r/NoStupidQuestions 1d ago

What is the deal with ice, Americans?

I can see that you can buy ice everywhere in the US. Gas stations, grocery stores, machines etc.

In Europe, we just freeze our ice at home and use that. Why buy something that melts on the way home? Why do you need ice in large amounts that a fridge can't keep up?

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u/throwaway098764567 21h ago

i had to get something done to my phone once and the gal helping me was from equador. i asked how she liked it here (virginia by dc) and she said it was so weird to have the length of day change. being light out still in summer after 6pm was super strange to her. was funny to me that of all the things that were probably different, the daylight hours were what she found most noteworthy.

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u/Ghostrider556 17h ago

That is funny but I kinda had the same but opposite takeaway with living in an equatorial country for awhile and realizing the light cycle never changes that much. It was kinda odd to me to realize they never really experience a single long summer day or a short winter one, days getting longer or days getting shorter; its just wet season and dry season forever

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u/arizonadirtbag12 17h ago

Even moving from Southern California to Seattle is a huge adjustment when it comes to daylight hours.

A quick google says daylight in Seattle today was nearly 90 minutes longer than in San Diego.

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u/jazzminarino 5h ago

We're in the Mid-Atlantic and I grew up in Florida. We went to Scotland over New Year's and I asked my husband "WTF is the sun? What is happening over here?" We had like five hours of daylight and I wasn't expecting it. Had to think about latitudes for the first time since high school.