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hedgehog

(36,286 posts)
Sat Jun 1, 2013, 12:34 PM Jun 2013

Simple ways to handle the heat without air conditioning

I can't tolerate strong sunlight, so i am indoors from 10 Am to at least 3 or 4PM.

I had real problems in the heat yesterday because I don't sweat - at all!

Today i remembered one quick fix - a damp bandanna rolled up and tied around my neck.

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Warpy

(113,130 posts)
1. I found a great gadget at a crafts fair here years ago
Sat Jun 1, 2013, 12:42 PM
Jun 2013

It's a bandana/headband full of water absorbing beads of some description. You soak it and tie it around your head or neck and it keeps you cool as the water evaporates. I wish I knew what the hell they were, I'd go into business making them, myself, since so many people have AC but can't afford to turn it on unless the temperature is in triple digits.

Another thing that does a good job is a spray bottle and a fan. You spray into the wind stream and cooled air and a little water hit your skin and cool you down fast.

Soaking your head also helps, wet hair cooling you off for a while. I used that a lot back in Boston. It doesn't work as well out here in the desert, stuff dries out too fast.

Heavy drapes that are closed in advance of the sun help to keep the house a bit cooler. Living in the dark gets depressing, but it's easier to cope with than living in a 95 degree house.

I still haven't set up the cooler here, even though temperatures have been in the low 90s. It's still comfy in the morning and until about 4 PM, only ugly from then until about 8. I suppose I'll have to do it soon, though. I use an evaporative cooler that works really well in an arid climate and adds only about $15 a month to the electric bill.

Viva_La_Revolution

(28,791 posts)
3. My Mom was making and selling those in Colorado before she passed away in April.
Sat Jun 1, 2013, 01:00 PM
Jun 2013

It would be so cosmically cool if you owned one of hers.
I keep them in the freezer, with extras so you can swap them out as they warm up.
I can dig up the directions if you want.

We use our cool basement air to cool the upstairs by using a hurricane fan to blow it up the stairs, and a small rotating fan at the top to boost it.

Wrapping your naked self in a wet sheet or Moo-moo helps too.

Warpy

(113,130 posts)
4. I'm in NM, so it's entirely possible
Sat Jun 1, 2013, 01:07 PM
Jun 2013

The cloth gave up the ghost years ago, so I remade it using some Japanese fabric left over from a haori jacket I'd made. It's hanging together nicely and is 100% cotton, a rarity these days.

There are no basements here, just a crawl space that gets as hot as the house does. When I lived in Dixie, we used attic fans to blow the hot air into the attic and bring cool night air in through the windows. That worked, too, and closing heavy drapes kept the place cool until evening.

All I need to know is what those beads are. Once I know what to call them, I can find a supplier. I'm thinking a sleeveless shirt using them might be really nice. Or maybe a ventilated hat.

Viva_La_Revolution

(28,791 posts)
5. craft stores carry them
Sat Jun 1, 2013, 02:36 PM
Jun 2013

they're 'water absorbing polymer beads' sold under various name brands, usually used in vases of flowers. The trick is to remember how big they get, don't put too many in each section.
I find they work better when the hit the base of your brain stem, on the neck they sit too low. ohhh, maybe a 'turban' style with a patch at the back of the skull, and a few on the forehead.
Get sewing!

It's starting to heat up here now, so I dug them out of storage to get them hydrated and frozen. thanks for reminding me

 

OffWithTheirHeads

(10,337 posts)
2. Back in my construction days, I would soak a t shirt in water and just put it on wet
Sat Jun 1, 2013, 01:00 PM
Jun 2013

as the water evaporates you stay cool as a cuke. Rinse and repeat as necessary.

Nay

(12,051 posts)
6. Hedgehog, is it humid as well as hot where you live? If not, you can use a swamp cooler to
Mon Jun 3, 2013, 07:13 AM
Jun 2013

cool your house off. They don't work well where it's humid, but if humidity is low, I hear they work pretty well. Just google 'swamp cooler.'

hedgehog

(36,286 posts)
7. The days that go above 85 are generally days when we have
Mon Jun 3, 2013, 09:18 AM
Jun 2013

high humidity as air moves in from the South. Usually, our weather comes over Lake Ontario so we have generally cool summers , with night time temps dropping into the 60's. We get along without AC because we usually only have one or two weeks of really hot weather. The real killer for me is that the hot weather usually brings high ozone with it.

mopinko

(71,813 posts)
8. when it's really hot, roll up an ice cube in it.
Wed Jun 5, 2013, 10:30 AM
Jun 2013

kept me alive out working in the hot, hot summer we had last year.

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