The hot weather arrived a few days ago. We will still have days of moderate or temperate weather, but the hot and humid days will return again and again until they arrive to stay. Every year I hold off turning on the air-conditioner until June 1 if I can. I live in the middle south and our summers are always hot and humid for at least two months. With global climate change, it will be for three months (or more) in the years to come.
I closed my windows to create my climate cave shutting out all the sounds from outdoors. I lose the bird and animal sounds and the sound of the wind pushing through the fat green leaves, but I do not mind closing out the teenage girl's loud radio that sits on her dock across the river every weekend. I do not mind missing the sound of the lawn mowers and speed boats and barking dogs. I do not mind muffling the loud museum concert that is being held just two miles away in the outdoor garden that I help weed! I live in the woods where there should be little sound, but the water is a perfect surface for carrying the abundance of man-made noise on weekends.
Once the AC is on, we become spoiled. We go outside to work or shop or visit early in the day until the sweat drips from our brows and nose and then we quickly retreat to the cool space of this house and rarely go out again. We tend to hide and find indoor things to do in the middle of the day. We get better about combining errands.
I find that I must also remember to bring sweaters to restaurants and movie theaters and museums because they crank up the AC much higher than I do. I am always amazed at the way stores in the beautiful climate of Hawaii find it necessary to create rooms like refrigerators for shopping.
When I flipped the switch this year I was even more aware of how big a decision this was. Even with zoned cooling, I am burning fossil fuels to heat rooms with high ceilings that I rarely use. I am pushing artificially cooled air down hallways and into upstairs bedrooms. What a luxury to burn this fossil fuel while people all over the world deal with the climate into which they were born, without AC! Here in the mid-south people used to quit housework early and sit on porches under fans and pant until the sun set and they could move once again. What a luxury to be able to afford this expense...for now. I cannot help but think we as a society in North America are at the peak of of our life style. I cannot help but think generations to follow will have many compromises to make in how they live their lives that would surprise us if we were here 40 years from now.
I closed my windows to create my climate cave shutting out all the sounds from outdoors. I lose the bird and animal sounds and the sound of the wind pushing through the fat green leaves, but I do not mind closing out the teenage girl's loud radio that sits on her dock across the river every weekend. I do not mind missing the sound of the lawn mowers and speed boats and barking dogs. I do not mind muffling the loud museum concert that is being held just two miles away in the outdoor garden that I help weed! I live in the woods where there should be little sound, but the water is a perfect surface for carrying the abundance of man-made noise on weekends.
Once the AC is on, we become spoiled. We go outside to work or shop or visit early in the day until the sweat drips from our brows and nose and then we quickly retreat to the cool space of this house and rarely go out again. We tend to hide and find indoor things to do in the middle of the day. We get better about combining errands.
I find that I must also remember to bring sweaters to restaurants and movie theaters and museums because they crank up the AC much higher than I do. I am always amazed at the way stores in the beautiful climate of Hawaii find it necessary to create rooms like refrigerators for shopping.
When I flipped the switch this year I was even more aware of how big a decision this was. Even with zoned cooling, I am burning fossil fuels to heat rooms with high ceilings that I rarely use. I am pushing artificially cooled air down hallways and into upstairs bedrooms. What a luxury to burn this fossil fuel while people all over the world deal with the climate into which they were born, without AC! Here in the mid-south people used to quit housework early and sit on porches under fans and pant until the sun set and they could move once again. What a luxury to be able to afford this expense...for now. I cannot help but think we as a society in North America are at the peak of of our life style. I cannot help but think generations to follow will have many compromises to make in how they live their lives that would surprise us if we were here 40 years from now.