6/27/2026 at 6:44:08 PM
To put it mildly: the reasons why I consider leaving the continent for good are growing and counting - not over decades, but rapidly over years and month.A/C is one reason. I bought one for my condo two years ago after experiencing 35+ degrees Celsius over weeks one or two years ago.
It was the single best decision ever, it is increasing quality of life massively. It cost me roughly 2000EUR - an investment, not a hefty sum.
I feel no difference in sleepiness, mood etc. at during summers where nights show 25+ degrees.
3 month per year for 2 years and counting means such a bargain for me given this summer. Imagine moving to a hotel for 3 month with A/C - 6-9 month at a day rate of around 200EUR. Now put that into perspective with the 2k investment.
Energy costs surprised me extremely. I expected to have to pay adional 200-300EUR as a result of its usage during summer month.
And I was stunned to be reunded 6EUR instead. So it seems to save energy magically, too. ;)
PS: I rarely join any events during summer given the fact that an event with 1k to 20+k guests would not be considered heat sinks. Today a friend of mine goes to an Open Air concert which starts at 18:00. I wished her well, since the heat indicators shows 37 degrees there. I have to bite my tongue to call it a nutjob. In the Italy for example, understandably since decades Open Air events start around or after 21:00. Maybe is has to do with the sun.
by _the_inflator
6/27/2026 at 7:28:13 PM
I understand that there's a bit of a barrier of entry to air conditioners, added to an already high resistance to change, making them uncommon in Europe. What I don't get is why aren't ceiling fans common there? Fans themselves aren't uncommon, so why not put in the little bit of effort to install them? There's an added bonus of being able to run them in reverse in the winter, to spread out heat, which is especially necessary when heat comes from radiators.by dlcarrier