S
sundays child
I'm in England, luke warm is bog standard English, it's in the dictionary and everything! It means, like, tepid, not warm but not cold. At a guess I'd say it's around 15 centigrade.
I'm wondering if the water from my hot tap (faucet) is different from the cold. It's the same coming in but it sits in a tank to get heated whereas the cold comes direct from the mains supply.
Anyway, for now I've worked out a method of feeding at 5.8, luke warm (which is good, believe me!) and I'm seeing improvements. I'm going to do some experimenting with the new meter and try to understand what's going on. I'm not ruling out simple error, maybe I just got it wrong and forgot to calibrate the meter or something.
A couple of people, Churchill was one, said about Britain and the United States, "Two nations divided by the same language".
I'm wondering if the water from my hot tap (faucet) is different from the cold. It's the same coming in but it sits in a tank to get heated whereas the cold comes direct from the mains supply.
Anyway, for now I've worked out a method of feeding at 5.8, luke warm (which is good, believe me!) and I'm seeing improvements. I'm going to do some experimenting with the new meter and try to understand what's going on. I'm not ruling out simple error, maybe I just got it wrong and forgot to calibrate the meter or something.
A couple of people, Churchill was one, said about Britain and the United States, "Two nations divided by the same language".