tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33929660.post754573329519064507..comments2024-03-28T18:34:03.426-04:00Comments on Working Pictures: Red and WhiteCarl Weesehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12291898089206705608noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33929660.post-3003433082140816572014-10-27T10:54:53.027-04:002014-10-27T10:54:53.027-04:00We have the opposite problem here in Florida. The ...We have the opposite problem here in Florida. The term that I have heard is heat soak. If the a/c is disabled for over a day, the heat creeps ever more inward and takes longer to banish.<br /><br />It's opposite, which you are experiencing is, obviously, cold soak. When we lived in Vermont 22 years ago, we had a godawful cold spell, with temperatures never getting above -10f and often touching -30f at night. This went on for two weeks and, even with the furnace running almost non-stop and a fireplace and wood stove going all day, the cold crept in from the walls until we were all walking in the center of rooms. I'm glad you are doing this changeover in Oct./Nov. and not January.<br /><br />This too shall pass.James Weekeshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15449279488210618234noreply@blogger.com