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10 ways to keep cool

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Lewis

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10 ways to keep cool at home without A/C





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(Photo: Getty Images)

Save energy this summer. It’s easy to keep your house cool without air conditioning. Employing a few basic environmentally friendly principals will help keep you cool and will help you save money. 1. Hot Air Out, Cool Air In
The most basic thing you can do to keep your house cooler without air conditioning is to keep as much sunlight out as possible and let cooler air in at night. During the day, keep windows, drapes, blinds, or shades closed, especially on the southern and western sides of your home. If you have a porch, you can put up large plastic or bamboo shades to cut down on sunlight.
2. Windows
Use white or light colored window dressings to reflect light. You can also apply reflective slicks to windows to further cut down on light. At night, leave cabinets open as well, as they will store heat.
3. Be a Fan of the Fan
Moving air is cooler air. At night, place fans in windows to bring more cool air in. Ceiling fans can also make a big difference. In terms of cooling, even a one-mile-per-hour breeze will make you feel three to four degrees cooler. In terms of energy savings, if you run a ceiling fan full-blast for 12 hours, you will only spend about $10 a month in electricity. Ceiling fans have two settings, one to pull air up (for winter use), and the other to push air down. Make sure your ceiling fan is blowing down.
4. Turn Your Fan Into an Air Conditioner
Another easy way to cool your home without air conditioning is to place a bowl of ice or a frozen milk jug in front of one or more fans.
5. What’s Hot in Your Home?
It’s one thing to keep hot air and sunlight out; it’s another to identify the appliances in your home that generate heat. If you aren’t at home during the day, it is easier to simply shut off as many electric appliances as possible. If you spend more of your day at home, try to use heat-generating appliances only during the coolest part of the day.
6. Electronics Are Hot, Too
Keeping your electronics on a power strip provides a quick way to “power-down†before leaving for the day.
7. Light Bulbs
Change incandescent bulbs for cooler fluorescent bulbs. Turn off lights when not in use.
8. Humidity
Humidity makes a room hotter. Do laundry early or late in the day. Take showers or baths during the cooler times of day. If your bathroom, laundry room, or kitchen has vents, use them. Invest in a dehumidifier if you live in a humid climate.
9. Insulate Your Attic
A well-insulated attic, especially when an attic ventilating fan is used, is one of the best ways to keep heat out of your home.
10. Landscaping
As you plan out landscaping for your home, be mindful of having deciduous trees, trellises and shrubbery on the southern and western portions of your home. Don’t place heat-absorbing rocks, cement, or asphalt too close to the house.
With a small amount of planning, you are on your way to a cooler and more enjoyable summer.
More from Hometalk:

10 ways to keep cool at home without A/C on Shine
 
I guess not one person on this board is suffering from heat, in America right now.
Well I am and it is 102 F here in Philly right now, with the heat index feeling like 112.
Plenty of seniors are going to die from this all across the country.
 
Lewis, I'm just a spoiled guy, living with the 2011 comforts. There's one way I know to keep cool...

GO TO WHERE THERE'S AIR CONDITIONING!!


I find most other remedies, besides jumping in the water, are more mind over matter than anything else. They help a little, but you have to convince yourself it's not as bad as it is.

Yesterday, in SE Michigan, it was 109 degrees after 6:00pm. 109 degrees!!! Are you kidding me???

During the winter in Michigan, there's one way to keep warm. Go to where the heat is!

Sorry, but I didn't need an article to tell me how to keep cool. I lived the life of hard knocks growing up when no one had AC. Yeah... those were the "good old days". :screwloose 2:00 in the morning, and my pillow is soaked with sweat.
 
I stayed in Gasstra Michigan for a while in the dead of winter in the early 90's right next to Iron Mountain. On my way there I saw 18 wheelers laying on there side when we tried to cross a bridge on lake Huron, We had to turn around and Greyhound put us in a motel for the night.
 
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Today we did extraction drills in full turnout gear. The thermometer was reading 110 degrees and this is before you factor in our humidity. Just glad I didn't have to be the poor "victims" in the car we tore apart :lol. One of the "victims" turned into a real victim when he pass out cold.

I actually didn't really mind the heat today at all. Which is odd because normally I hate it.

And that list is forgetting to VERY MOST important aspect of keeping cool... H2O. Drink it.
 
I stayed in Gasstra Michigan for a while in the dead of winter in the early 90's right next to Iron Mountain. On my way there I saw 18 wheelers laying on there side when we tried to cross a bridge on lake Huron, We had to turn around and Greyhound put us in a motel for the night.

HAH! The upper peninsula?? That's not Michigan. That's the North American Siberia! No, I'm a SE lower peninsula Michigander, and the winters get plenty cold for me! As a Philadelphian, you know what it is.
 
I have many folks in Gary Indiana, I was last there, when we buried my grand mom almost 2 years ago.
Chicago is 20 miles up the pike. But hey Mike in Gasstra we were eating fresh killed deer man, we would keep our own hanging in the barn to drain and then it was skinned cut up and froze. And we cut down our own Christmas tree, and cut our own firewood, that was some work, I hated it. The Christians in Gasstra and Iron Mountain were some of the best caring, giving Christians in the world.
 

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