Important 
  scientific fact for cyclists on a frosty Winter's morn'
  
   
  
  
  
  Question:  
  
  
  Why is that with warm clothing too boot to guard against the dreaded 
  wind-chill during the Bobbin Head descent at 50 km/h on a 
  frigid, pristine Winter's morn', a cyclist's exposed face 
  doesn't complain?  Yet the chill on the tiny gap between a glove and sleeve 
  can be a source of irritation all the way to the bridge.  
  
  Why do we bury our torso in thick blankets on a cold Winter's night?  Yet our 
  face is exposed!  
  As the late, but colourful 
	Professor Julius Sumner 
  Miller regularly espoused to his science classes, "Why is it so?"
  
  
  Answer: 
  
  
  Because a cyclist's face is made of the same stuff as a duck's bum.  A duck 
  has all that feathery down to cover it above the water, and is still able to 
  float around in frigid water without freezing its arse's off.  
  Faces are made of the same stuff as a duck's butt is 
  beneath its bum fluff.  
  
  Test of the Hypothesis:
	
  If you don't 
  believe  Bank Teller, try sub-merging your face in a frosty duck 
  pond for the same time as it takes you to descend to Bobbin 
  Head bridge.  And then dip your butt in.  
  The nerve ends in your face will contend with the frigid pond better than your 
  butt.