Wet, you pick the facts or claims, which suit you and ignore those that don't suit you. That's really not science. By that way you can prove almost anything, because world is full of facts, so there is really much where to choose (just ignore what doesn't suit). And mix there a good part of imagination, fantasy and speculation. So it's like magic, you can show things to be just want you want them to be, different that they really are.
Just an extreme example how to do that:
wet_Yes, Finland has no tropical lagoons that I'm aware of.
Are you sure?
Just look at this video, and you see that too hot lake water is our main problem on a special season (but no worry, in other seasons it's just tropical
.
As you can see on the next video:
- the lake water is so hot, that it steams into the air
- swimmers can be in water just a short time, cos water it's so hot (it's so obvious and ofcourse you understand it, but I say it anyway)
- when they come out from water, the hot water steams on their skin
- they must rest outside the get rid of that extra heat, they can't go inside straight away
- ofcourse they use thin swimming suits so extra heat can exit as fast as possible
- they must use special 'cool suit' which they take from deep freezer just before they are going to the hot lake, they put it back after swimming to get quick cooling and so to avoid skin burns. Some use a cooling cap, too. And ofcourse cooling socks and gloves.
- it's too hot water for kids, as you see there are just adult people having better adaptation to the hot water
There are so much more facts, but I think this is enough, and you are convinced.
All this you can check from this video:
Are you asking what's that white stuff there around?
Just ignore it! It's nothing important. I think it's somekind of lime that comes out of lakes on that season. Ofcourse it's because of that hot water, it somehow rises form lake with that hot steam and float on the surface and spread even to near forests. But when it's again tropical, it just dissappears. So it's not a problem.
So quite tropical here, but sometimes too hot for swimming.
I can tell you so much more about that hot water, if you are interested or even if you are not.
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But to get the whole true picture: I mainly train freediving in 27-32 C/ 80-90 F water though (and that's a real fact!), our nearest swimminghall is just 1 km from us and there are 6 swimminghalls more (open for everybody) inside 20 min driving time, (that's a real fact). But on every "that special season" I go to those hot steamy waters too (I mean i go there into a hole in that white stuff, that's a real fact ,too).
And if there is sometimes too chilly..., we have hot sauna's there at lakes, a lot of them (that's a real fact). So kids can swim for hours in 20 C/70 F water (sauna 60-100 C for 10 min then swmming 20 min, and again and again) and they do! (that's a real fact).