Hot Weather for Old Folks
How are you dealing with this exceptionally hot weather?
I haven't been handling it well. I've been taking very short walks and spending most of the time sitting around at home.
Walking on hot pavement is dangerous for old people, and also very dangerous for dogs, who are closer to the radiant heat.
A few weeks of this and I'm noticing a loss of muscle strength, and so is my neighbor Fred. It happens faster when you're older.
By 8:30 the temperature is rising.
I will change my day pattern so that we get outside by 7:30 or sooner and can complete a long walk before it's too late.
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I have MS, live in Houston area, assorted other diseases. 3 strokes in 3 years. Also have TOPS (Tired Old Person Syndrome). Don’t go out much, just gave my car away…no driving, my choice Am 78. Help care for 3 dogs, 3 cats. That’s my physical activity. I read, slowly. Just finished Land and Regime Change. Watch some mindless TV. Very different living than past, but that’s life isn’t it? Best wishes.
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3 ReactionsSummers here in Texas are beastly.
Many people exercise by driving to a mall or other large indoor space and walking there.
I am disabled by a stroke; walking to the mailbox in 100-degree heat is about all I'm good for.
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2 ReactionsGood question. I'm in New Mexico in the mountains--very hot but it cools off nicely at night. I do get up early, then take a siesta, and stay up as late as I can (11 pm is my best!). I socialize, run errands, etc. hopefully before 2 pm. Garden in morning and early evening. It isn't great and I do feel lethargic but I can do my usual exercise routine indoors. I might suggest a month or two of membership to an air conditioned gym, a visit to the public library to read and get desk work done, public swimming pool (check for quite hours), and a tip from my long ago un-air conditioned student days--a quick freezing shower 1-2 times a day to perk up. Stay cool!!
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1 Reaction@mir123 Basements are great if you have them. Otherwise, you have two options for air conditioning: water-based (evaporation, which only works where the ambient humidity seldom rises above about 65%) and mechanical/refrigerant. Both use electricity, but evaporation takes much less....and water, up to ten 20 liters a day. Latter takes a lot of electricity.
For years we lived in south-central British Columbia in semi-arid conditions. Summers were brutal. My dad, an engineer. sought and acquired a 'swamp cooler', a large cabinet maybe 40" on a side and about the same tall, weighing about 70 pounds with electric fan motor. Inside a drum fan much like your average furnace. Each of the four sides has a 'radiator-like' grill for air to pass through. The rear of the unit has a duct meant to be mated to your home's ducting. a small water line must be affixed to the unit at a suitable point provided on the machine and a shut-off valve for that line. Behind the grills, capoc bags are hung on small hooks so that they lie flush against the radiator-like grills showing on the exterior walls. When the unit is switched on, water runs along small channels at the inside top of the grills and drips down through the capoc bags. The fan draws air through those wetted bags and pumps it into the house, providing moistened and much cooler air. They work fabulously....but not cheap to acquire initially, and more work to install securely and to fit them well. Incidentally, the bottom tray catches the unevaporated water and a small sump pump recirculates that water up to the channels again to re-use.
In a pinch, short term, wet towels and place them in front of a fan. Seated across from that should be cool. And kewl.
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