heard on radio: put clean towel in freezer/fridge and then wrap it around pillow, to have a cooler head when trying to sleep.
German voters slide inexorably to common sense …
Expensive free range chicken was tasteless!
Sign up to Gransnet Daily
Our free daily newsletter full of hot threads, competitions and discounts
Subscribe
GN members live in every part of the country and overseas and in all kinds of housing from high rise flats to country cottages, plus for some overseas members, the temperatures we are expecting are normal.
So what are your tips for keeping cool?
I will start by saying that I intend to start each heatwave day by getting into a tepid bath, then lying there while the cold tap slowly fills it so that I am lying there with only my head above the water. I will lie there for half an hour or more until I am cold and starting to shiver. I will then get out, air dry myself and get dressed. The bath cools the core of my body and in the past has kept me cool for many hours and at night enabled me to sleep for 5 or 6 hours.
heard on radio: put clean towel in freezer/fridge and then wrap it around pillow, to have a cooler head when trying to sleep.
100% Egyption cotton bed sheets/pillow cases.
I never go outside when the weather is like it is.
Wear a hat if going outside, obviously!
I always wear a hat after burning my scalp while living in Australia - took years to get my scalp and hair back into a good condition. So I can't understand why in really hot weather so few women wear hats. I have quite a wide brim one that helps protects my neck and top of my back as well. I see a few men in hats or baseball caps but rarely see other women wear one.
Come for a swim with me
I passed a woman “ d’un certain âge “ today as I drove past Edgbaston cricket ground, walking her black lab on the lead - possibly on the way home from the park- but it was midday and while she was wearing a wide-brimmed hat, she had presumably given no thought to what the dog was experiencing, both from the sun and the hot pavements. ??
So a thought for our four-footed friends.
It’s good that the media including GN are sharing ideas on how to manage the heat. But when I hear BBC News: “It is the first time a red heat warning has been issued for parts of the UK, although the extreme heat warning system was only introduced in 2021.”
That explains why so many younger people have no idea about 1976.
Daisymae
I'm thinking about making gazpacho. I think that the temperature needs to be 40c to contemplate cold soup?
Ooh, that’s an idea! Haven’t made it for ages.
I just nipped out to refill the bird bath - and yes, the big straw hat makes it bearable. The garden sprayer is at the ready for that lovely lovely fine mist to cool me down. On hot nights I spray the bed, too, before I lie on it.
Soroptimum, the 'cobber' reminds me of the neck tie worn by my Italian friend (it's just cloth dabbed with water when it dries). Still, I can't understand the 'windows open for a breeze' idea - not when it's seriously hot, as it just lets the heat indoors. Use a fan instead.
Wear a hat if going outside, obviously!
MawtheMerrier
However tempting iced drinks may be, Arabs in the desert drink their tea hot - perhaps they know something?
Anyway, tepid or cool is gentler on your system.
It encourages the body to sweat, perspire or glow (take your pick!) which then cools the body by evaporating.
Put damp flannels in the freezer or fridge. At bedtime wrap them round your wrists.They really help to keep you cool and get a better night's sleep.
Currently sitting in the grandchildren’s paddling pool whilst they splash around me.
Too late for this week but I have a ‘Cobber’ which has silicon gel in a neckerchief. You soak in cold water for 20 mins then tie around the neck. Amazing how cool it keeps for quite a while, then put in the fridge to cool down and use again.
If it's predicted to be below 30 degrees, I'll do the usual UK windows open on the shady side thing. Above 30 though, and it's all windows, blinds and curtains firmly shut - except when (if?) it's cooler at night.
I have old white duvet covers and sheets hung across the south-facing ones (on the outside) and I wet mop the floors for evaporative cooling. Spare water goes on the flat roof too!
I get heatstroke quite badly and easily (I adore the winter). Read somewhere that cooling your armpits is the best way to deal with it so in hot weather wherever I go I carry a small misting spray meant for plants and spray away. Gorgeous when aimed down the back of my neck as well as the armpits!
A bath towel on top of the bottom sheet at night and open windows to create a cross breeze - or howling gale depending on how you look at it and if you are my DH ?
Take all sensible precautions and don’t think about it all the time.
I’ll take away the kaftan idea, thanks. Or summer dressing gown over bra and pants , if not too gapey, which mine is.
Have a siesta.
I've just switched my day around a bit so I do more when it's cool. When it's really hot outside in the middle of the day I go into our cool north facing sitting room and have a nap - something I don't usually do during the day. I open the windows in the evening to let a nice cool breeze blow through so the bedroom is quite cool before I go to bed. I also drink tea during hot days - it always seems quite refreshing.
The thing I haven't figured out yet is how to keep my pillow cool. It seems to heat up quite quickly. Anyone tried those cool mats for pillows?
Sorry, M0nica but that just wouldn’t work for me. I just don’t have the patience to lie in a bath for half an hour, especially a cold one - not to mention exhausting myself lugging all that water into the garden so as not to waste it. ?.
I’ll organise my day according to how we lived in Aden which was a darned sight hotter. Up early, all jobs done before 11am, eat light meals, snack on ready salted crisps and orange juice if feeling light headed, drink plenty of water and Maw is right about tea. I’m sure that suffering from a sensitive bladder during my school years was caused by drinking copious cups every day from the age of three!
Listen to your body. It will tell you what it needs. Just be sensible.
Keeping oranges in the fridge is good, they are so refreshing when they are cold.
I haven't been able to sleep the past few nights, but that had more to do with the moonlight from the truly beautiful 'supermoon' shining in through the open curtains and windows. Worth being awake for.
The running water on the inside wrist is foolproof.
Cooling the wrists is a classic! I learned this as a child.
I run my wrists under cold water for a few minutes as told by an old Spanish friend yrs ago it cools down your blood and lasts for quite a while.
Registering is free, easy, and means you can join the discussion, watch threads and lots more.
Register now »Already registered? Log in with:
Gransnet »Get our top conversations, latest advice, fantastic competitions, and more, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter here.