@Angrbrd@JimmyThomist The vast majority of people living in the PNW live near a river or the ocean, where the humidity doesn't drop much below 75%.
Yes, inland, into the forests away from water sources, it gets very dry.
@NorthynSummit@TheYard@fwong Oh YouTuber. Did a lot of fun VFX stuff back in the day, then Video Game Highschool series, the rocket jump show, Anime Crimes Division show, Dimension 404 and even did a skit with Key and Peele.
@AngeloVonUlf@Awk20000 have the mental capacity to take care of a child. And the same the other way, if someone desperately wants a child, and has the means and character to raise one, keeping them from doing it is also bad.
They had to split up, it was the only real choice.
@AngeloVonUlf@Awk20000 They were together for like 10 years. Nick, apparently, was okay with not having kids, and Malena definitely didn't want any.
And then Nick decided he wanted kids. If that's the obstacle, it's basically irreconcilable. Don't make someone be a parent if they don't think they'll
@murdocswinne@Semple_Ice@RBPundit That's everywhere I live in a temperate rainforest, same biome as Britain, or atleast what Britain would be if there were still trees
In 2 days we went from 28 degrees to 14 degrees. Didn't notice it inside my apartment because is well insulated and the AC/Heat pump barely ran.
@PointlessNarrow@jacksonforq@feeshflakes@RBPundit If you build something to trap heat in, it also does the opposite, if you cool it down enough, it'll "keep the cold in" or more realistically, keep the heat out.
Slowing heat transfer passively isn't bi-directional.
@SakaiCenat1804@TheLastFarm Sadly you're completely right about most of the U.S.A
Even the "untouched parts" in like Wyoming and Montana are still pretty different to what they were.
But southern Pacific Canada, and north of that, there's a lot of unaffected land to see.