Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love this time of year to open windows and not have anything running. No heat, no AC. It's that one perfect time of year.
Of course you have to let those outside smells in
/sarcasm
The outdoors smells amazing!
I can’t! The birds chirping around me wakes me up at 4:30 AM!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My children who are in their 20s insist on running the AC LOW (like 68 degrees) no matter what time of year this is. Do they not understand how expensive that is? What’s the reason for this?
My 32 year old sister lives with me. She thinks 68 is a normal temp. I told her it was too expensive. Nothing changed. I handed her the bill the next month. She paid it. Maybe that will change once she has real bills (family, mortgage, daycare etc) but for now it's her contribution to my household since she lives rent free with me.
Running 68F rather than 74F is about $30 a month. AC is way cheaper than heating.
Anonymous wrote:We keep it at either 65 (heat) or 68 (a/c) all year long.
We've been switching back and forth over the last month or so because the weather is wacky.
-GenX
Anonymous wrote:I love this time of year to open windows and not have anything running. No heat, no AC. It's that one perfect time of year.
Of course you have to let those outside smells in
/sarcasm
The outdoors smells amazing!
\Anonymous wrote:My children who are in their 20s insist on running the AC LOW (like 68 degrees) no matter what time of year this is. Do they not understand how expensive that is? What’s the reason for this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love this time of year to open windows and not have anything running. No heat, no AC. It's that one perfect time of year.
Of course you have to let those outside smells in
/sarcasm
The outdoors smells amazing!
Except the outside is trying to kill me this time of year. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:I love this time of year to open windows and not have anything running. No heat, no AC. It's that one perfect time of year.
Of course you have to let those outside smells in
/sarcasm
The outdoors smells amazing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most Americans like to live in blasting cold A/C. I'm European living in DC, and my youngest kid loves the cold A/C. My oldest, my husband and I freeze to death. And in the winter, the heated air is really warm in their schools. At home we just put on sweaters. It's healthier.
"healthier" come on. It's a preference although I do agree 68 is way too damn cold in the summer.
In the winter, the hot air dries out your skin. I can feel it. This is why I keep the temperature down as much as I can. Humidifiers and skin creams can only do so much. If I take away the cause, then I don't need to use them as much.
1. The discussion was about summer
2. Heat doesn't dry out. The cold air is already dry. That's why chapstick exists.