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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
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    Concord, MA
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    Mine has increased, as far as exercising in the cold. As for just walking around, like in the city, I can tolerate it, as I have better clothes now, but I prefer NOT to do it. I love being outdoors in the winter, but I am working hard!
    I have lost tolerance to heat since leaving AZ, but what I really have no tolerance for is heat and humidity. It increased a little over the past 2 summers, which were really hot here.
    I understand why people want to move to places where it doesn't get cold, but I love the change of seasons/winter sports so much, I will never do it. I also couldn't live somewhere where the winter was longer than it is here. Really, January and February are real winter here, with some variation in December and March. Some years we get snow in those months and other years, not. It's been mostly not in the past couple of years.
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Oslo, Norway
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    My tolerance to cold varies a great deal according to what I'm doing, if I'm hungry or full, drunk or not..., and how my immune system is doing. If I'm cold, my body is telling me that I need to do something about it, or I will end up sneezing and miserable. I don't think it's changed with age. But I'm better at dressing the cold out.

    But Norwegian has two different words for distinguishing between being cold ("kald"), and feeling cold ("fryse", literally "freezing"). Being "kald" just means that you can feel something is cold but it's not bothersome, i.e. you're generating enough heat from inside. But if you "fryser" it means you're bothered by the cold, feel uncomfortable and need to warm up.

    The tipping point between those two states changes from October to February
    Winter riding is much less about badassery and much more about bundle-uppery. - malkin

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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Beautiful NW or Left Coast
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    Quote Originally Posted by lph View Post

    But Norwegian has two different words for distinguishing between being cold ("kald"), and feeling cold ("fryse", literally "freezing"). Being "kald" just means that you can feel something is cold but it's not bothersome, i.e. you're generating enough heat from inside. But if you "fryser" it means you're bothered by the cold, feel uncomfortable and need to warm up.

    Very cool!! and in Italy, even if it over 100 degrees, if you turn a fan on, people think you're entertaining pneumonia...

    Quote Originally Posted by Kiwi Stoker
    Remember as a kid you would spend hours in the pool. lake, beach etc and didn't feel cold at all?
    We were very different kids. I was the whiny one with the blue lips that was too cold to try to dry myself with the towel a helpful adult handed to me..
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    6,984
    Quote Originally Posted by lph View Post
    But Norwegian has two different words for distinguishing between being cold ("kald"), and feeling cold ("fryse", literally "freezing"). Being "kald" just means that you can feel something is cold but it's not bothersome, i.e. you're generating enough heat from inside. But if you "fryser" it means you're bothered by the cold, feel uncomfortable and need to warm up.
    Dearie tells me that German has the same two word equivalencies too. German words sounds the same as Norwegian too. He's not too sure of their spelling in German.

    I will do sports in cold and have noticed that I heat up rapidly once I get going, but again I have to pay attention to my hands because of Reynauld's condition/syndrome. I am not overly thrilled walking around in -24 degrees C winter cold/snow but have done it ...for several hrs. last year when we were up in the Rockies. We were within the town limits on trails, but it's not a situation I want to be out in the middle of wilderness. Certainly never alone.

    Strange when cycling season heats up, wearing cycling shorts initially feels cold at 15 degrees C and but by fall, I'm fine at 5 degrees C in shorts, my legs always build up resistance to cooler temperatures. In fact, I find it hard to get back into full length tights for first few days.

    I may be losing my resistance to hot, humid (100%) weather now that I've lived away from that type of heat over the past 10 yrs. Yes, southern Ontario summers become like that often.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 12-29-2011 at 07:57 AM.
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    3,176
    I think my tolerance for temperature is about the same as always. In my late teens and twenties, I used to get hives on my knees and elbows when the weather was cool and I was active and warm. That doesn't happen anymore.
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  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Columbia, MO
    Posts
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    My tolerance changes dramatically from the beginning to the end of the season.

    It also changed as I got more fit. I used to always be the one who was cold and wearing a sweater as everyone else begged to turn the ac colder. Now I'm the one wanting to turn the temp down.

    We have more brown fat when we are younger.
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  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    West MI
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    4,259
    I can remember as a kid ALWAYS sweating and being overheated...even in Jan. I would wear shorts to school in NE Wisconsin.

    It all changed after I gave birth to my son. I can remember being SO cold that I could not get warm, even if I jacked the heat up to 80. It's better, now, but I still tolerate heat better and have less tolerance for cold. I usually can't fall asleep unless I have a heating pad draped over my hip.
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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    I guess I'm so old that we would have never considered going without gloves, a hat, and a scarf under our woolen pea coats or duffle coats!
    I think I have better tolerance now, due to the invention of merino wool and my knowledge of layering.
    But all of those years in the south and southwest made me forget. When I first came back here, I rarely wore wool and I was cold all of the time. I even x country skied in cotton long underwear and a cotton turtleneck .
    How dumb was that?
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  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    2

    Losing tolerance to winter cold

    According to me, it all depends on your health and being fit. If you eat healthy and do regular exercises can help you to cope up with this issue. Weak peoples normally experience this since i have come across many such individuals. Age is not a matter in this.

 

 

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