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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!doc.ic.ac.uk!warwick!uknet!edcastle!fofp
- From: fofp@castle.ed.ac.uk (M Holmes)
- Newsgroups: alt.peeves
- Subject: weather or not to ski
- Message-ID: <30580@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 12:23:09 GMT
- Distribution: alt
- Organization: Edinburgh University
- Lines: 80
-
- I had a ski lesson on the plastic slope here last night. It was very
- windy and squalls had been coming through all day. Still, the lesson was
- prepaid so off I went wearing all-over Goretex (tm).
-
- As expected it was windy. Then some sleet started. That hurts just a bit
- when you're standing face into the wind trying to hear the instructor.
-
- Later on we got a little hail, that hurt quite a bit more.
-
- Then, on the way up the ski tow, there wa this huge flash just at the
- top of the hill. "What was that?" I thought. "Lightning? That doesn't
- happen often at night here, never mind in winter". Then the rumble of
- thunder confirmed it. "Cool" I thought "one of Mother Nature's
- light-show's, and at night too. Excellent!".
-
- The ski tow stopped though, and they started announcing something on
- their tannoy. "What are they saying?" I thought, unable to hear it
- properly.
-
- There was a little alarm bell ringing way back in my midbrain though,
- and having litle else to do while I waited for the ski-tow to start
- again, I listened. "Look idiot" it said, "that's lightning up there,
- heap big spark. And it's close, one-elephant, two-elephant, remember?"
-
- "Yeah, I answered, pretty cool innit?"
-
- - "Conceded, howeverm see those big things there? Those are pylons.
- They're made of metal. Metal conducts lighning."
-
- "Uhuh. Well thanks for the physics intro."
-
- - "It gets better. Those pylons are connected to a wire. Made of metal.
- YOU are connected to that wire."
-
- I begin to see where this is going, but I'm gonna argue anyway.
-
- "Ah, yes, but I'm connected by a rope..."
-
- - "A *wet* rope...."
-
- "....and I'm wearing ski boots. *plastic* ski boots."
-
- - "Yes, *wet* plastic ski boots, connected to large pieces of metal
- sitting on wet plastic fibres on a very large metal lattice. The largest
- area of metal around here in fact.
-
- "OK. I'll ski down then."
-
- So I get to the bottom of the slope. The tannoy is clearer there and I
- hear "Would all skiers return immediately to the bottom of the slope."
-
- So we're all standing down there seeing sheet lightning at the bottom of
- the hill. I'm doing one-elephant, two-elephant to figure out how close
- the storm is. I'm looking at some woods less than half a mile away.
- Suddenly there's this jagged fork of lighning there searing my vision.
- Limned against the darkness I see it hit the woods.
-
- Peeve: No trees burst into flame :-(
-
- The crack of thunder arrived almost immediately. Things went very quiet
- after that. I was convinced enough. I put down the ski poles (metal) and
- got out of the skis (metal) as quickly as possible. The insturctors were
- now ordering evryone into the buildings in a much more insistent tone.
- I headed for the balcony so that I wouldn't miss any more lighning
- strikes.
-
- Peeve: no more.
-
- So 20 minutes later we're allowed back onto the slopes. Serious hail
- starts and hurts like hell. It's enough to cover the matting with litle
- ice-balls and makes the skiing really smooth (for plastic anyway).
-
- !peeve: They left the tow's on "free passage" after the lesson to make
- up for the 20 minutes lost, so I got in some practice while the slope
- was running good.
-
- Peeve: There's snow on all the Scottish ski areas but the winds are too
- high to go skiing.
-
- FoFP
-