cw3pa
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 336
- Location
- Kingsport, Tenn.
Brylcreem, a little dab will do ya.
Skin cancer is a real risk here I find straws are not as UV blocking as 3 inch brimmed felt.
RAF pilots were known as 'Brylcreem boys' in WWII.
http://www.theguardian.com/fashion/fashion-blog/2012/apr/02/brief-history-of-brylcreem
Of course real men use Dapper Dan's
I never wear straw. When I've worked outdoors on farms and it's been 110 degrees a wide brimmed felt hat is fine. Those outdoor workers that wear hats in the bush here wear felt country style hats with no liner but usually some vents. Skin cancer is a real risk here I find straws are not as UV blocking as 3 inch brimmed felt.
Here is a hat for all you hot heads, Non la
Let's get civil, Please
http://www.amazon.com/Vietnamese-Bamboo-Palm-Leaf-Conical/dp/B00ESUOOU0
Richard
The other thnig that can be nice on a hot morning is a felt straight from the freezer, though the killer there is they warm up again so quickly.
I'd love to agree to disagree, but his posts are so contradictory, filled with bravado and arrogance that I can't tell what is what!
When really hot, cooling the skin too much can lead to getting ... HOTter.
Well, it looks like thousands of doctors around the world lack the "Hosing Down of Horses" course. Had they only attended that, they would have known, they kill a lot of patients with extreme fever!
For decades extreme fever has been treated by lowering patients into cold tubs of water. The purpose is to cool down deeper lying organs and the brain. First aid for marathon runners, struck by heat, most often consists of pouring cold water on their wrists - as main arteries are very close to the skin here.
Maybe you're quite different from a horse ... after all(?)
Remedies for Heat Stroke
In order to treat a heat stoke a medical health care provider will focus on cooling your body, so that it reaches its normal temperature as soon as possible. Some of the simple self-care steps that are advised in this case include:
Cold Water: It may become necessary to immerse your entire body in cold water or ice water, so that your body temperature can be brought down as quickly as possible. You could do this by sitting in a bathtub filled with cold water fir around 5 or 10 minutes. However, make sure that you are assisted by a family member or medical personnel during this time.
Cooling Blanket: If it is not possible for you to sit in a bath tub, you could warp a special cooling blanket around yourself, after packing your groin area, neck, chest and back with ice packs
Evaporation: This technique is one of the newer ones used by doctors, for bringing down body temperature. Since evaporation leads to cooling, this method can be as effective as soaking in a bathtub. In this process, some cool water will be misted on your skin and warm air will be fanned over your body, so that the water evaporates and the skin gets cooler.
Controlling Shivering: It is important to ensure that you do not shiver, as the simple act can raise your body temperature by a great extent. Therefore, in case any of the body-cooling other techniques are causing you to shiver, your doctor may give you a muscle relaxant, which reduces the shivering.
Rehydrate your Body: You need to alleviate body temperature internally and externally and therefore, it is important that you drink a lot of water. Drinking extra fluids can help reduce the risks for dehydration.
Well, it looks like thousands of doctors around the world lack the "Hosing Down of Horses" course. Had they only attended that, they would have known, they kill a lot of patients with extreme fever!
For decades extreme fever has been treated by lowering patients into cold tubs of water. The purpose is to cool down deeper lying organs and the brain. First aid for marathon runners, struck by heat, most often consists of pouring cold water on their wrists - as main arteries are very close to the skin here.
Maybe you're quite different from a horse ... after all(?)
Yup...According to this medical remedy for heat stroke Ole, you've got it right. When I do roofing and constuction in excessive heat, (a lot of times reaching tempratures of 100 + degrees), during the Summer months, we get out a water hose and mist ourselves down to cool off....and of course, most important, stay hydrated...
Never really thought about this subject as I avoid heat like the plague...but I gather from the posts that there is no danger from going from very hot to very cold so suddenly for the human body?
Yes there is.
On the head it can cuase severe headache and when drinking it can cause serious cramps and vomiting. Cóld drinks are thus a bad choice to keep hydrated. Alcoholic beverage too as alcohol will déhydrate.
Thus a cóld beer is a NoNo.
Best is coolish water. Makes drinking enough easiest too.
Bob of Blacksheep Hat Works does not sew his liners in so they can be removed in the hotter months.
Bob of Blacksheep Hat Works does not sew his liners in so they can be removed in the hotter months.
If I had one of his hats I would want to take the liner out when it's really hot so I wouldn't ruin it with sweat stains.