You know it’s getting hot, says our friend Barb Rose, when you can’t keep your legs crossed, because the top leg keeps slipping off.
You know it’s getting “cold,” when the locals start putting on coats, scarves and hats and tell us they are freezing, because the temperature has dropped to 78 degrees Fahrenheit.
You know it’s getting hot, Darlene tells me, when you have to put your Trident gum in the refrigerator to keep it from melting.
You know the humidity has reached 100%, I say, when in the middle of the day the rain breaks out in torrents.
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