zippetydude wrote:...but would bake instead, and that's a very long time to be out in the sun on a hot day. I don't think I would spend that much time sitting in a chair by a pool on a hot day, much less grinding my way up Skyline.
I think the fact that we live in an air conditioned environment today does give us a more cavalier attitude towards heat, and more willingness to tackle strenuous activities in the heat. When I was growing up, there was very little AC. Shade, cold drinks, and fans helped, but you really could not escape the heat. When it was hot, it was 24/7 hot, and it had a cumulative effect. After a while all you could do, or wanted to do, was slow down and dream about cooler weather. After a few days of hot weather, you had no energy and human life slowed down to a crawl. The idea of doing anything vigorous in hot weather was viewed as rather crazy since you could not end it by popping back into an air conditioned environment to cool off. Come to think of it, the idea of living in the Coachella Valley in the summer was also viewed as rather crazy by sensible people.
Sometimes I think of this when I see people striding briskly around downtown Palm Springs on a hot summer day. The landscape and other people who have to remain out in the heat to do their work are moving much more slowly, like everybody once did.
