feywon
Well-known Member
- Location
- Rural North Central NM
A lot depends on where you live. Not only general climate of your area but if your house has shade trees or bodies of water nearby and what kind of materials the dwelling made from.
i've lived in dryer climates most of time since 1994. My current house is 160+ yrs old and mixed construction (some wood, some adobe & stucco. The walls are a foot thick. In the summer we usually have a window open on each side of house unless rain coming in that (usually only brief hard t-storm rains in evening, during summer). The cross breeze and fans kept us quite comfortable till this year. We've just had 10-14 days of high nineties and getting below 60 only briefly just before sunrise.
The tips in post #1 work well i've used all but the swamp cooler. The Motel Daughter manages uses them tho and they work so well most folks think it's AC.
Thankfully a wind blew in some cooler air last night and it's barely 81F at 12:12 p.m. Long range forecast shows return to 90s tomorrow, but then only high 80s next weekend. Hoping it's right.
i've lived in dryer climates most of time since 1994. My current house is 160+ yrs old and mixed construction (some wood, some adobe & stucco. The walls are a foot thick. In the summer we usually have a window open on each side of house unless rain coming in that (usually only brief hard t-storm rains in evening, during summer). The cross breeze and fans kept us quite comfortable till this year. We've just had 10-14 days of high nineties and getting below 60 only briefly just before sunrise.
The tips in post #1 work well i've used all but the swamp cooler. The Motel Daughter manages uses them tho and they work so well most folks think it's AC.
Thankfully a wind blew in some cooler air last night and it's barely 81F at 12:12 p.m. Long range forecast shows return to 90s tomorrow, but then only high 80s next weekend. Hoping it's right.