Coping with the heat.

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In Finland we seldom have very high temps up to 30 C.
One summer when it was extremly hot I kept my windows closed and had some 5 degrees less inside than outside. Living on the bottom floor of a 3 storey buiding.
 
When everybody was working from home I was in the attic.

I fitted an Inkbird ITC-308 temperature controlled switch and put the probe outside of the attic window, with a rectangle of marine grade plywood with a 125mm diameter vent and an extractor fan turned to suck air into the attic whenever the temperature dropped below (IIRC) 24°C. The inside would be nice and cool when I started work at around 06h30; as the day got hotter I would remove the extractor fan and connect the output of a mobile air-conditioning unit.

I ran the air-conditioning unit again today to make sure that it still works; it's noisy but it keeps the room tolerably cool.
 
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The barn we live in was built as a threshing barn - it's designed for the lightest breeze to blow through :)

Loose, light, clothing, move slowly if at all. Stay out of direct sunlight but, if you do venture out, stay covered. The typical Brit has not evolved to deal with the kind of conditions we're experiencing and, even if you don't burn, it's very dangerous for long term health. I cannot believe all the 'lobsters' that are appearing in the news saying how great this heat is :)
 
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To get draught there needs to be windows on two, opposite, walls. I have windows on only one wall so no through drought is possible. So for my appartment it is best to keep windows closed daytime and use a tower fan for cooling draught.

During hottest part of summer when going outside, the only parts of me that are not covered with clothing are my hands and my face. And face is shaded by wearing a boonie hat. Best boonie I have had is the one I currently have; the South African defence forces one. Wide brim and on top a thin wadding that suck up the sweat from top of my head and let it evapourate.

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@Broch
Every word of that is true round here too.
We joke about the Taps Aff thing the minute there's a gleam of sunshine, but honestly, scarlet and peeling is such a truly bad thing to do to our skin. I hate seeing sunburnt children. They're running around in shorts and ....not being racist or whatever.....but they're white; white children in a generally more overcast country, and they're scarlet across their brows and their shoulders and arms. Going to be a lot of sore kids I think.
 
I fear the sun because my father got cancer on his earlobe. He has always been without head cover or at the most a cap that do not shade the ears. I do not want that for me.
 
I fear the sun because my father got cancer on his earlobe. He has always been without head cover or at the most a cap that do not shade the ears. I do not want that for me.
Ever since I quit the military I have outside worn a hat to have rather a large collection of hats of various types, the current a Tilley Hemp T5
 

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