Oh, the weather outside is...

The views from those towns that sit at the base of the Rockies are just unbelievable. I've seen some firsthand in Colorado, and Utah... If that's what kind of area you like you should definitely think about visiting Colorado.
If Canmore wasn't so expensive, I think it would be a great place to live. I'm more comfortable at higher altitudes than at lower ones, and as you say, the views are unbelievable.

But if I ever win the lottery some day and the border regulations between our countries become sane again... who knows?

One of the views out that way is Lake Minnewanka. I've never been there in the summer, but on Mother's Day weekend in May 2004 a friend brought me up there for some sightseeing. The lake was still over 95% frozen (open and slushy on the shore; not safe to walk on the ice), the air was chilly, but warm enough that my fall jacket was good enough, and the silence amid all that ice and snow and trees was just so incredibly relaxing.

Lake Minnewanka was famous for awhile thanks to the Lake Minnewanka Squirrel. Yes, that photo is genuine; nothing was photoshopped.

That "Big Head" thing is creepy... I was going to ask you who or what it was supposed to represent until I just read the article to find out it was a reference to the name of the town :blush: that would've been embarrassing.
I'd have had to look it up as well. Actually, I hadn't realized there were so many arts events there. That would make it even more of the kind of place I'd like to live.

It was also interesting to read that it manages to be the 9th largest town with about 12,000 people. The 9th largest town in my tiny State of Massachusetts has a population of over 90,000. My hometown in Connecticut is considered a "small town" with about 20,000 population.
Canmore is right next door to a national park, which is why it has a low population (along with a huge problem with affordable housing). It's an environmentally sensitive area, so there's been a kind of push-pull issue with how many people can live there. They need people to work during the tourist season, but like Banff and Jasper, there's not enough affordable housing to put them. Some people commute from Calgary, but a lot can't do that. And because of the environmental restrictions, there's a limit to how much more expansion will be allowed.
 
colder weather is on the way, what do you cold warriors wear for warmth?

I'm looking at merino wool base layers now and could use recommendations

I find that a California license plate bolted to the car keeps me pretty comfy.
 
EUrricane® Leslie is approaching Iberian peninsula. It seems it will land at Lisboa tonight.
 
Well the rain and high tides has made a small hole under the railway track just north of here so the rest of the country is cut off by train.
 
Until you are in Texas and you get a personal acquaintance with drug-sniffing dogs because of your license plates.

Ah. This is new to you. Being from California qualifies you for instant hatred in the backwards parts of the country. Get used to it.
 
Couple days ago there was snow. Itty bitty snowflakes smaller than a period when I'm reading this forum on my cell phone. Not sure it would even qualify as 'trace'. Next day people are still mowing their yards. Today at work saw a light dusting of snow on the cars that was gone by the next break.
 
Couple days ago there was snow. Itty bitty snowflakes smaller than a period when I'm reading this forum on my cell phone. Not sure it would even qualify as 'trace'. Next day people are still mowing their yards. Today at work saw a light dusting of snow on the cars that was gone by the next break.

If you ever have the opportunity to be somewhere really cold and dry, and can find a power plant to visit, do it. Steam from the cooling towers hitting the cold dry air forms these tiny ice crystals, smaller than any snowflakes. At night, when conditions are right and they survive contact with the ground and stuff they are like glitter and can make the ugliest structure and grounds in the world seem downright magical.
 
South and central Sweden has had a tremendous week of an "Indian summer", or "brittsommar" in the Swedish expression: Sunny and up to 20+° Celsius in mid-October. Not... average... in any way, shape, or form at least
 
It turned cold with high in the 50s! Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr......................
 
South and central Sweden has had a tremendous week of an "Indian summer", or "brittsommar" in the Swedish expression: Sunny and up to 20+° Celsius in mid-October. Not... average... in any way, shape, or form at least
How has the rain situation been lately?
 
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