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by matwood 5707 days ago
I read the linked article and was immediately turned off the by narrowed minded comment under cons. Just because someone disagrees with the authors personal political ideology does not necessarily make them narrow minded. If he was simply talking about racists, bigots, and the like then you can find those in any city as large as Atlanta.

This author based his idea on the post here:

http://stu.mp/2010/11/your-city-sucks-and-so-does-mine.html

I disagree with a lot of what the author said were cons of Boulder. In a pro he says good ski slopes are 3 hours away, but a con is Denver is too far. Huh? Denver is plenty close enough to Boulder to drive to for a concert or to see a professional sporting event if that's your thing.

The cold really isn't that bad here either. Does it get cold in the winter? Yes, but it's not unbearable like Chicago or any other mid-western city. When the sun comes out it really does feel much warmer here. I was in Oregon not long ago and I had forgotten how miserable the wet cold feels even when the thermometer says it's not that cold.

Now I gotta jet because I only live 1:30 away from good snow and it's opening day at Keystone :D

1 comments

> I was in Oregon not long ago and I had forgotten how miserable the wet cold feels even when the thermometer says it's not that cold.

Precisely. It's the same here in Padova, where it gets humid and foggy in the winter. It usually doesn't dip too far below freezing, but the humidity chills you to the bone. Where we lived in Innsbruck, Austria was much colder, but it was less humid so it didn't sink in the way the wet cold does.

And as a native of Oregon... yeah, rain and 5 C is about the worst thing out there. You simply can't do stuff outdoors in that kind of weather and stay warm for very long, no matter how much fancy technical gear you pile on: the rain eventually soaks in and you start getting cold. Bleagh....

I've always wondered about that - to me -10C at ~1000m on a ski slope in Scotland often feels much colder than -35C at ~4000m in the Alps.

I've always assumed it was something to do with the humidity.