View Single Post
  #21  
Old May 16th 05, 01:07 AM
Grumman-581
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

wrote in message
oups.com...
There's a popular TV show here in Canada that gets a lot of laughs
about the ignorance of Americans. I'm sure thay have to talk to a LOT
of Americans to find the material they need to get the laughs, but
there are some hilarious stories about the misconceptions many have
about Canada, Canadians and Canadian weather and topography.


I'm not above perpetuating the stereotypes of Canada just like I do of
Texas... Of course, for the stereotypes to have developed, there must be
some truth in them...

Cold is one of those. In the North the days are very long in
the summer, with the result that there can be vast numbers of huge
insects, hot weather, and people who can grow huge vegetables in their
gardens. So much daylight, see. In the winter it can often be colder
here in southern Alberta (near Montana) than it is 1000 miles north of
here. In the winter in Vancouver and Victoria people are often golfing,
on green grass. Toronto can have wicked winter weather but it's about
as far south as southern Oregon. I grew up In Kamloops, BC, which is
the northern tip of the Sonora Desert, with cactus and sagebrush and
Ponderosa Pine trees and everything. Latitude often has nothing to do
with weather; it's the presence of mountains and water that affects it.


Hell, if you're gonna bring *logic* into this conversation, I'm leavin'...
grin