MarkEagleUSA
C'mon Q!
If you've never had it how would you know?Or just never start with caffeine. You'll find yourself so much happier.
If you've never had it how would you know?Or just never start with caffeine. You'll find yourself so much happier.
If you've never had it how would you know?
Or just never start with caffeine. You'll find yourself so much happier.
Got my electric bill yesterday for the month of February. It was more than my January bill. OK, so we did have those couple of days of below zero temps during which I ran my heat pump. However, I was literally not in my home for 16 if the 29 days in February. No lights were on, the TVs were not on, no dishwasher or washing machine/dryer running. I know people say to unplug items when you're not home but I cannot imagine that my bill would go up that much due to plugged in items when I was physically not there.
Life without coffee is scary.
Went to COSTCO today. Loaded my stuff in the car and looked for the cart return. None close. BUT!, not 60 feet away were 4 lines of carts waiting to go into the store to be used by happy customers. I returned the cart there.
The lady who loaded her car that was next to mine walked 20 feet and pushed her cart on the grassy median. Lazy beech.
Life without coffee is scary.
I once drank 100 cups of coffee over 2.5 days. It was awesome.
Nope. But we watched every episode of Futurama back-to-back.
I once drank 100 cups of coffee over 2.5 days. It was awesome.
I find this difficult to believe.
Coffee blows, though. On the "worst taste" meter it scores somewhere between cantaloupe and kimchi. If coffee tasted like chocolate I would have a really serious problem.
But instead I just drink about 6 sodas a day. I'll bet that's healthy.
I like coffee, but I make it sparingly because the way I brew it at home, it always gives me the jitters. Even just 1-2 cups.
If coffee tasted like chocolate I would have a really serious problem.
I once drank 100 cups of coffee over 2.5 days. It was awesome.
If you've never had it how would you know?
Have you checked the kilowatt hours used between the two bills, likely listed as kWH? Also, did your bill for February also include part of January? Billing for utility companies aren't necessarily synced to the standard calendar. Lastly, what was the kWH unit-pricing between the two months? The real kicker about an electric bill, at least around here, is that there's basically a base amount you pay the company for simply making service available - the infrastructure portion of the bill; sometimes that makes up as much as 75% of the bill.
Life without coffee is scary.