10 Ways to Lower Heating Costs

With winter approaching and energy cost at an all-time high, tips to keep down heating costs are called for.

Room temperature doesn’t need to be tropic. All you need are an even 18 degrees Celsius. I usually have that temperature programmed to my heating day and night, just putting it up to 22 one hour in the morning while the boys get up. That is enough to give the feeling of a warm home. It is not necessary to run around in short sleeves, you may wear a pullover or like me even two.

Close the shutters over night. Most heat is lost through windows. Once it is dark outside, you close the shutters until morning. It is amazing how much energy you save that way.

Close down rooms you don’t really need. Put the radiator on minimum but not zero and keep the shutters closed. Keep the door closed to that room as well.

If you are not moving around in the house, you feel colder than when doing something corporeal. While I sit at my computer, I have a hot water bottle under my feet, and a blanket over my knees which covers feet and bottle. As long as my feet are warm, I feel warm.

Draughts are a constant problem. They tend to come in under doors and wriggle around your feet, which makes you feel colder than necessary. Put draught stoppers in front of your doors. You can sew them yourself from old cloth or bed linen. They should cover the length of the door and have a diameter of about eight centimetres to work efficiently. Fill those cloth tubes with something relatively heavy, like dried beans. You might want to use a mixture of dried beans and packaging material. The finished stopper is placed directly inside the door.

Put a hot water bottle in your bed before going to sleep to keep your feet warm. It makes you feel warmer and you will sleep better for it.

Radiators give off warmth towards the wall as well. Heating your walls is not really necessary. To deflect part of that warmth back into the room, put up aluminum foil behind the radiator. The shiny part is the more reflective surface; it should face the radiator when put up. If you have enough space between radiator and wall, you might want to stick the foil onto thick carton and put the carton onto the wall. Thick carton contains a lot of air and is a good insulation material. You might use polystyrene for insulation as well instead of the carton.

If you have windows that are never opened and not really needed for anything, you might put bubbly wrap up over the whole window embrasure. Bubbly wrap insulates quite well, and having some distance between glass and wrap makes it work almost like a double glazing.

You might also insulate your outside walls from the inside. Cork, carton, or polystyrene serve very well as insulation material. If you ever plan to put up panelling on your walls or ceilings, remember to use the space behind the panels that way; straw or reed cuttings will serve there as perfect insulation.

You might do something to your roof as well. You may use any of the materials mentioned as used on the walls. If the roof is hidden in the attic, thick carton for panelling and straw for inside insulation will be most cost efficient.

You might want to go one step further on my hot water bottle. Instead of a hot water bottle, use cherry pips in a cushion. You can warm them on any stove or on the hearth after cooking. They keep warmth very well and always remind you of summer.

If you don’t have any dried cherry pips, it’s something to look forward to. Just remember to collect them for cleaning and drying next summer. Saving on heating costs becomes a year round concern like that, and a very tasty one at that.

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  1. Thanks for the info…I hate cold weather, burrrrrr

  2. who doesn’t? but when it’s nice and warm inside, it’s nice to watch the blizzard outside :)

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