My fire ant bites from last week are starting to fade from an angry red circle with hard brown bumps in the middle to simply a red circle. But another ant bit me on that same ankle yesterday, causing me to come running into the house whining/shrieking in pain, going right to the fridge to apply more ointment. And last night I rubbed baking soda on it as well, I was in so much pain. Fire ant bites are way worse, the pain can go on for days not only hours.
Yesterday I was determined to clean up the poop in my pasture, like every Saturday, but on four separate occasions I thought, "I cannot do this. They're gonna find my body out here." The heat and humidity were so bad I was watering the grass around me with sweat dripping down at a high rate. It was running in streams down my face into my mouth and eyes, and dropping in splashes onto my glasses. I kept telling myself "Just go slow" but I already was. I was panting, my body was trying another way to cool down. I have not sweat so much since I tried hot-room yoga years ago.
I'm naturally a sweaty person - even in Winter I cannot wear solid colored blouses to work or my sweat will show, but in Summer humidity I suffer more than normal.
I walked out to my pasture this week in the evening and it was as if it was on fire - I was met with a solid wall of white "smoke" - all the valleys around here are "burning" with humidity. This is not a nice place to live for a wimpy Seattleite.
Yesterday at 1pm the sky turned black and we had another raging storm - the skies dumped down and the thunder was non-stop. I love it when the thunder rolls together into one long sound.
So all that moisture is now seeping upwards even after the rain - it's misery.
It's "only" 30 degrees out - 86F. Not too much for a dry heat, but this is the opposite of dry. I had a dream this week that I was lost in the mountains of Arizona, wandering around in the heat, I couldn't find my horse trailer and my horse was in it.
No AC in Germany: Can you imagine in this weather, sitting in an office 9-10 hours per day, and having no AC? I brought a thermometer and I took some photos. One day last week I was in a meeting with 50 or so people on the top floor, the one with a wall of south-facing windows. It kept getting hotter and hotter in there til it was like a sauna. Sweat was beading up on the face of the guy next to me. Germans don't go for AC - they think it's environmentally irresponsible, and they also get ill when exposed to artificially cold air.
Some of our conference rooms have AC but if I turn it on, someone inevitably turns it off, complaining of "the draft." However when 50 people have to sit through a 3 hour training session, the only room big enough is the one on the top floor with all the sunny windows and not even a single fan to help. I had my thermometer on the floor so the reading shows the floor-level temp - not the human body-level temp. Another day I took the temp by the bookshelf in the room.
A colleague invited me to go bowling and I had to decline, "It's too hot to recreate." Isn't it odd that I declined an indoor event due to weather? Later she invited me to a beer garden and I also had to decline. I cannot imagine sitting outside for fun right now. I looked up, "Things to do to beat the heat" and sadly the suggestions were things like "Go to a movie." In America that's a good idea, not here. I went to a pet store yesterday to get some fish, and when I walked into the shop I was blasted with a wave of heat and animal smells. It was an oven in there. They certainly save money not having to turn their aquarium heaters on in Summer! I was very quick about my shopping yesterday.
At home I have a stand-up box AC unit that helps. My husband was telling a neighbor the other day, "No, she never gets sick from it. She dries her hair on it!" (I do not......unless my hair is soaked with sweat!)
Right now I'm sitting in front of it, cooling the burning bite on my left hand occasionally.
BTW, can you see how German windows do not work well with AC units? I've put towels all around it. When I looked in the instructions for my AC, it says, "Cut a hole in the wall of your house to vent the hot air out." This may be another reason Germans do not have AC units in their homes - they don't usually own their own homes, and they aren't allowed to cut holes in the wall. Next week we get a new backdoor and I'm going to have the carpenter cut a hole in the new door immediately.
I cannot go outside and enjoy my Sunday, just like yesterday. I wanted to actually ride my horse this week. I don't see how that is gonna happen.
On a less grouchy note, here is a building I drive by everyday on my way to work. I love the ingenuity - do you see it?
UPDATE
J agreed to go for a training walk with me and Mara and since it was raining I said yes. Now I cannot sit in the chair to type this because in our 20 minute walk, I was bitten by a horsefly on the back of my thigh (to match the red sanddollar on the other thigh), my right calf, and right behind my ear. They HURT.
Mara tried to play that game again, balking at the top of that grassy slope and ignoring my drumming heels. J got tired of that and reached over and grabbed her leadrope and tugged it and she went forward. Then she stopped again after a few paces and I did my best but she refused to budge. J said MARA komm!! and glared at her. Then he came back to us, gave her halter a tug and she followed again. A few more times and he didn't have to help, she gave up. At the bottom we entered the woods and went only a few steps before J said "Wanna try again?" at which point a horsefly bit my calf and it hurt so bad I said "Let's just go home" in a whining voice but by the time we got to the top of that hill J turned around again, and we followed. She didn't require any urging at all the second time, so perhaps she's improving, or perhaps having J there is enough. Trying this on my own will require a different saddle. I felt like I was riding her neck the entire time, and wobbling back and forth. This horse definitely needs the confidence of her rider, and she is totally using my saddle issues as a "no-go." I am very thankful to my man for helping again when we need it most.
9 comments:
Lytha--I was just complaining to my husband about the chilly gray fog we have virtually every morning this time of year (on the California coast) and your post made me realize that I have nothing to complain about. I will remain properly grateful for our climate the rest of the summer.
Wishing you some good days weather wise and happy rides on Mara.
Your humidity, lack of flowing cool air and bug bite issues sound miserable. With our standing water from and endless slew of downpours, the horses are so bothered by bugs that they won't eat. They just constantly itch themselves on anything they can find, usually tearing skin off so that I have to administer first aid. They are also rubbing their manes and tails right off. Bug products don't help. I keep telling myself this is just another phase that will be over with in a couple of weeks. This summer in Arizona has had some pretty high humidity. We take towels outside with us so we can wipe the sweat out of our faces so that we can see.
I often think about what is happening to our earth with these extreme temperatures. It seems people are lucky to get more than two weeks a year of comfortable temperatures. The only place I don't hear people complaining about the cold or heat is California, but then you have to deal with the smog when you pass through the big cities.
I'm anxious for summer to be over with. People ask me to go places with them too, and I say no because I can't cool down my truck enough to make the drive comfortable. I'm baffled over why anyone wants to go outside at all in the summer months. Even at night, it's still too hot and muggy. If we can go somewhere nearby that has air conditioning, I can handle that, but not much more.
Horse flies suck for sure, I have only been bit once.
I am right there with you on the A/C to. This place we are in has no A/C...We have exactly what you have...portable window unit.
There hasn't been any rain in nearly a month here!
Tara
Thank you so much for stopping by my blog; I love new friends! I'm from Spokane and once we went to Seattle to get away from our heat. The temps in Seattle? 95 degrees!
To have humidity and biting monsters along with the heat sounds unbearable. And no A/C? I'm so surprised they feel that way about it, sounds archaic to me.
It's bad right now..the humidity over here is just..gross. We have a big ceiling fan on all the time in the living room and when Dutch people visit us they complain about the draft..everything is a draft here..not one dutch home I have been in has a fan..anywhere. They also leave their windows open with no netting/screen on there and the dog sized mosquitos come after you left and right.
It's cooled down into the 70's here but within two days we are looking at close to 90.
New here, have been reading back and have a question. Why are you using a crupper on Mara? I've never used one so don't know why it's needed. She certainly seems to react badly to it so I'm wondering if there's another option? If it's small withers, they make saddle pads that have extra padding to hold your saddle in place. Some saddle pads even have a pocket so you can adjust the amount of padding.
No AC, no Ac, no AC.....how can such a highly intelligent culture have such antiquated ideas? I am so sorry for your misery. :-(
As to the bites, have you tried putting apple cider vinegar on them? It helps to neutralize the neuro toxins. It really works. I was stung on the end of the nose by a large red hornet, and it worked miracles. I was also stung by two yellow jackets, and once again, it helped the pain, but you need to get it on there as soon as possible. I soak some paper towel in ACV and apply it to the sting. (Still shaking my head about the AC. I would be less healthy w/o it.)
Those photos showing the humidity in your fields would look so magical and mystical if it weren't for knowing the story behind them.
I really hate humidity, which is why I chose to live in New Mexico. But when we lived in South Carolina the summer's were so brutal dealing with that swamp-like heat and humidity, the mosquitoes, biting flies, flying roaches (they call them a fancy name in the south: Palmetto Bugs...but they are just 3-4" long flying roaches!), and fire ants!
The fire ants were terrifying! One day while at the park, one of my twins who was just 4 yrs old at the time, sat on the curb and was attacked by fire ants IN HIS PANTS! He had about 15-25 bites all over his butt, thighs and crotch! My poor baby! He was screaming! :(
So, I feel terrible for you! And I hope your weather improves and the insects that are terrorizing you, move on soon!
~Lisa
NINETY THREE DEGREES INSIDE AN OFFICE MEETING AND NOBODY WILL TURN ON THE AC?!?!?! BECAUSE THERE'S A '"DRAFT"?!?!
Of course there's a draft! That's the feel of air moving.... really?
I was nodding along, all semi-sympathetic, because I thought you meant "No AC" in the houses... it wasn't even conceivable it would be no AC in the workplace.
In case you can't tell, I'm horrified on your behalf.
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