Sun dials dont work on submarines?
Not very well.
We always have to adjust them for the time zone
And.. I wasn't born in 1966.. so.. I didn't know what time it was.
Sun dials dont work on submarines?
But, do you care, what time it is?
Which somehow knows the sun is no longer out and decides to release its moisture.Completely guessing that it's latent moisture from the bean itself. Again, this is something that I referenced already.
I don’t care if you referenced already. Those words don’t mean anything in real life, only in your head.Completely guessing that it's latent moisture from the bean itself. Again, this is something that I referenced already.
Not picking on you, just saving this here for no reason.Pretty sure I never said that,
, my statement "that's not dew" .
There you said “likely not” but then used a bunch of big words to make it at least rhyme with “not dew”.Still likely not dew, unless you're talking about morning twilight. There may also be evaporation from recent rain or lawn watering. But the air temperature, generally speaking, does not approach the dew point until early morning. The earth is radiating too much latent heat during/through evening twilight for ambient air temperature to drop enough to approach the dew point. There are, again, certainly localized edge cases. (And I'm guessing those would also often be associated with foggy conditions.)
@DoggyDaddy take the wheel!Cars essentially create their own microclimates, due to the windows, heat accumulation/retention inside the car during the day, and additional heat loss at night. So, yeah, you can absolutely get boundary conditions around a car window that are different from otherwise ambient conditions, leading to condensation on the windshield.
First, I didn't say you said that (I'm sure to many INGOers suspect this is turning into a who's on first skit). I asked if you were saying that. It's a reasonable question given the conversation. You don't seem to like it when people share reasons why they don't like to mow in late evening. The grass often gets dewy in the humid summers. Response: THAT'S NOT DEW! Okay, that representation is a little hyperbolic, but to make the point. You didn't like it when we used the D word.Pretty sure I never said that, and in fact said the opposite. But that's a very localized thing (see the previous comment about car windshields).
I probably should never have said anything, because it's irrelevant, and in true INGO fashion, my statement "that's not dew" got turned into "the grass isn't wet".
does anybody really care
We've all got time enough
If so, I can't imagine why
We've all got time enough to cry
Not me. I had to look up that word, so that should prove it!pedantic
I think it's time for an explanation for why it can't be dew, that it has to be some unknown process involving the plant knowing to release its moisture right after sunset on a humid day. A process that doesn't involve the formation of dew.There you said “likely not” but then used a bunch of big words to make it at least rhyme with “not dew”.
I'm told that Chicago's original lyrics after that last phrase is...
because the dew between our toes,
but I ain't got no time for tears,
the sun is setting
no more beers
even wet grass needs cutting
Completely guessing other causes besides dew, when dew is a perfectly valid likelihood. That's what I find oddly astonishing about this conversation has turned.I don’t care if you referenced already. Those words don’t mean anything in real life, only in your head.
“Completely guessing”, goes to “something I’ve referenced already” so it’s gospel truth written in stone fact.
If the beans had any latent moisture in them they couldn’t be cut (harvested). If the pods have any (ok, by any I mean the beans themselves are literally 9-14% moisture by weight, the pods are drier than that) they couldn’t be cut in the daytime.
THAT IS DEW.
Go outside, man.
My tractors have lightsCompletely guessing other causes besides dew, when dew is a perfectly valid likelihood. That's what I find oddly astonishing about this conversation has turned.
Another observation I've made, if it's not dew, then mowing after sunset doesn't have deleterious effects on our equipment.. So then there's no reason why we can't spend the money on lights and the time setting them up, that we could have spent mowing if we could have gotten to it an hour earlier in the sun's cycle.
Maybe it is just invisible fog condensing on the grass.Mine does too. But if it's time to turn the lights on, chances are, the tires are wet from dew.
Don’t make the bet.I think it's time for an explanation for why it can't be dew, that it has to be some unknown process involving the plant knowing to release its moisture right after sunset on a humid day. A process that doesn't involve the formation of dew.
Or. We could allow for one time face saving offer to just drop it. I'm not a botanist and I'm sure Chip has taken more plant biology classes than I have. Maybe there's some term I don't know. Maybe it's part of photosynthesis, where excess water from synthesizing nutrients from CO2 and water after the process stops. I totally made that up. If I end up correct, I'm gonna go bet $500 that the Lions win the 2025 Superbowl.
As good a non-dew explanation as any.I think I've got the answer. The grass is sweating. It's been out in the hot sun all day, but that same hot sun makes the grass sweat dry up during the day, so you don't notice that it's sweating. When the sun goes down and it's still warm and humid, the sweat doesn't evaporate, so you can see it. I'm pretty sure I'm right.