Redetotry wrote:I read a post on FB yesterday in Women Who RV about a woman's whose rig broke down in the middle of an intersection, the temp was 129 degrees. It is a wonder she didn't die waiting for help. I can't help but wonder why she would have been traveling, especially during the day, in that kind of heat.
JudyJB wrote: Hope that lady had a motorhome with generator instead of trailer. Or if she had a truck to pull trailer, maybe she sat in it with AC on. Dangerous to break down in this weather.
THANK YOU, Ladies!!
It has been near 110 all week here at my house. Yesterday it was 111. Add to that, I am a person that is "heat sensitive". I was having a conversation with my sister on the telephone the other day. Where she lives it is cooler than where I am; 85 - 90 are generally top temps in her area. Some 20 or 25 degrees cooler than where I am. She is a person who has never traveled, and has never owned a pet. When I travel, I travel with my dog. She has her own - very strong - opinions on things, and although I care about her she sometimes (ok, often) totally rubs me the wrong way.
I was having a conversation with her the other day and she asked me if I was going to go visit a friend near the coast. I said "No, too hot". She replied something to the effect that it would be cooler at the coast. I replied again "Too hot", then added, somewhat jokingly I will admit (but true enough), that if my car broke down or if I had a flat tire on the way there, I would be at serious risk of death, and that I preferred not dying.
She replied, indignantly, "Well, I didn't know you would be driving Desolation Road!". This instantly angered me. Although I would (had I gone) be driving mostly freeway (and some rural roads) even in the best circumstances in a breakdown it's going to be 30 - 40 minutes before AAA arrives to help. In the worst of circumstances (no cell service, for example) I (and my dog) would need to depend upon the kindness of strangers - someone stopping to help. In either situation, with 111 temps, I would be S.O.L. Literally, death a possibility. For me and my dog both.
I ended the call at her Desolation Road statement (Oh, there is someone at the door! Bye!), without further explanation (explaining one's point of view is pointless with her, and generally just escalates the argument further). In any case, how to explain "too hot" if a person doesn't understand the implications of this in the first place?
I was angry about this most of the day. Still am, a little.
Reading here that both of you ladies agreed with my opinion - too hot, therefore dangerous to travel - put a smile on my face, and joy back in my day.
Thank you.
Anne