Re: On heat conditioning/acclimatization
Update on the original intent of this thread -
I spent the month of June (which was unusually cool and mild here) layered up, suffering through any opportunity I had to overheat in a controlled manner (i.e. at home, near water and the ability to strip down if needed). I bucked trees, set fences, dug garden beds, mucked stalls...etc. all intentionally in the afternoon heat with a base-layer and a hoodie on, or a heavy flannel and a warm hat. By the time the heat came around in early July I was sitting outside with shirtless friends drinking beer while I was in denim with wool socks and a long-sleeve without breaking a sweat. I kept my neck covered with a bandana all summer to work on forced perspiration around the body's heat-channel.
In short, it all worked quite well. During the months of the fire season not a week went by without a medical evacuation due to heat-related illness. One person from our 20-person hand crew was sidelined for an entire 2-week run due to a heat stroke, while I watched hotshots in buggies headed off the fireline in California and Oregon a dozen times that I can remember in 3 months. Even on the 110F days I was running chainsaw for 12+ hrs with chaps on my Nomex without ever entering the overheating territory. I sweat like heck, drank more water than I knew possible, but never felt overheated.
Not exactly a controlled experiment, but my first reaction is that the process of controlled heat adaptation worked. I'll be working with a similar protocol next year going into the fire season.
"Do you want ants? Because that's how you get ants."
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