Anonymous wrote:Another point that you may not have thought about is that she may feel hotter during the day because she is running around the house, playing and chasing after your kids! I know that's the case for me (nanny) and my MB jokes about how I'm always hot, etc, but she knows that that is part of the reason why. When you're home at night/just relaxing, your body temp. is bound to be a lot cooler than if you were there in the day time, running around/up and down stairs, etc.
I even get cooler just sitting down for 20-30 min at nap time! Seriously, sometimes I'll even have to put on a sweater!
Anonymous wrote:We have this issue in our house as well, although sometimes it's me and our nanny united against my husband.![]()
Basically the nanny's desires trump ours during the day - she's the one there w/ the kids. If she wants AC or heat she can adjust the thermostats, fans, windows, etc... as she wishes. We reset when we're home if necessary.
We tend to heat/cool primarily only the main areas we're using (so bedrooms at night, family room/kitchen during the day, etc...) while she takes a "whole house" approach. But she's wrangling our twins so we figure we want her to be comfortable and as engaged and available for them as possible. So her comfort (assuming it's reasonable for the kids also) comes first.
Anonymous wrote:We tend to put on a sweater or be in shorts/tshirt or perhaps be only 90% comfortable instead of 100% comfortable at all times rather than running the AC or heat at every opportunity. Of course, it's on most of the summer, but we haven't turned it on yet this year for example. We have lots of ceiling fans going and windows open.
Our nanny on the other hand would keep the AC on full blast all day (and not turn it up when they're out for the day). How do you handle differences in heating/cooling preferences?