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Post by team on Dec 17, 2009 4:02:56 GMT -5
G'day everyone! Pop in for a moment just to say "Hi" ;D My name is Oxana, I live in Moscow but you're welcome to call it Antarctica... of course Hugh is my longtime passion Have an awesome days everyone! Oxana
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Post by mamaleh on Dec 17, 2009 9:37:11 GMT -5
Hi again, Oxana. It was great meeting you at the stage door. I love the photos you took. So glad you fulfilled your dream. Hope you have the opportunity to visit again someday. (Ellen)
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Post by team on Dec 17, 2009 9:47:47 GMT -5
Hi again, Oxana. It was great meeting you at the stage door. I love the photos you took. So glad you fulfilled your dream. Hope you have the opportunity to visit again someday. (Ellen) Hi Ellen! You know, I was soo glad to meet you too at the stage door and thanks again for warm welcome )) felt like home )) and it's great to see you here ))) Of course I dream about to meet you again someday! "Hurry Houdini" ! love, Oxana
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Post by klenotka on Dec 17, 2009 11:27:54 GMT -5
Hello and welcome.
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Post by nmb on Dec 17, 2009 16:26:39 GMT -5
Hi Oxana, You are going to love it here.
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Post by team on Dec 17, 2009 16:45:07 GMT -5
klenotka, nmb , Thank you very much )) x
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Post by vivianl on Dec 17, 2009 18:27:26 GMT -5
Welcome! Always glad to have someone new.
I share a similar experience with you. I saw the show 2 hours after landing and flying over 12 hours. I rushed to the hostel, throw everything onto the bed, and just as the 2 guys staying with me in the same room wanted to start-up a chat with me, I told them "sorry guys, but I gotta rush now, will catch up later" and I was gone. I was so proud of myself that I could find my way to the theatre without a map, and in like 15 minutes before show-start. lol...
I did make sure I wasn't sitting in the front rows, 'cos I looked like shit that night, plus my stomach was giving really odd noises 'cos I hadn't eaten in like 10 hours. haha....
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Post by latone on Dec 17, 2009 19:05:58 GMT -5
Greetings from the compatriot, Team! Used to read you on the Mark's forum and glad to see you here! Btw, there was "only" -18C (-1F) today and it felt WARM after -27C (-17F).
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Post by team on Dec 17, 2009 19:25:49 GMT -5
vivianl, thanks and ;D felt almost the same that night (shitty ;D)... thanks God I stayed just in 2 minutes from the theatre, but I wasn't going to meet them 2.12... I just went to look for something to eat and suddenly saw the theatre and rushed back to my room, collected all the stuff and came back at the stage door... (didn't even correct my make -up ).. and in 20 minutes they appeared ...I was thrilled and def shocked...btw, it was pouring rain outside "a steady rain" ;D ... Latone, hello dear )) nice to meet you here I'm sure you know that I left Mark's forum 'cos of some venomous snakes on board hehe...and I told him that I'd come back when they'd be banned... but I'm not sure if he'll ever do that...so
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Post by CrisisOver on Dec 17, 2009 20:43:00 GMT -5
Greetings from the compatriot, Team! Used to read you on the Mark's forum and glad to see you here! Btw, there was "only" -18C (-1F) today and it felt WARM after -27C (-17F). That's the actual f***-ing temperature? Not the wind-chill? I swear, I'll never b**ch about a Texas cold snap again!
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Post by team on Dec 18, 2009 7:40:03 GMT -5
Hey Dee! ))
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Post by Dark Phoenix on Dec 18, 2009 10:41:53 GMT -5
Greetings from the compatriot, Team! Used to read you on the Mark's forum and glad to see you here! Btw, there was "only" -18C (-1F) today and it felt WARM after -27C (-17F). That's the actual f***-ing temperature? Not the wind-chill? I swear, I'll never b**ch about a Texas cold snap again! I don'r complain about our -2 we have today either. Russia is damn cold. As far as I remember they have the coldest place on earth where shirts freeze so much that you can tear them like paper. Berlin got -10 or something today.
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Post by latone on Dec 18, 2009 13:02:01 GMT -5
That's the actual f***-ing temperature? Not the wind-chill? I swear, I'll never b**ch about a Texas cold snap again! I don'r complain about our -2 we have today either. Russia is damn cold. As far as I remember they have the coldest place on earth where shirts freeze so much that you can tear them like paper. Berlin got -10 or something today. The lowest on my memory was -36(-33F) a few years ago, but luckily that kind of frost is quite unusual for Moscow. But it's nothing compare to some places in Ural and Siberia where -50(-58F) is a pretty normal winter temperature. Yes, the northern hemisphere pole of cold you are talking about is at the town Verhoyansk in the Eastern Siberia. The record was -72( -97,6F) if I'm not mistaken.
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Post by team on Dec 18, 2009 16:08:20 GMT -5
Yes, the northern hemisphere pole of cold you are talking about is at the town Verhoyansk in the Eastern Siberia. The record was -72( -97,6F) if I'm not mistaken. Anybody still alive? ;D
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Post by jumper on Dec 18, 2009 16:23:48 GMT -5
I can vouch for -12 C in Berlin, but tomorrow I'll probably have up to -22 C a couple hours south of here in Dresden.
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Post by vivianl on Dec 18, 2009 17:50:54 GMT -5
I'm not used to the freezing winter anymore. When back in China, it easily turned - 20-30 C, but here in Hungary, if it's - 1 C, I'm officially refusing to go outside. lol...
Just got too comfortable living in Europe...
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Post by Dark Phoenix on Dec 18, 2009 18:01:58 GMT -5
I don'r complain about our -2 we have today either. Russia is damn cold. As far as I remember they have the coldest place on earth where shirts freeze so much that you can tear them like paper. Berlin got -10 or something today. The lowest on my memory was -36(-33F) a few years ago, but luckily that kind of frost is quite unusual for Moscow. But it's nothing compare to some places in Ural and Siberia where -50(-58F) is a pretty normal winter temperature. Yes, the northern hemisphere pole of cold you are talking about is at the town Verhoyansk in the Eastern Siberia. The record was -72( -97,6F) if I'm not mistaken. Yes, that was the one! ^^
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Post by latone on Dec 18, 2009 18:50:02 GMT -5
Yes, the northern hemisphere pole of cold you are talking about is at the town Verhoyansk in the Eastern Siberia. The record was -72( -97,6F) if I'm not mistaken. Anybody still alive? ;D Yes, the human is a very survivable creature. They even manage to have some kind of an extremal tourism industry now. There is a little article on subject:
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Post by jumper on Dec 19, 2009 14:30:55 GMT -5
I just came home from a drive from Dresden to Berlin, and I had windshield cleaner in the sprayer system that withstood -30C in the past with no difficulty - but tonight it froze right inside the sprayer nozzle on the hood and I couldn't see squat through the front window most of time! So although it's 'only' -17C here now, windchill must be way lower than -30C. *shivers*
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Post by klenotka on Jan 24, 2011 10:46:59 GMT -5
Oxana, are you OK? I know you said something about your way to the airport...
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