By Joey Williams
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28 Aug, 2020
Around the world, people adapt to extreme heat through a deep understanding of place, whether it's finding a shady refuge outside, innovating indoor cooling systems, or enjoying cold food and drinks. In order to continue through a pandemic, global civic unrest, and the height of a natural disaster season exacerbated by climate change, it is essential to be able to function on extremely hot days in our human bodies in order to grapple with the larger demands we are facing. In this spirit, CAPA Strategies staff member Thea Kindschuh shares her own and others’ personal stories about how they are coping with heat through their own day-to-day adaptations in their respective corners of the world. Thea Kindschuh, 28, has never lived in a home with air conditioning. Growing up in Portland, Oregon, she remembers the daily ritual of closing all the doors and shades during the day and opening everything up as soon as it was cooler outside than in. If she couldn’t get up into the mountains or to a nearby swimming hole, she and her siblings would spend the hottest days eating popsicles in the basement. They had an enormous industrial fan that her father must have picked up from an old office space in the 80s. It would roar in the front door as it blew cool night air into their house, and her mother would bring them wet washcloths for their foreheads when they went to bed. On the high desert mesa of Taos, NM, where she currently lives, many of these techniques still apply. She uses curtains to block out as much sun as possible from the house during the day and opens the cooling tubes built into her home to passively bring air cooled from the ground through the house. Because her home runs on solar energy, she tries to minimize electricity use during the day to be able to keep a fan running through the night. Cooking appliances are used minimally to keep the space cool, but options like sun tea and cold brew coffee are wonderful alternatives. Tea and coffee are dehydrating, however. For a rehydrating beverage, she likes to dissolve honey, lemon juice, and a pinch of salt in hot water and dilute with cold to taste. “Always layers, and always wear a hat.” - Nancy Ryan, pictured, outside her wood and adobe home. In the neighboring Taos mesa community of Tres Orejas, Nancy Ryan, 86, has the heat and air movement in her oddly-shaped octagonal house down to an art form. She keeps open pathways along the ground from the portable "swamp cooler" in the front room (Nancy has a store-bought system, but you can also make your own ) through to her bedroom, and stays largely in the low parts of the house where the cool air pools. The windows are covered with insulating fabric during sunny hours, and she watches the sun across the mesa for when to open which windows to maximize cool air flow. She is careful to ensure she has drinking water, full oxygen tanks, and gas in the generator in case they don’t get enough solar power to keep her partner’s CPAP machine running through the night, which has been needed more often as the angle of the late summer sun has combined with forest fire smoke to reduce their usual solar gain. Shakir’s son Sahib, 12, pictured in the header enjoying a motorbike ride through the Himalayan foothills. A year ago, Shakir Lufti, 38, was able to move his family from their home in Delhi, India, to the mountain town of Dehradun, which is much cooler. In Delhi, he would fill a cooler with ice and water that would blow cool air into his home. They use large clay pots to keep drinking water cool, and now have refrigeration and enjoy plain yogurt on hot days. Shakir often takes motorbike rides through the mountains, and his children enjoy playing on their balcony or in local rivers. In Milan, Italy, Giorgio Olgiati, 26, says electricity is very expensive so many households don’t use air conditioning. The homes are often double-layered cement with an insulating natural-fiber material such as cellulose, wood fibers, or hemp or cork in between. On the hottest days, he uses a small portable fan in the room he’s using. Of course, Italian gelato is a summer staple and, according to Giorgio, every Italian household keeps a large stock of popsicles on hand. Free potable water fountains throughout the city help the public stay hydrated while moving about as well. Giuseppe Cilione, now 29, remembers growing up in the southern Italian region of Calabria. Before refrigeration was common, families would put their favorite summertime dolce of watermelon in either a cold mountain river or in a hole in the sand where the waves would keep it cool. In the countryside, farmers would opt for wool shirts over cotton year-round, as the material would insulate from both cold and heat. If you have a heat story you’d like to share, please reach out to us at info@capastrategies.com, or via social media @CAPA_HeatWatch on Instagram and Twitter.