June 2008 Weddings
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
What do you keep your heat set at?
We have oil heat and its so expensive in the winter so we keep it set at 60 when we are home and I turn it down to 55 when we are not home during the day. Just curious what others have it set at! And if there is a difference between those who have oil, gas, or electric!
Re: What do you keep your heat set at?
Between 68-70. I hate having the heat on and all the "dry" heat. Gives me a headache.
We tend to use space heaters when we are the living room or family room. At night we have an electric blanket, although I haven't pulled it out the closet yet this year.
Our electric bill is typically lowest in the winter and it skyrockets during the summer. this year should be even cheaper because we got new and improved insulation in the attic this summer.
Damn, Ranger, I thought my house was cold! We have it at 62 when we're gone and 66 when we're home. If it's a weekend and we're around all day and it's the dead of winter I might kick it to 68. Maybe.
We used to do 62 at night but now we keep it at like 66 at night too since having Janie.
Oh and we have oil - but a new burner which seems much more efficient than our old one b/c we only had to get oil 2-3 times the whole of last winter.
Blog
16 read! my read shelf:
Neena Mae. 1/7/10
"A baby nursing at a mother's breast is an undeniable affirmation of our rootedness in nature." - David Suzuki
We have gas heat and our thermostat is set to 64 during the day and overnight, I think it goes up to around 67 in the evening. The thermostat is in the central room in the house where it's warmer, the kids' bedrooms have been 62 according to our new baby monitor.
I'm surprised so many of you keep it in the 60s, isn't that too cold for babies? Kodi sleeps with lots of blankets and since he's older I'm not worried about him suffocating but how do you keep newborns and infants warm?
Aspen Marley ~ 12.22.11
My Blog of Randomness - Pocketful of Roses
I think we have gas, but it could be electric.
We keep it at 63 at night and during the day while we're at work and turn it up to 68 when we're home in the evenings on on weekends.
I think we'll probably bump up the night and daytime temps once the baby is born.
I've always read that for babies (infants even) it should be cooler (as a SIDS preventative thing). Other than that, it's really all what you get used to. When I lived in NYC and didn't pay for heat or control it it was sweltering all the time and that's what I got used to. So, when I came to visit my Mom's 60-something house I would die. Now that's my house and it's chilly, but I am not wearing 10 layers like I used to.
Jane sleeps in just a fleece footed PJs. She is always warm in the morning.
It depends on who is working the thermostat. Generally, I think we turn it up to 68 or 69 when we're home and up. Then down to 64 or 65 when we're away or sleeping. We have gas heat. We also use space heaters.
With LO, now I'm worried about him being warm enough since you're not supposed to put heavy covers on them at night. His little hands are freezing most of the time.
Our pedi told us to keep it at 68 during the day and 65 at night so that's what we do. We put A & R either in a fleece sleeper with a cotton swaddle or a cotton sleeper with a fleece swaddle at night.
ETA: We have gas heat.
m/c 7/17/10
Dx: MFI- 3% morph
IUIs: Gonal-F + Ovidrel + b2b IUI= BFNs
IVF with ICSI= BFP! EDD 11/25/11
3/18- Beta #1 452! 3/20- Beta #2 1,026!! 3/27- First u/s- TWINS!
Our twin boys arrived at 36w5d due to IUGR and a growth discordance
Be kinder than necessary, for everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.
My Blog Picture A Day Blog
BFP 11/25/2009 ~ Blighted Ovum Discovered 12/10/2009 ~ Natural M/C 12/24/2009
BFP 3/29/2010 ~ EDD 11/25/2010
Sawyer Marshall ~ November 16, 2010
We have gas heat, and keep it at 68-70 when we're home and awake. We drop it down to 62 when we're gone or sleeping. Nora's room is chilly when we drop the temp at night, so we use a space heater in there (our electric is a lot cheaper than our gas).
Before Nora, we'd drop the heat in our old place down to 56 at nighttime or when we were gone. It was fine when we were sleeping under our big down comforter, but god forbid you had to pee--that toilet seat was COLD!
Blog
We keep our heat at 66, and will sometimes bump up to 68 during the hours we're home. Hours we are sleeping/away from the house it is no warmer than 64. Typically even with it set at 68 I'm chilly. I'm curious to see if we need to change it when LO is born since her bedroom is colder than ours. And we have electric heat.
My parents who are on oil are 65 during the day and 55 at night. The house NEVER gets all the way up to 65 since it's old/drafty. I am going to freeze my arse off over Christmas.
My boring blog
Same here.
Last winter we kept it warmer, more like 65. We have the old radiators and they release steam as well so once the heat is done going off it's usually almost 68 in the house. This winter we turned it down because last year we were getting an oil delivery almost every month and it was costing $500 every delivery!!
Our pedi also said to not overheat the kids. But we put them in fleece sleepers. They snuggle up in their cribs and never feel cool. I love sleeping in cooler temps anyway and my kids seem to like it as they sleep from 6pm to 7am no problems.
Cut the Crap - Weight loss journey of a Few Fat Chicks
This for us. But we also turn it down at night as well, because it gets pretty hot up on the second floor.
We have gas heat. It's set at 68 until it get's in the 20s at night, then we change it to 67 so it won't run non-stop.
Our highest bills are in Jan-Mar, and the record was $190 last year when it was in the teens outside for a month.
I've heard/read from reliable sources that changing the temp from day to night makes your bills higher. I don't know if it's true, but I just try to keep ours steady.
Landon sleeps in fleece pjs with a short sleeved onesie underneath. I also give him a blanket, but he's always on top of it instead of under it when I check on him.
Life of mrsjanks