(Two relevant blog articles, how to deal with heat and dealing with heat waves on a budget.)
Right now it's 106.7F (41.4C) outside, and the temp inside my studio where my computer is is 100.0F (37.8F). Humidity is 10% RH. This is about as hot as it gets up here at QH (down in town it's about 116/118F right now).
I don't have AC or a swamp cooler. I have a desk fan blowing on my chest/face, and a smaller blower fan in between my legs. I'm wearing short cotton shorts.
Outside, I have a bag of water hanging from my shade pit. Every once in a while I go rinse off and the evaporative cooling (10% RH!) feels lovely. There's a hammock in the shade pit (thanks again @grundo), but the underside of the solar panels are quite hot so that could use some improvement.
I've been either here or in Utah since the winter, so I'm acclimatized to the heat. I can still think clearly enough, write, do computer work, etc. It feels close to my upper limit though, I doubt I could still cognitively function at 105F indoor air temp without improvements to my system.
Improvements in rough order of ease:
- Get a bead seat cover. Sitting in a normal chair is like strapping insulation to half of your body. Bead covers let air circulate.
- Get a mister bottle to spray myself with. Dead simple evaporative cooling. These two things would probably get me up to 105F indoor air temp without much issue.
- Burning man style swamp cooler in a bucket.
- Put a radiant barrier under the solar panels, ideally that doubles as a drip-pan so we can shelter under the shade pit in a rainstorm.
- My west facade gets blasted by late afternoon and evening sun. An external shade to the west would help my indoor air temp not skyrocket from ~5p-8p. The studio remains too hot to sleep in at night, partly because of this evening blast. Part of the issue is that the breeze tends to die with the sun so cooler night air doesn't naturally flush the studio.
- High Volume Low Speed (HVLS) fans set up to night flush the studio. Once the sun goes down the air tends to cool off rapidly, with early morning temps in the high 60s. With fans to force night air through the studio I'd be able to sleep in it and it'd stay cooler longer the next day.
- Outdoor sleeping platform. There's actually no reason not to sleep outside, it's lovely, except the mice are next level this year and I don't fancy being woken by mice running over my beard. I was sleeping on the rear deck of Serenity, but the mice figured out how to hop up on to it and try to raid my pantry, so at the moment I'm sleeping inside Serenity with the rear deck half open. This is fine, but it'd be nicer to be fully under the stars but protected from the mice expeditions. Soon I want to build a pergola over my main courtyard, and I'll aim to build a good sleeping platform up there. None of my other roofs are pitched for sleeping.
- Go underground. Build a room/studio/space almost entirely below grade with a super-insulated roof.