »
back to brain freeze... it would appear that if one savours the experience of ones drinks and ice cream by taking sips and small mouthfuls allowing the stuff to warm in the mouth and release its flavours you dont get the brain freeze that the gulpers/shovelers do. :)

it also stops the dicky the dicky tooth from compaining about the cold

Greenbare Woods

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #103 on: June 08, 2017, 03:46:08 PM »

Beats me why you do any mowing at all, Bob.
You seem to inhabit a large and lovely piece of natural woodland, uncultivated, so why attack innocent, unsuspecting areas of natural grassland?
John


The natural area is nice, but maintaining a home among it requires a little work.  This area is plagued by wild fires every summer.   My grass is a 40 foot firebreak between the natural land and my house.   Keep it green. Keep it non-flammable.

The grass also covered a lot of sticky clay left over from construction.  You couldn't walk outside without clay stuck all over your feet or shoes.

Bob

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JOhnGw

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Re: Everyday Occurances
« Reply #104 on: June 08, 2017, 05:04:16 PM »
The grass also covered a lot of sticky clay left over from construction.
Bob
Sounds like the same syndrome as buried rubble in the garden - colloquially known to us as "builders compost."
JOhn

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
George Bernard Shaw, Maxims for Revolutionaries