Earth Notes: KEHS talk: Keep Cool and Carry On (2025)
Updated 2025-09-22.See the slide [PDF].
(Trimmed quite tightly in part because of noises-off!)
[00:00][Marilyn] Why are we worrying about heat these days?
[00:03]It's interesting because Damon and I have been doing these talks for quite a while.
[00:07]In that time, there has been growing concern about overheating,
[00:11]maybe because of climate change and the realisation that
[00:16]thousands of people die from overheating in a heatwave,
[00:21]not to even mention the lethargy and discomfort that goes with overheating.
[00:28]And we're not very good in this country for historic weather reasons,
[00:34]knowing how to keep cool.
[00:38]We still tend to throw windows open even at inappropriate times of the day.
[00:43]We haven't needed to worry about this in the future,
[00:46]but I think we do increasingly need to worry and prepare for the next heatwave.
[00:51]So, keeping cool. What can we learn from hot climates?
[00:54]It always surprises me - people go to Spain and the south of France, etc. for holidays,
[00:59]but they don't seem to notice how people in the south of France and Spain regulate their lives.
[01:05]It's very different from ours. And one of them, of course, is timing your activities.
[01:10]The old Noël Coward song, "Mad dogs and Englishmen // Go out in the noonday sun."
[01:15]It's quite right. Take a siesta at midday if your life permits,
[01:19]but if you can't, early morning is easily the coolest and best time to do heavy work.
[01:26]People who get up late don't know what they're missing in the summer.
[01:29]It's lovely first thing at 6 or 7 o'clock, but it stays hot for a long time.
[01:34]So, that's first lesson.
[01:37]Keep an eye on relative temperatures.
[01:40]Don't open your windows at noon when it's actually hotter outside than inside.
[01:46]And again, you'll notice from our friends on the Continent that they don't do that.
[01:51]When it's hotter outside than in, and it's not that difficult to tell,
[01:55]you've only got to step out the back door,
[01:58]close your windows, especially south-facing ones,
[02:02]draw curtains to keep the heat and the sun out,
[02:05]and then reopen your windows quite late at night.
[02:08]It's not symmetrical. It's nice early in the morning.
[02:12]It stays warm quite a long time into the evenings,
[02:16]but at sort of bedtime you can open your windows.
[02:20]And learn to love shade.
[02:24]I noticed my neighbours in their gardens,
[02:27]they're for ever cutting back trees, and they don't like shade.
[02:30]I think that we've got to learn to love shade.
[02:34]I would recommend, particularly, deciduous climbing plants
[02:40]on a gazebo or a pergola,
[02:44]because they'll shade you in the summer,
[02:47]and then they'll drop their leaves in the winter,
[02:49]and you'll get the light that you want in your house.
[02:52]Because I think we've traditionally had grey skies and lots of drizzle and cool weather,
[02:57]we tend to not like shade and to have big windows
[03:00]and cut down trees because they're shading your house.
[03:04]In fact, I think as life goes on, you'll probably welcome those.
[03:08]Get to know your home.
[03:10]Everyone knows in theory that heat rises,
[03:13]but we don't often act on it.
[03:16]Upstairs and roof spaces may well be the hottest parts of your house.
[03:21]You might find it better to sleep downstairs if you can arrange it.
[03:27]And certainly at the height of the noonday sun,
[03:32]retreating to the coolest room in the house,
[03:35]which might be the darkest room in the house, or it might be the room that faces north,
[03:39]will make your life much more comfortable.
[03:43]You need to pay special attention to south-facing rooms and windows.
[03:48]I think, again, on the Continent, you probably wouldn't have huge expanses of glass facing south.
[03:54]You do here, because we're still learning how to cope with heat, I think.
[04:00]And one thing, and we've had quite a lot of myth-busting this morning,
[04:05]it is not true that insulating your house will make it hotter in the summer.
[04:11]And you've only got to think, you know,
[04:13]if you were taking a nice cold bottle of wine to your friend's house for lunch,
[04:17]what would you do to keep it cool?
[04:19]Any suggestions?
[04:21]Yes?
[04:23]You drink it perhaps!
[04:25]But yes, you insulate it, basically.
[04:27]You grab it in something to keep it cool.
[04:30]And as I say, all the insulation that everyone's been talking about
[04:32]this morning to keep your house warm in the winter,
[04:35]will also help to keep it cool in the summer.
[04:39]I'm going to talk about a few feasible home improvements.
[04:43]You could consider low-emissivity window film,
[04:46]which has been mentioned in the context of keeping homes warm.
[04:50]It will also help to keep it cool.
[04:52]External shutters and blinds, such as they have on the Continent,
[04:56]are excellent for this, but not very easy to accommodate.
[05:01]If anyone looks at the windows in this room and they open outwards,
[05:04]that would not work if you had an external shutter.
[05:07]And I think it would be quite difficult to organise in this country.
[05:12]We've got a thermal image.
[05:15]And that's what a patch of low-emissivity film just stuck on your window
[05:22]will do, it'll make it much cooler.
[05:26]So it's an interesting thing to do if you can.
[05:30]Oh, yes, use a fan with a timer.
[05:33]I'm not going to recommend things like air conditioning and fans,
[05:36]because it's going to increase your energy usage.
[05:39]But a fan with a timer that you can have going for an hour or so
[05:44]when you're trying to go to sleep at night works pretty well we've found.
[05:51]Air conditioning, well, I'm not going to recommend that.
[05:55]There are, and Damon might be able to talk about these better than I can,
[06:00]you can get warm air heating systems
[06:06]that will also blow cold air around your house.
[06:08]But again, if you haven't got them, it's probably a step too far
[06:12]to actually even start that kind of improvement.
[06:18]Visit cool spaces on a really hot day.
[06:21]I mean, this is an astonishingly cool room.
[06:23]It's quite warm outside.
[06:25]It must be pretty well insulated, I think,
[06:27]because it's actually, I've been feeling cold.
[06:29][Damon] ... With the sweat of teenagers.
[06:31][Marilyn] I don't know.
[06:33]But anyway, I reckon this is quite a well-insulated room.
[06:37]Drink lots, save water, take showers rather than baths,
[06:42]use grey water in the garden.
[06:44]There are all those sorts of things that I think pretty soon
[06:47]we're going to have to be thinking about this summer, because we've had very little rain recently.
Show Notes
Recorded with the Zoom H1n, stereo 48ksps.