Sentences with phrase «little ocean air»

For city dwellers looking to trade the city's stifling streets for a little ocean air, the Boggsville Boatel will be running until Labor Day.

Not exact matches

In those days, little was known about the care of sick children, but many thought that fresh air — especially ocean air — was beneficial.
Ross and I decided to stay a few nights for a little mini vacation before the school year starts up for him, and the fresh ocean air and slower pace is just -LSB-...]
Zamperini's hopes of breaking a four - minute mile are put on hold when he is drafted into the Army Air Corps during WWII, and in 1943, his plane goes down, leaving him stranded in the middle of the ocean with very little hope of survival.
The ground - floor bedroom opens directly to the pool terrace, while the upper - floor suites all open to balconies with lounge furniture, letting you breathe in the fresh ocean air first thing in the morning or step outside to relive your honeymoon with a little stargazing at night.
The average mean temperature in January ranges from 53 - 59 degrees F; summers are a little warmer with an average mean temperature in July that ranges from 62 - 70 degrees F. Both winter and summer temperature extremes are moderated by the moist ocean air with generally high nighttime humidities and frequent fog.
Luxury travel agent Natalie Nevares likes the little touches at Ocean Coral & Turquesa: «Chaise longues studded with air jets are built right into... Read More
Why: Former travel agent Natalie Nevares likes the little touches at Ocean Coral & Turquesa: «Chaise longues studded with air jets are built right into the children's pool, so parents can sit in the water with a pina colada, enjoying the bubbles and watching the kids play all day,» she says.
Or just relax and enjoy the ocean air, do some sunbathing, reading, or take a little siesta.
The Taj Kumal is Akumal's little Taj Mahal by the sea, and has air conditioned bedrooms, dramatic Moroccan Mediterranean architecture and a beautiful ocean side swimming pool.
The upper terrace showcases a lovely alfresco dining area with a stunning ocean view, and little could compare to the fragrance of your favorite cuts sizzling on the barbeque while you enjoy the fresh sea air.
This cosy little cottage, with its chic style, features a natural wood fire, three corner spa, air conditioning, fully equipped kitchen, large LCD television with blu - ray player, DVD library, laundry with dryer, games and books, barbecue and deck overlooking the ocean.
The effective emissivity from the surface of the ocean above that little millimeter or two of air gap is about 0.857, on average, so the oceans would require a 2.18 instead of 5.35 as the multiplier resulting in 1.5Wm - 2 at the surface.
If extra human CO2 does warm the top millimetre of the ocean a little before the extra down welling infrared radiation is bounced back up by the almost impermeable ocean surface then the air immediately above the ocean surface will promptly warm up.
Arctic air temperatures are increasing at twice the rate of the rest of the world — a study by the U. S. Navy says that the Arctic could lose its summer sea ice by next year, eighty - four years ahead of the models — and evidence little more than a year old suggests the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is doomed, which will add between twenty and twenty - five feet to ocean levels.
Failing that, you might like to explain the existence of the great ocean thermal currents that, together with the slipstream air currents, determine our global weather patterns, in your strange little world where the oceans lose their accumulated heat overnight.
Or alternatively, perhaps the CO2 - theory suggests a pattern where land areas with little noise from ocean air trends show no heating after around 1930?
For the US MIDWEST, the air masses from the Pacific first have to pass more than a thousand kilometres of mountains and thus the temperature trends in the US Midwest have unusually little noise from ocean air temperature trends.
In Fig 22 you state that «air masses from the Pacific first have to pass more than a thousand kilometres of mountains and thus the temperature trends in the US Midwest have unusually little noise from ocean air temperature trends.»
Ocean air sheltered stations (OAS) in Europe (and perhaps the whole world) show little or no warming since the previous warm period in approx. 1930 - 1960.
His theory is, that the sea surface has been warming since the little ice age, and ocean air also warmed coastal and other ocean air affected regions, but not OAS regions.
Further, air has little heat capacity and the wavelength of re-radiated radiation from CO2 is such that it can not effectively penetrate the oceans (depth of penetration about 10 microns) and at most it simply boils off a small layer of the ocean which probably has a net cooling effect.
It certainly doesn't support an idea like an option he suggested: «[L] and areas with little noise from ocean air trends show no heating after around 1930.»
And, going back to the Little Ice Age, with the oceans appropriately a lot cooler than today they could hold more carbon dioxide and less was released into the air.
Every year that the air temps are near record highs it will push ocean temps that little higher and that's not withstanding the affects of ice albedo either.
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