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Simple steps to stay warm in a cold house

Posted Nov 14 2008, 12:22 PM by Karen Datko
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Kate at Living the Frugal Life has some tips that remind us of a Montana winter years ago. Making little money early in our career, we set the thermostat at 60 degrees. That was that.

Years later, when hard times hit, we reverted to those frugal ways. To this day, the programmable thermostat never goes above 63 in winter. Do we sometimes get cold? Yes. Do we suffer? No. We know that Kate's advice works.

We recently found Kate's blog and enjoy it because it's so real. Unlike personal-finance writers who assemble advice in the comfort of fine homes, she's living a sustainable suburban homestead life.

These simple personal tips will help if you're among those trading warmer houses for lower energy costs. (For more ideas about cutting the power bill, read "13 easy, inexpensive ways to go green" and "10 easy ways to 'green' your house.")

    • Layer your clothes. She's admittedly a wuss so she wears fingerless gloves and a hat in the house. Extreme? Perhaps. We've been thinking about those old-fashioned sleeping hats.

    • Get active when you feel cold. Hand wash dishes, use the vacuum cleaner. She sometimes puts dance music on the stereo to warm up.

    • Use the oven. Another post by Kate explains how to maximize use of your oven by baking several things at a time. After you turn it off, leave the door open.

    • Eat or drink something hot. That's a normal part of our day now that winter weather is here. After our fill of hot coffee, we switch to tea.

    • Don't pour hot cooking water down the drain. When we make pasta, which we do a lot, we lift it with tongs (thank you, Mario Batali) and deposit it in the sauce. The hot water stays on the stove until it cools.

    Comments

     

    when I was young, my Mom used to iron our pjs after our bath...which was a communal affair with my 2 younger sibings...less hot water and was lovely to hop into warm pjs. When I get home and the heat is down, I wear my scarf which I have been wearing outside...we lose a lot of heat from our necks too...not just your head. Slippers make a big difference...warm feet, warm body.

    Put on some clothes if you are cold, another waste of time from Karen Datko.

    We use an electric blanket on our bed in the winter, along with flannel sheets.  We turn the blanket on about an hour before going to bed for instant warmth upon arrival.  Silk underwear works well for extra warmth and it slides well against flannel sheets.

    My folks always turned the heat UP to 65 during the day and then turned it down to 50 before we went to bed or when ever we left for the day. DOn't need to heating the house when we aren't using it or are under covers.

    Think TWICE about building or buying a house with 20 foot tall ceilings in the greatroom.  Wish we had!  We close heat ducts at the furnace to any rooms we are not using and then shut the doors and keep rest of house at 62 most of the time. We use propane and last year our heat bill was less than $1600 for the year. Oh yes, and I wear gloves when needed because I always have such cold hands, and my bald headed husband wears a stocking cap in the house. It's all about comfort, not how you look! And just because you work hard, doesn't mean you need to reward yourself by keeping the heat high so you can walk around the house all winter in summer clothing.  You have to live within your means and hopefully, have enough left to save for that possible catastrophy like a job loss or health issue or huge car repair.

    For less hot water costs(gas )  i set the thermostat on the hot water heater to the temp that is just right for showering . that way only the hot water tap is used (no sense  adding cold to the hot to get it to right temp

    We are originally from Chicago and have lived in Florida for the past 20 years.

    The winters are like the autumns in the north but we still feel the cold. We dress

    in layers but as soon as the warm sun comes out it gets too warm. It seems at night

    we have the heat on and sometimes during the day the a/c comes on for a short

    while. We set our thermostat in the winter months at 72o and in the summer 80o.

    Our blood has thinned in a Florida climate so we feel the cold more when the

    temperature changes. We have a space heater in our lanai, it feels good after it

    heats up but NEVER leave it on when we leave the room. Another tip, if you

    have animals in the house; we have 2 dogs, they sleep with us and their fur

    bodies up against us feel good. They like to be covered up with baby blankets

    that we buy at Walmart. They love it. When weather permits, we open some

    windows, the front door and we keep the screened in garage door open until

    9:00 PM, then it is closed for the night. At times we do go around wearing

    shorts and tees. Come on down for the winter if it gets too cold for you. LOL.

    Anyone have  any helpful hints on keeping a "cape" house warm in the winter? My mom is 88 and is very cold all the time.  She has always had very low blood pressure. There are heat pumps in the house. They cost a fortune to use.

    We live in Long Island. The cold air is coming....

    We are not moving. The house was paid for entirely in 1991. It was bought in 1960, built in 1938. So it has been updated quite a lot. The windows are well cauked, and some replaced because the weather stripping was power washed out by some cleaning crew.

    It is heated with natural gas and it flows through the registers.

    Ideas welcome.

    on bright sunny winter days open the drapes and curtains covering your south facing windows. Close all drapes as night falls.

    Get a piece of insulation board and trim it until it friction holds in the interior window recess of most of your north & west facing windows. Cover it with printed fabric and you have a wall painting.

    replace furnace filters. If you can't see thru it, it is already been there too long.

    thick socks and a quilt over you are great for reading & watching tv

    When it is cold in our house we will put  a couple of pots of water on the stove half full and put them to boil. from the steam the heat will rise up. I also put  plastic up to my windows. We have a programmable thermostat. We sometime use our space heater if we're in a certain room and do not need the entire house warmed.

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