becky wrote:Im definitely affected by SAD. That's why i'm going to new zealand!!! yay!!!!
Hehehehehe, which temperatures do you disagree with, if we have another snow like last year that was 3 foot deep here (and we're at 100m above sea level, there was snow on the beach! - Kind of unheard of round these parts) and the power was off for 4 days. Cousins f ours had no power for three weeks, they - however - had a generator. We don't, fortunately we have a fireplace - just as well as it was -15 degrees C outside. Although, the house did smell of wet socks for quite some time...
We haven't had the hottest of summers this year, rained every other day. But then, a couple of Christmas's ago we had 4 successive days of 40 degrees plus - in the shade. The thermometer didn't like being in the sun, kept going up to 60 then maxing out before finally smashing itself to pieces.
Really depends what part of NZ your going to be in, I'm on in the South Island about 45mins drive south from Christchurch.
Anywho, back to topic. I'm not affected by S.A.D. I do however prefer the cold to the hot, as the hot makes me itch. I've had to have stitches once because I itched all the way down to the bone in my arm in my sleep. That made a mess I tell you now. Fortunately, after having the number of blood tests etc that I have had and living on the farm and the like, the sight of a little - Ok, a LOT - of blood doesn't bother me all that much. I just calmly got out of bed and went and told Mum who rang the doctor and we went and I got 15 stitches. Nobody has been able to explain why the heat makes me itch, it can be a real annoyance. Mind you, the look on peoples faces when I'm strolling around in my shorts in -15C as if its the middle of summer is rather amusing. Mum's theory is that my internal thermostat is stuffed. When I was a baby I would apparently sleep with no blankets through the middle of winter, and still be hot to the touch and sweating. I've run a temperature several times of 40 degrees or more. I remember being 45 once and having to sit in a batch full of ice. Most people would be unconscious or dead by this point. But not me, and I can tell you now. A temperature that high isn't nice at all.
Anyway, before I launch into yet another paragraph...
Catch Ya's
SavV
