^^ "It teaches the kids character?!" You're getting old, man. OLD!! 

No, exactly the opposite is true. As I mentioned upthread, water draws heat away from the body much faster than air does. A 75-degree day feels warm, though not uncomfortably so, to most people. A 75-degree pool feels a tad chilly when you first enter it, though you get used to the temperature quickly.. . . if the air and the pool were heated to the same temperature, the water would feel warmer than the air.
No, exactly the opposite is true. As I mentioned upthread, water draws heat away from the body much faster than air does. A 75-degree day feels warm, though not uncomfortably so, to most people. A 75-degree pool feels a tad chilly when you first enter it, though you get used to the temperature quickly.. . . if the air and the pool were heated to the same temperature, the water would feel warmer than the air.
73 is sundress weather, not sweater weather!
I agree with this. I don't have a jumper (sweater) on if it is above about 16-18C.
Unless you're a penguin.And not directed at you personally scotpens, but I really, really resent when people tell me “oh, you'll acclimate”. For some people, water that's chilly on entry stays cold.
"And when you put it as health and safety, I mean, goodness me, you'd have kids come down with colds and flus and everything else."
"And when you put it as health and safety, I mean, goodness me, you'd have kids come down with colds and flus and everything else."
Oh come on. Being too cold has nothing to do with catching a cold."And when you put it as health and safety, I mean, goodness me, you'd have kids come down with colds and flus and everything else."
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.