When I was first married the wife said “Oh your so warm and cozy.” I told her, “You say that now, but this summer you will be saying ’Get away you are all hot and sweaty.”
They could snuggle in a bit better facing the same direction. My wife is in front until she gets warm then makes me rollover to be against my back once she is too warm.
At our age we’ll take central heating over a fireplace. Fireplaces were nice when I was a kid, but as an adult I had to care for and clean the fire place and gather wood. We had black widow spiders in the woodshed.
I worked for a national homebuilder back in the days of Jimmy Carter outside of Tulsa Oklahoma. Part of the job was keeping buyers “interested” in the home they had contracted to build. Deposits were small, contract wasn’t that binding, and it would be stupid to try to legally force a closing on an unwilling buyer. So I was the one who negotiated bribes to keep buyers happy. Washer dryers, lawnmowers, and most popularwas a fancy glass door for a fireplace. These were metal box fireplace inserts, about a $600 extra on a $54,000 house (1,700 sq ft…amazing…and we still made a 20% gross profit). The folding glass doors were about $200. One Sunday evening at church I ran into a friend that was a fireman, he had changed clothes but he still had soot on his forehead. When I asked what was up, he said “it was another one of those Glass Door mantel Fires , one of dozens at that time.” I turned pale. Turns out if you closed the glass doors on a metal fireplace box, you inadverently created a foundry furnce, raising the temperature several hundred degrees over its safe operating numbers. Igniting the wooden decorative mantels. I had given away nearly thirty glass doors in two of our subdivisions. I had to go to each one and trade lawnmowers and washing machines for each door. This was nearly 50 years ago and we’ve lived in at least ten different homes with firepaces. I’ve never lit a fire in one since, in my living room as I write this is an unused elegant old masonry fireplace. With cracks in the flue and chimney that would easily burn the house down if used. Be careful…snuggling under a blanket with Lois is a much better idea.
Da'Dad 11 months ago
One difference is my Janis is not comfortable wearing socks. ‘Nuff said.
Yakety Sax 11 months ago
The heat is on!
nosirrom 11 months ago
From hot and bothered to warm and toasty. Things have a way of working out.
William Bednar Premium Member 11 months ago
I guess Arlo’s hands were too cold for where he and Janis wanted him to put them. And, no, it wasn’t on her feet.
archipelago Premium Member 11 months ago
Arlo is soooo sweet!
morningglory73 Premium Member 11 months ago
A pleasant warm cuddle. Nice.
Just-me 11 months ago
Cuddling up, playing snuggle bunnies is a pleasant way to spend an evening.
ladykat 11 months ago
Snuggling is better.
Bruce1253 11 months ago
When I was first married the wife said “Oh your so warm and cozy.” I told her, “You say that now, but this summer you will be saying ’Get away you are all hot and sweaty.”
Gameguy49 Premium Member 11 months ago
You will miss that next year, condos don’t usually have fireplaces.
rodney 11 months ago
They could snuggle in a bit better facing the same direction. My wife is in front until she gets warm then makes me rollover to be against my back once she is too warm.
flagmichael 11 months ago
Hot water works even better. It gets both sides of the hands and between the fingers.
Now – for those of us with an evil streak, there is ice water.
uniquename 11 months ago
The sacrifices Arlo makes…
GojusJoe 11 months ago
At our age we’ll take central heating over a fireplace. Fireplaces were nice when I was a kid, but as an adult I had to care for and clean the fire place and gather wood. We had black widow spiders in the woodshed.
Bill The Nuke 11 months ago
That the problem with a bonfire in the snow. You cook on one side while freezing on the other.
eced52 11 months ago
I don’t get it. Is Arlo trying to take Crankshaft’s place?
Rhetorical_Question 11 months ago
Day family’s farewell storyline? Moving from a single family home to a small condo near the beach?
DDrazen 11 months ago
And the last one was juuuuuuuuust right.
Aladar30 Premium Member 11 months ago
Aaaawwwww.
whulsey 11 months ago
I worked for a national homebuilder back in the days of Jimmy Carter outside of Tulsa Oklahoma. Part of the job was keeping buyers “interested” in the home they had contracted to build. Deposits were small, contract wasn’t that binding, and it would be stupid to try to legally force a closing on an unwilling buyer. So I was the one who negotiated bribes to keep buyers happy. Washer dryers, lawnmowers, and most popularwas a fancy glass door for a fireplace. These were metal box fireplace inserts, about a $600 extra on a $54,000 house (1,700 sq ft…amazing…and we still made a 20% gross profit). The folding glass doors were about $200. One Sunday evening at church I ran into a friend that was a fireman, he had changed clothes but he still had soot on his forehead. When I asked what was up, he said “it was another one of those Glass Door mantel Fires , one of dozens at that time.” I turned pale. Turns out if you closed the glass doors on a metal fireplace box, you inadverently created a foundry furnce, raising the temperature several hundred degrees over its safe operating numbers. Igniting the wooden decorative mantels. I had given away nearly thirty glass doors in two of our subdivisions. I had to go to each one and trade lawnmowers and washing machines for each door. This was nearly 50 years ago and we’ve lived in at least ten different homes with firepaces. I’ve never lit a fire in one since, in my living room as I write this is an unused elegant old masonry fireplace. With cracks in the flue and chimney that would easily burn the house down if used. Be careful…snuggling under a blanket with Lois is a much better idea.
majobis. 11 months ago
A nice cozy sleeping bag for two will work also