When we lived in Texas (and had AC but couldn't afford the electricity to run it), we found that putting a big fan in a window facing *out*, and opening another window as far away as possible, cooled the apartment down faster than the fan blowing in. I bet you could put a bowl of ice on the windowsill of the "in" flow and introduce some moisture that way, though less efficiently than if it's in front of the fan.
Another thing I did was, when going to bed, just get a t-shirt wet in tap-cold water, squeeze it out, and wear that to bed. You might want a towel under you so less water ends up on the mattress, but it seemed like it dried right out of mine during the day.
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Date: 2011-07-21 06:37 pm (UTC)When we lived in Texas (and had AC but couldn't afford the electricity to run it), we found that putting a big fan in a window facing *out*, and opening another window as far away as possible, cooled the apartment down faster than the fan blowing in. I bet you could put a bowl of ice on the windowsill of the "in" flow and introduce some moisture that way, though less efficiently than if it's in front of the fan.
Another thing I did was, when going to bed, just get a t-shirt wet in tap-cold water, squeeze it out, and wear that to bed. You might want a towel under you so less water ends up on the mattress, but it seemed like it dried right out of mine during the day.