Hi there, time to share ways to keep your home cool during hot times

So ok, usual ways I use:

  • open everything during night
  • close everything during day
  • external sheets on windows without shutters
  • some curtains to prevent heat from going upstairs

I was also wondering if plants could also help inside, any ideas ?

Share your advices !

  • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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    7 minutes ago

    If you own the place or can get permission, a mini-split air conditioner is very easy to install with minimal tools, and they’re pretty affordable online.

    For under 500 buck including drill and bits you could have AC in a few days. It’s not free, but it’s a huge quality of life improvement.

  • neomachino@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 minutes ago

    I’ve been getting by just fine with a couple standing fans. I’ve had to turn the ACS on a couple times for my kids when I was around 110F

    Before going full blast AC in all the rooms I’ll turn on the big Window unit in the living room and set up fans so it blows the cold air through the whole house (our house isn’t big) and I find its a good middle ground. It cools down the rooms pretty well.

  • BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works
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    3 hours ago

    Hot showers at night or when you’re feeling extremely overheated. Trust me, that’s way better than cold showers. First shower warm, then get soapy, and then shower as hot as you feel comfortable. I do this for over 10 years now and it’s amazing. My theory is that it heats up the body and due to the outside being cooler, it actually cools your body down - albeit 35°C. By the way I shower with ~42°C regular lol

    • beastlykings@sh.itjust.works
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      1 hour ago

      Upvoting for visibility, but this seems insane and impossible to me. When I take a cold shower, I can feel the water stealing the heat from my back, because it’s warmer when it hits my legs. It’s crazy.

      It’s definitely taking heat away, for me, and I would die if I tried to take a hot shower on a hot day.

      I start with a warm shower, like normal, then slowly turn it down until it’s nice and cool, almost cold. But not ice cold. Feel way better afterwards.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    OP, do you have an air conditioned library or a cold springs near you? When I was living without AC I found that getting really cold at some point in the day chilled me off for quite a few hours, made the rest of the day feel better. I had a friend who would get in a cool shower then not dry off just lay in the wind from a fan.

  • grasshopper_mouse@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    If you can afford it, buy a single window AC unit, install it in your bedroom, and then live in there all summer. That’s what my parents did when I was little and we lived in a house with no AC. If you can’t afford that, a box fan in the window once the sun goes down, then shut it off in the early morning and close/black out the window/draw shades as soon as the sun is up to try and keep the cooler air in that one room for as long as possible.

    • Jarix@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      What part of “without AC” did you fail to ducking understand?

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 hours ago

        I mean, pretty much any person with central AC would read that as “without central AC.” And the answer would be the same: Fucking install AC. Installing central AC is too big of a project for most, so a window unit is a decent stopgap.

        • fishos@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          Yup. A $100-200 window unit(personally I prefer “portable” units with the exhaust hose to the window - keeps the main unit out of the sun that causes it to work harder) will be your best bet every single time. But sure, go ahead and check the price of tinting every window(about $20 per window) or getting blackout curtains(~$20 per panel in my experience) or any of the myriad of lesser solutions. Then, when you’ve spent as much or more with worse results and finally cave on getting a small unit, you’ll wonder why you ever did anything else before. Nevermind the fact that OP basically said “so aside from all the normal passive options, what else is left?” AC. That’s what’s left. Unless you want to advise them to replace all the insulation/windows/seals in their house.

          • beastlykings@sh.itjust.works
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            60 minutes ago

            Window units are the best bang for the buck. Don’t worry about expensive ones, $100 goes a LONG way to cooling one bedroom. And it’s cheaper than doing the whole house.

            We have a big in wall unit in our apartment that can do the whole living space, but we hardly ever run it. We just run the bedroom one, set to like 70-75f, just to take the humidity out and chill it down a bit. A nice place to go cool down if you get hot while doing things around the house. We don’t run it when we’re not home, because even the cheapest Menards special can cool the room down in minutes, and it’s cheaper to not run it when we don’t need it.

            Beware of the units with the hose… You’re paying more, and trading the convenience of not lugging a big unit into the window (small ones really aren’t that bad), for the inconvenience of having to dump the water (unless you pay more for one that can pump it out the window).

            But by far the worst thing about the hose units, if they only have one exhaust hose, and no return hose? They are less efficient, because they create negative pressure in your house that sucks hot air in through every crack.

            For more information see here.

          • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            But sure, go ahead and check the price of tinting every window(about $20 per window) or getting blackout curtains(~$20 per panel in my experience) or any of the myriad of lesser solutions.

            tin foil and painters tape $1.50 per window.

            Unless you want to advise them to replace all the insulation/windows/seals in their house.

            winter blankets and old shirts.

            couple with a window fan and a swamp cooler can reduce internal temps 10-15°.

            poor af growing up. that’s what we did. bonus points if you’re in a trailer. you can open both ends and have fans blowing from one end to the other.

            • fishos@lemmy.world
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              1 hour ago

              I mean, sure, if you want to look like you live in a meth lab. Or you could spend a little bit and have something 100x better and actually functional and not be miserable. This is like that whole boot problem: you can only afford $20 boots so you buy them and they wear out in 6 months. Over 5 years you spend $200 when a nice pair that would’ve lasted as long or longer would cost you $100.

              You can get an ac for like $60 new, like $20 on Facebook. Walmart has Artic Kings on sale every year for that much. But yeah, spend hours of your time Macgyvering a makeshift solution that maybe drops you 10°. You know what “10° degrees cooler” is where I am? 100°. You’d still be plenty miserable.

  • 0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 hours ago

    When its hot, avoid cooking indoors if you can. Especially iff you dont have proper exhaust in your kitchen. Buy some food that require less heat or none. Sandwiches, Fruits, Salads, etc.

    Keep your home cool and yourself too.

  • Mohamed@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    Passive or Active Ventilation. The idea is to encourage air to pass through the home, which helps with removing heat from inside. Passive Ventilation would be opening windows, using wind catchers, etc. This depends on the design of your home, among other things that you probably don’t really have control over. Active ventilation is the same idea, but you use strategically placed fans to induce good airflow. For example, if you have two windows that are opposite to each other, you can place a fan at one window to intake air, and a fan at the other window as exhaust.

    • Novocirab@feddit.org
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      24 hours ago

      Came here to point to this.

      Also, if outside noise is preventing one from keeping the windows open over night, get custom-fitted silicone earplugs.

  • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Lose weight. I’m totally serious. Thin people have much higher natural tolerance for heat.

    It’s no coincidence that so many developed countries have become addicted to AC. The fact is that most people there are now overweight and in many (USA most obviously) over 40% are literally obese. Conversely, AC is much less common in places like France and Japan, and it’s not just because they’re too cheap.

    If you want to stay cool in a heatwave, it helps not to be wearing a blubber overcoat that you can’t remove.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Not disagreeing but none of my kids are at all fat and one is so hot-natured, it’s not always just insulation. One of their cousins, too, she was just never cold and always hot.

      I did always joke with my ex that I was built spare because I am from the hot part of the world, and he was padded because he was from Michigan.

    • 6nk06@sh.itjust.works
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      6 hours ago

      AC is much less common in places like France

      It’s everywhere around me (in France) because it’s becoming too hot, whether people are fat or not.

    • JayGray91🐉🍕@piefed.social
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      19 hours ago

      I mostly agree since it’s healthy either way, but back when I was half my weight when I studied in a 4 seasons country, coming back to the year round hot and humid home country still makes me immediately sweat the moment I step out of the plane. Constantly felt like I always have a blanket on me. Anecdotal for sure, but I just want to say my piece.

    • th3dogcow@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Conversely, AC is much less common in places like France and Japan, and it’s not just because they’re too cheap.

      I assure you that practically every household in Japan has an air conditioner these days. Maybe not some decades ago but things have changed, including the climate. And companies are legally required to keep offices at no higher than 28°C, too.

      • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Offices in all countries have AC, the question is about homes. I doubt “practically every household” in Hokkaido has AC. Here in northern Europe, very few do.

        • th3dogcow@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Every home I have visited in Japan over the past two decades has had A/C units. You may be right that in regions where it is very cold an A/C unit may not be necessary. However, as heat pumps are one of if not the most energy efficient ways to not only cool but also heat a home, I wouldn’t be surprised to find them even in colder regions.

          Add on the fact that houses in Japan are generally considered a depreciating asset, so until recently demolitions and new construction were favored over renovations, I stand by my first statement.

          Additionally, every place I have ever rented has come with at least one A/C unit, and additional holes are predrilled in other rooms so that split systems can be installed.

          • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Fair enough. Most of Japan is hotter in summer than northern Europe. Here it has been 35C for much of the last week and domestic AC penetration remains extremely low. There are also quite few fat people, and the two things are probably at least a little bit connected.

            • th3dogcow@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              I don’t disagree that people who are overweight will feel hotter. The rainy season makes it feel hotter than just the temperature here, too. Buildings here are probably more poorly insulated, too.

        • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          My office in Southern Germany doesn’t have AC, even though it should. It’s the hottest part of Germany.

          • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Give it a couple of years and a few more heatwaves! This is the insidious problem with heatwaves, as I see it. Tolerance for heat and cold is in large part cultural - go to Portugal in winter to see how tolerant people can be of cold indoor temperatures. But with every new 3-day heatwave, Europeans are going to rush out to buy AC units to escape the immediate misery. Next thing we know the continent will be like the US, where it’s just unacceptable for indoor temperature to be outside the 19-23C range. And mass AC is just a climate disaster. That’s my worry.

    • clif@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      This may explain why I’m wearing a hoodie in the office in late June while most everybody else is comfortable or still hot.

      But, I also do lots of outdoors stuff and acclimate to heat up to a point.

    • BruceLee@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      I gain weight this winter. I have such a trouble cooling down the part of my body that gain the weight. It is hard…

    • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      How is losing weight going to help right now? They can hardly lose enough weight in time for the next heatwave.

      Or maybe they’re in the menopause.

      Or maybe it’s 50C out.

      Or maybe they’re on one of the plethora of medications that causes heat intolerance.

      Or maybe they’re elderly.

      AC is horrifically expensive (energy bills) and terrible for the environment, by the way. People aren’t cheap, they can’t afford it.

      • BruceLee@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        I found it good advice. We don’t know every detail about OP life. Of course, some example won’t apply but that’s fine.

  • cb900f_bodhi@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 day ago

    If your roof is not shaded by trees, a light colored roof makes a huge difference. This can be accomplished a number of ways. Replacing your roofing material with a lighter color is ideal but expensive. Coating it with something like Henry Tropi-cool is durable but the product is also a little pricey. The absolute budget way to do this on an asphalt shingled roof is with a slurry of masonry lime. I’ve experimented with all of these methods and the results are dramatic. In my case the coating paid for itself within one season and made the house noticeably more comfortable.

    • wintermute@discuss.tchncs.de
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      17 hours ago

      This works really well. I also open the downstairs windows. The hot air going up and out creates a draft effect, sucking in cold air from the downstairs windows.

      • Jarix@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I could never do this, I get swarmed by June bugs at about 850 everyday, it’s like someone kicked a hornets nest outside my windows :(

  • susi7802@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    Most importantly: Make sure no direct sunlight enters the house. Insulate your roof. Plants in the house can have a modest cooling effect. Close doors to rooms that get hot faster. Lower floors (especially cellars) are cooler, with a small ventilator this cooler air can be transported upwards. At night, use small ventilators to “pump” cool night air through all the floors.

  • thedeadwalking4242@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Probably not exactly the answer you’re looking for.

    If you have access to sun and are tech savvy, hop on Facebook market place or equivalent. You can probably get very cheap used solar panels that still have plenty of output. Rig up a AC unit in one room and cool just it.