• @LeadSoldier@lemmy.world
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    711 months ago

    In 2000 I was in basic training in South Carolina. I’m from California and my battle buddy was from Hawaii. One day it’s snowed and my buddy left formation and ran around catching flakes with his tongue.

    Drill sergeant just let him do it. It’s the only time I’ve seen someone get away with something in front of drill sergeant.

    • D-ISS-O-CIA-TED
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      511 months ago

      Aww, that sounds so goofy and sweet! The drill sergeant sounds like a nice guy, what did you think of him?

    • Dharma Curious
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      711 months ago

      I think they’re saying in super hot tropical regions generations could pass without freezing temperatures. I don’t know enough about the weather in tropical regions to know if that’s true or not. Maybe like equatorial regions? Or the Seminole people in Florida? But I think trade with other regions and migration might throw that theory off.

      Def. A legit shower thought, though! Lol

        • snooggums
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          411 months ago

          Huge parts of South America, Egypt, and South Asia are in tropical or subtropical regions where frozen water was mostly limited to high elevations.

          That said, people have always communicated so even those populations were likely to have stories about ice and snow from trading partners/travelers/cultural history from migrations even if they did not experience it directly. So millions is probably accurate, but is not as many people as it sounds when billions have lived.