It doesn't have to be quite that cold. Anything below freezing with enough moisture will cause ice to form in the beard. I remember one winter trudging across some frozen fields to get to my office, I had a remarkable collection of chincles by the time I arrived, which everyone of course had to remark on.

On 9/20/2015 1:27 PM, Knarf wrote:
My breath. Really.   ;-)

You know when it's cold out (like below 50F in Cali) and you can "see your 
breath"? Well, when it's below 0F (around -25C) as it was that day the water 
droplets that just formed as one's warm breath hits cold air, turn to ice as they hit 
cold hair. They accumulate rather quickly.

I had just come from a walk along the Lake and it was cold and windy. Bingo! 
Icy beard!

Thanks for the comment, Jack!

Cheers,

frank

On 19 September, 2015 10:53:41 PM EDT, Jack Davis <jdavi...@comcast.net> wrote:
That on his mustache is frozen what??

J

----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Roberts" <postmas...@robertstech.com>
To: "Pentax-Discuss Mail List" <pdml@pdml.net>
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2015 6:40:23 Ps
Subject: Re: OT - PESO - Greybeard

Knarf wrote:

Since it's International Talk Like a Pirate Day. Aaaargh maties:

http://www.knarfinthecity.blogspot.ca/2015/09/greybeard.html?m=1

It was cold that day. Taken with phone cam.
Shiver me timbers!



--
I don't want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve 
immortality through not dying.
-- Woody Allen


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