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Brrrr - What are you doing to keep warm

(199 Posts)
JessM Tue 31-Jan-12 16:18:56

It really feels like winter now. What happened to that mild weather? Set to hover around freezing for the rest of the week at least.
Apart from lots of thin but warm layers and hot drinks what else to do?
Just about to go round and make sure all upstairs curtains closed and doors shut, which reduces heat loss.
I have ordered more fleecy blankets from Zara home sale. And some new merino gloves from the outdoor shop.
Sit with laptop on knees instead of table...
I have also bought a fan heater so that if I am at home I can just heat the room I am in, instead of whole 3 stories.
Other thoughts on keeping warm?

glammanana Sun 12-Feb-12 00:32:44

glass worst mistake I have made this week was to go to LE site,I am now waiting delivery of black 3/4 length squall jacket and light weight jacket for DH that was also £14.50,also ordered some duckkie boots for DGS,I like some of the boots also but have two good pairs and will wait until next year.

jack Sat 11-Feb-12 21:19:53

I'm Jack's husband and 8 years' older. I went to boarding school in 1945 aged 6. The school was unbelievably cold particularly in 1946/7. I had chilblains on my toes, fingers, ears and behind my knees. They were with me every winter until 1956-the year I left school. That year I remember my doctor gave me an injection of a massive dose of vitamin A. I didn't get chilblains again but then I was also free of that cold, cold school! Two years' later I was called up into the RAF but I didn't get chilblains despite sleeping in cold Nissan huts. How those poor military personnel managed in the trenches in WW1 and on the Arctic Convoys, I just do not know. Brrr. Off to bed with a hotty now! Warm wishes - Richard.

Woody Sat 11-Feb-12 20:28:03

Oh I forgot - hot water bottle under my feet too.

glassortwo Sat 11-Feb-12 20:27:02

I have resisted the temptation to browse on Landsend until I my DD mentioned coats and I mention the sale at Landsend, and I had to go onto the site to show her. But I have managed to get a great bargain its a shower proof jacket which is perfect for the school run when it warms up and it was only £14.50.

www.landsend.co.uk/pp/StormRaker-Jacket~12741_59.html?bcc=y&CM_MERCH=IDX_00008__0000000022&origin=index

Woody Sat 11-Feb-12 20:26:37

Wrap myself in my "Slanket" to keep warm, mind you bit of an effort to put on and take off and once its on you just have to stay there!

Greatnan Sat 11-Feb-12 18:36:41

I heard on the radio that up to a quarter of UK retired people are in 'fuel poverty' - i.e. they spend 10% of their income on keeping warm. I spend only about 3% because my flat is very small and very well insulated, and I am away for about 3 months a year on various holidays.
Travel is my biggest expense - about 50% of my income!

goldengirl Sat 11-Feb-12 17:48:11

I remember chilblains too. My extremities get very cold as does the rest of me, so sod the cost we bung up the heating a tad during the day. As we're not drinkers, rarely take holidays, or anything else - apart from the odd Baileys grin - warmth is our luxury. I just can't bear being cold.

jeni Sat 11-Feb-12 17:40:02

Erythema ab ignia ithink

Oxon70 Sat 11-Feb-12 17:18:06

I remember chilblains - not very often but my children and grandchildren don't know what they are!

The scorch marks on shins were called 'fireside tartan' in Dundee.

jeni Sat 11-Feb-12 17:10:12

Whisky mac sounds good. Mmm? How many pro points I wonder?

Ariadne Sat 11-Feb-12 17:09:13

And scorch marks on your shins from sitting too close to the fire?

jack Sat 11-Feb-12 17:05:56

Who remembers chilblains? I was reminded of the agony of getting up in a freezing house when our gas and electricity failed last night and we were without heat, light and hot water until later this morning. Luckily my be-hatted and duffel-coated husband found a "tripper" in our modern electrical circuit and we're now warm and cosy again. We can also watch television, read our books and use our computers. I think we often forget how spoilt we are in our centrally heated houses and I never want to go back to those Bad Old Days that some people refer to as the Good Old Days. Hooray for gas and electricity (although the price of both is monstrous) and for thermal underwear and home-made soup (both of which are cheap, cheerful and practical). A whisky mac works wonders as well!

JessM Sat 11-Feb-12 16:01:16

Oh - semi open plan not great for keeping warm. I keep pulling curtains and closing upstairs doors here.

kittylester Sat 11-Feb-12 14:09:46

Our house is semi-open plan and we have difficulty keeping the middle bit warm. We leave the heating on overnight at about 8 degrees and then turn it up to 17 (ish) when we get up. On really cold days we have been having one of those really lovely(!!!!) calor gas heaters on in the dining room which seems to spread throughout the whole house but the cylinders are very unwieldy and expensive but at least we don't have any nasty bills in the pipeline as we buy those as we need them.

Oxon70 Sat 11-Feb-12 14:00:00

Jess - I was doing weeding for me. I know she won't do it and I wanted to free the bulbs coming up from the weeds! Any way it was boring waiting for the gas man. Will look nice later.

Very cold last night and I thought it was me coming down with something, but it was the weather, I discovered from the news this morning. I got a cold weather payment yesterday.
A little more snow this morning but it's gone.

bagitha Sat 11-Feb-12 08:45:57

Good tips for distinguishing dog tracks from fox tracks and cat tracks from both:

www.bushcraftuk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=68389

seasider Fri 10-Feb-12 22:54:46

Hi JessM not sure about a photo ( no publicity please!!) but I bought the insulated squall coat ref 407540FBO . Just gutted it is now even cheaper then when I bought it in December. I have to admit I first heard about these coats on Mumsnet!! where they were recommended for the school run. I could not afford one at full price so was delighted when I saw them in the sale. Whenever I see a lady of a certain age wearing one now I will wonder if she is a Gransnetter!

yogagran Fri 10-Feb-12 18:35:32

That brings back lovely memories greatnan - I went to Chamonix a few years ago during the summer. We took the cable car then the lift that goes right up to the top of Mont Blanc. A lazy way of getting to the top compared with some of the other people we saw up there, but what a fabulous experience. The views from the top and the thin air was something to remember forever.

pinkscorpio Fri 10-Feb-12 15:07:13

I,ve bought some very tight leggings which I wear under my joggers and other trousers. Very cosy and unlike thick tights the gusset does not descend to my knees smile

Greatnan Fri 10-Feb-12 14:54:03

I have just taken my small bag of rubbish out to the communal bins - about 100 yards. I was well wrapped up, and it is dry, but very, very cold. It is the wind that bothers me - if I stay in it too long I get a migraine. I have now snuggled back down under my duvet to watch 'Escape to the Country'.
Tomorrow, I will definitely go for a drive, perhaps to Chamonix, and treat myself to tartiflette (a lovely cheese dish) in one of the very many restaurants.

JessM Fri 10-Feb-12 14:41:52

And, hopefully, not trying to be too much of a hero over your daughter's housemove. Weeding indeed. What are you like smile.
I went out for a lovely snowy walk. A tad treacherous underfoot at times where there is frozen stuff from last week under the snow. But with all the clothes and the fast pace it was lovely. I always like seeing the animal tracks in the snow. But wish i was better at discriminating between fox and dog/cat.
Then i went to have a coffee in our new local coffee shop. Just opened by some african immigrants. They need the business - i am not convinced it is a great spot to shop up. But nice to have somewhere to go with my laoptop for a change of scene - and get away from the temptations of the internet. Talking of which... hasta la vista ....

Oxon70 Thu 09-Feb-12 19:42:54

Done the wrist thing....don't intend to do the femur! This year I will be very careful.
I try to move around as much as possible..not sitting too long at the computer..

JessM Thu 09-Feb-12 19:29:42

Oh wow. Sounds like a lovely holiday. But... What a temperature shock. Wrap up warm.

Of course the biggest risk to our age group in cold weather is falling over and breaking something. Wrists and femurs. Take care if things get slippy folks.

Stansgran Thu 09-Feb-12 18:39:08

Just come home from the far east. The house is an ice box -has warmed up to 10 degrees. It was 39 a day ago. the locals were freezing in the cool morning air-it was beautiful eating brekkie on the banks of the mekong

yogagran Thu 09-Feb-12 11:13:01

Oooh Petal 10 deg - that's cold. I've got chilblains on my fingers this year, first time I've had them on my hands for years. I spend a lot of time outside and some of the things I do need bare hands. I have very poor circulation, hence the chilblains