On Fri, 11 Jul 2008, Christian Perrier wrote:
Please also consider that Andreas is a "grandfather" raised in former
Eastern Germany, which only access to the sea is the *Baltic Sea*.
I was there for 5 days in May and temperature was about 11-12°. I can
confirm that you get used to it if you g
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 07:19:55AM +0200, Christian Perrier wrote:
> Please also consider that Andreas is a "grandfather" raised in former
> Eastern Germany, which only access to the sea is the *Baltic Sea*.
>
Uhm, grandfather... That would imply that I'm a grandfather too. Damn it.
:-D
--
Fran
Quoting Andreas Tille ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> Hmmm, that depends. I expect it to be not much below 10° considering
> the outer temperatures - that's no temperature which would stop me
> from enjoing a (short) bath...
Folks reading this, please notice that the only access of Germany to
the sea is
Hola Andreas Tille!
>> Regarding going to the sea, don't count on it. Our sea is not bathed by
>> any warm current (like the Gulf Current for you guys in the North), so that
>> even in summer the sea is very cold. So, if you don't want to go down with
>> hipothermia, I suggest you don't go furth
On Thu, 10 Jul 2008, Margarita Manterola wrote:
Regarding going to the sea, don't count on it. Our sea is not bathed by
any warm current (like the Gulf Current for you guys in the North), so that
even in summer the sea is very cold. So, if you don't want to go down with
hipothermia, I suggest
Hi!
For all of you coming to Argentina from the North Hemisphere, please
remember that seasons are inverted and August in the South means *winter*.
Bring warm clothes. Bring a sweater and a jacket with you on the plane.
You don't want to wait until you have your luggage to put them on.
You might