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Home Prepping
Old school ways to cool your home

9 Old-School Ways to Cool Your Home Without Electricity

Jack by Jack
April 7, 2026
14
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Three summers ago, a heat dome parked itself over my county for eleven days straight. Temperatures hit 104°F by noon and barely dropped below 85 at night. On day three, the grid buckled. No AC and no fans. Just dead, heavy air sitting inside the house like a wool blanket soaked in hot water.

My wife looked at me. I looked at her. And I realized that for all the beans and rice stacked in the basement, for all the solar panels on the roof and the water barrels in the garage, I had done almost nothing to prepare for heat.

That was a hard lesson to learn. But I spent those eleven days doing things I should have already known by heart. Things my grandfather would have laughed at me for not knowing.

Here’s what I learned, what I dug into afterward, and what I now have ready before the next one hits.

9. Cross-Ventilation and the Stack Effect

Banner presenting the idea tat the back-up genertor might be dangerous and that 90% of them are. You have to click on it to watch a video. Hot air rises and your house is a perfect trap for it if you let it be.

Every farmhouse built before 1950 was designed around this, but modern constructions ignores it almost completely.

The stack effect works like this: cooler, denser air sinks while warm air rises and pushes out through any opening it can find at the top.

You can either let that happen randomly or you can control it deliberately.

Here’s how to use it:

  • Open windows low on the shaded side of your house – north or east side in the morning.
  • Open windows or vents high on the opposite, warmer side.
  • Keep interior doors open so air can move through the whole house, not just one room.
  • At night, reverse the priority – open everything wide and pull the cooler night air through.
  • Close everything up before the morning sun starts hitting the walls again.

That last part is what most people skip. You’re charging the house with cool air overnight and then sealing it in like a thermos before the day heats up. Done right, this can hold interior temperatures 10 to 15 degrees below outside air during the worst part of the afternoon.

8. Wet Cloth

Before refrigerants existed, evaporation did the same job. When water evaporates, it pulls heat from whatever surface it’s leaving. That’s why sweating works and it’s also why a wet cloth hung in a window actually does something measurable, not just psychological.

Air passing through wet cloth loses temperature on the other side as moisture evaporates out of the fabric. This is the exact principle behind swamp coolers, which were standard in dry-climate homes decades before central air became normal.

How to Make Your Own Wind Turbine (No Experience Needed!)

The one word that matters here is dry. Low humidity environments, such as the Southwest, high desert, inland areas, this works well. In Florida in August, wet cloth in a window adds misery. Know your climate before you count on this.

To do this, you should follow these steps:

  • Hang wet sheets or burlap over open windows on the side the wind is coming from.
  • Keep a bucket of water nearby and re-wet them every hour or two as they dry out.
  • For personal cooling, wet a bandana and wrap it around your neck – the carotid arteries run close to the surface there and cooling the blood moving to your brain works faster than cooling your arms or legs.

7. Strategic Shading

DR bannerA single-pane window in direct sunlight lets in roughly the same heat as a small space heater running full blast. Four or five sun-facing windows and your house is fighting itself – the walls trying to stay cool while the windows import heat as fast as they can.

Anyhow, external shading is far more effective than curtains or blinds on the inside. By the time sunlight gets through the glass, part of it has already converted to heat inside the room.  An exterior awning, a porch roof, shade cloth, a well-placed tree – these stop the radiation before it enters.

Old farmhouses had deep roof overhangs for this reason. A 2-foot overhang on a south-facing wall blocks most of the high-angle summer sun while still letting lower-angle winter sun warm the house. People figured that out long before anyone named it passive solar design.

For immediate application, I recommend you these items:

  • Exterior shade cloth over south and west-facing windows – these take the worst afternoon sun.
  • Bamboo roll-up shades mounted outside the glass.
  • Cardboard covered in aluminum foil, reflective side out, placed in windows from inside. Crude, but it works.
  • Any exterior barrier that reflects radiation before it converts to heat inside the room beats anything you do after the heat is already in.

6. The Refrigerator With No Moving Parts

Why you should always put a silver coin in the freezer before leaving home watch video nowTwo clay pots, one inside the other, wet sand packed between them, a wet cloth over the top, set in a shaded and breezy spot.

That’s the zeer pot or the pot-in-pot refrigerator. As water evaporates through the porous outer pot, it pulls heat out of the inner chamber.

A Nigerian teacher developed the modern version of this in the late 1990s.

In dry conditions he kept tomatoes fresh for 27 days against 2 days in open air, which changed the entire game on food storage without power.

The Zeer pot can be used for many things, but some that work best are:

  • Keeping vegetables, fruit, and cooked food from spoiling in dry heat.
  • Storing medications that degrade in high temperatures.
  • Cooling water for drinking.
  • Keeping seeds viable during hot storage periods.

The materials cost close to nothing. Unglazed clay pots, sand, water, cloth. You can build one in an afternoon. Same limitation as evaporative cooling – humidity kills the effect. In dry climates, this thing earns its place in any serious setup.

5. Thermal Mass

Thick-walled homes (adobes) stayed cool in the American Southwest for centuries before electricity arrived. The walls were doing all the work.

Thermal mass is a material’s ability to absorb and store heat slowly. Stone, brick, adobe, concrete, rammed earth – all of these soak up heat during the day and release it at night.

The USA Gives Away Free Land. See the MAP Here!

The interior temperature lags behind the exterior by hours. A well-built adobe home can sit at 75°F inside while outside hits 100°F, and it gets there through mass, not insulation.

You probably can’t rebuild your walls. But you can still use the principle:

  • Stone floors, brick interior walls, and ceramic tile all add thermal mass to existing spaces.
  • Large water containers placed inside rooms act as heat sinks – water has one of the highest heat capacities of any common material.
  • A 55-gallon drum of water absorbs a significant amount of heat before the room temperature around it rises noticeably.
  • Shade your high-mass surfaces during the day so they don’t load up with heat – then let them radiate that coolness overnight.

The move is keeping the mass cool so it works for you and not against you.

4. Earth-Sheltered Spaces

Six feet underground, the temperature barely moves year-round. Across most of the continental U.S. that number sits somewhere between 50°F and 60°F regardless of what’s happening on the surface above it.

Every farm with a root cellar before the 20th century was using this for food. Most folks never think about using it for themselves during a heat emergency.

If you have a basement, you already have a version of this. A basement holding at 65°F while the upstairs climbs to 95°F is a survival room, not just a storage space. Sleeping down there during a heat event is the obvious move, and it costs nothing.

For those building or modifying structures, earth-sheltered construction takes this further. Soil banked against the north, east, and west walls uses the ground as a thermal buffer. The earth absorbs heat slowly and gives it back the same way. The interior stops tracking surface temperature swings.

If you don’t have a basement, consider building a small root cellar. Even a mini version tucked into your backyard taps is a life-saving idea; this way, your produce stays cool without electricity, and you get a space that holds steady around 55°F when it’s 110°F above.

GIF banner presenting a project for building a root cellar right in your own backyard

It’s also a surprisingly satisfying build project, and once it’s done you’ve basically added a cool room you can step into when July in Phoenix, the Central Valley, Las Vegas, or anywhere across the country turns brutal. This amazing DIY cellar walks you through the whole build step by step if you want a clear blueprint to follow.

3. Night Radiative Cooling

On a clear night, surfaces lose heat by radiating it upward toward the sky. This is why frost forms on grass when air temperatures are still above freezing – the grass radiates heat away faster than the surrounding air replaces it.

In parts of ancient India, people left shallow pools of water in open courtyards overnight. By morning, a thin layer of ice had formed on the surface – in climates where daytime temperatures never dropped below freezing. They harvested it and stored it in insulated underground chambers for summer use.

Why Are the Amish Painting Their Barns Red?

A practical version of this works right now:

  • Set water containers outside on clear nights – they will cool significantly by morning
  • Bring them inside before the sun hits them and they act as thermal sinks, absorbing room heat before slowly warming back up
  • Wet a flat or low-slope roof at night – the surface drops in temperature, the ceiling below drops, the room below the ceiling drops
  • Clear nights work far better than overcast ones – clouds reflect radiated heat back down

2. Behavioral Cooling 

A banner with a summer shed and the text that says This shed stays cool all summer and you can build it in a weekend like Lego. Watch videoBefore air conditioning made indoor comfort a given at all hours, people organized their entire lives around heat. They cooked in the early morning or outside entirely.

Heavy work happened before 10am and after 4pm. Rest during peak heat was a survival habit, not laziness. Siesta culture in hot-climate countries exists because working midday heat genuinely kills people.

They also dressed differently – loose, light-colored, breathable fabrics and full coverage.

This may sound backward, until you understand that fabric against skin wicks sweat and creates evaporative cooling across a larger surface area than bare skin sitting in direct sun. A loose linen shirt in desert heat outperforms no shirt. Bedouin people figured that out a long time ago.

Sleep was handled with damp sheets, elevated sleeping surfaces that allowed airflow underneath, and outdoor sleeping when conditions allowed. A screened sleeping porch was a standard feature of Southern homes before AC arrived. People slept outside and they slept better for it.

1. The Amish Ceiling Fan

You most probably grew up with a ceiling fan during the summer, or you still have one attached in the bedroom that you haven’t used in a while. But did you know there’s another version of it that works without even a watt of electricity?

It’s just a fan blade on the ceiling connected by a belt to a small wind turbine on the roof. Wind spins the turbine, the belt transfers that spin to the fan, and you get airflow inside without ever touching the grid. Some people use a hand crank or a water wheel instead of wind, depending on what they have available.

The Amish didn’t come up with this – factories and plantation homes were running belt-driven fans back in the 1800s. The Amish just never stopped because they never switched to electric in the first place.

These move real air too, not just a light breeze you can barely feel. Paired with open windows and a wet sheet they can make the room cool down fast. Hot days usually come with at least some wind, so it tends to work right when you need it.

If you want to see one get built from scratch, this video shows you how:

Page from the book The Amish Ways showing how to build a ceiling fan that works without electricity

Old-School Keeps Your Home Cool

Heat kills faster than almost any other environmental threat, even faster than cold in many situations, because hypothermia gives you time to react and hyperthermia does not. And unlike cold, you cannot just add layers. You have to move heat out of your environment, and that requires understanding how heat actually moves.

Every method on this list works through the same basic physics – convection, evaporation, conduction, or radiation. All of them require either preparation, knowledge, or both.

Your stockpile is only as useful as the people operating it. A wet sheet, a cross breeze, and a hole in the ground will outperform a generator you can’t fuel. Keep yourself cool enough to think straight when SHTF (and even this summer).

Are you already using any of these? What did we miss? Drop it in the comments below.


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Comments 14

  1. Poot says:
    1 week ago

    We had a swamp cooler in Texas. They really work well. This was in north Texas, when I was raised in Port Arthur we just had an attic fan which cooled the house. Just geewhiz info.

    Did you like this comment? 7
    Reply
    • CAddison says:
      1 week ago

      We live in the sub tropics. We have spent plenty of time with no power. We already have the a/c on for the summer. Sailing off the grid for months at a time. Don’t tell me about natural “breezes.” “Breezes” means “convection oven.” It cools off to 80 at night. Mostly close to 100% humidity in rainy season.
      Here is what we do when hurricanes knock out the power. We have a fan that runs on the same batteries that run our power tools. Ryobi is our brand. Portable. Point it at us as we sleep or wherever we are. On the boat, 12v fans work great. They run off the boat’s battery
      Hook the Ryobi battery up to the charger and charge on the portable solar charger.
      For us this is a way of life. Not something that happens on occasion.
      Get a fan.
      Simple.

      Did you like this comment? 4
      Reply
      • Outer Spice says:
        1 week ago

        CAddison…Hi…I checked out some of those Ryobi fans yesterday on the web..it’s not hot enough yet in the Pacific N.W.to break out the old credit card. But summer is coming….yee ..ha…!!! ☮. I like get a fan …

        Did you like this comment? 1
  2. TappaSV says:
    1 week ago

    I really like the blog, but does anyone know why it’s been so quiet? Looking at old posts, there used to be lots of comments… and even a guy named Raven who was always causing a stir… is the preparation down?

    Did you like this comment? 4
    Reply
    • Old Para says:
      1 week ago

      Could be that some topics are just seemingly everyday mundane and as such don’t merit comments? IDK. I’d like to hear more about the alternative sustainability that CA has relating to long periods sailing. Assuming the SV after Tappa is ‘Sailing Vessel’ even yours. I know there are books and videos about the lifestyle. An article or two about to topic of life aboard or even choosing a boat for bug out would be very interesting. Kindest regards.

      Did you like this comment? 5
      Reply
      • TappaSV says:
        1 week ago

        Sorry for my English, I’m from southern Brazil. I don’t know how my comment seemed, but it’s not a criticism of the blog, I really like it, but I wanted to know why so many people have disappeared from here… and the world seems to be getting worse every day! The “SV” refers to survivalism.

        Greetings from the Serra Gaúcha region of Brazil, winter is coming!

        Did you like this comment? 7
    • red ant says:
      1 week ago

      TappaSV

      Hello from Texas…

      Well, this survival site was #1 site, when it came to survival information.

      Just like everything else, the New wore off and people faded away. BUT…

      Yes, Raven was a wild card that caused a lot of hell on here and so many people would get mad, if you talked about something else other then the article. Why, I don’t know. They just got soft I guess. Not going there way, just like today…

      Plus when you learn about survival things, after a while you thank you do not need anything more…

      I remember when we could say just about anything you wanted, but now we have to be careful not to upset the group or person, s…
      People have fillings and they can’t hear the real truth, in a asshole way, we have to be soft and nice to everyone.
      Hardness is what maks a real person that can become a REAL survivor.
      Not soft, O don’t say anything to upset anyone.

      Nothing is what it use to be.

      stay sharp

      Did you like this comment? 7
      Reply
  3. Old Para says:
    1 week ago

    Thank you Tappa. No need apologize for your English, you are doing very well. I did not detect any criticism and did not mean for my response to indicate that. Kindest regards.

    Did you like this comment? 5
    Reply
  4. orion says:
    1 week ago

    As a long time Arizona desert dweller living in Phoenix, with a bonus of being chea .. frugal, I can say some things, and even perhaps give some advise. I talked to an older woman, who grew up in Phoenix, back in the 30’s, before evap cooling, and she said, that the reason a lot of homes had covered patios, was for shade during the summer but at night, her family would move bedding onto the patio, hang sheets on all three open sides, and spray them with water … even a little wind, had a great cooling effect.

    As for evaporative coolers … some older houses have them combined with a/c … as they are semi inexpensive to run, with rising electricity costs, and don’t add a lot to your water bill, recycling the water. HOWEVER … during late July, most of August, and into September, the months when we are famous for our monsoons, giving little rain to the northern part of the state, and a lot of humidity to the deserts … evaporative coolers are a waste.

    Now about why I added chea … frugal to my statement. I hate paying high utility bills, both water and electric (gas not available where I live). For the longest time, living in just about 1400 sq feet, by myself … I did not use my roof top A/C. After retiring, while home, I realized I spent most of my time in one of two rooms. So I purchased small window A/C units for each of those rooms. When I was in my home office I used that 110v unit, kept at 80f. Meals, I would sweat it out, fixing what ever I ate, then back to my home office.

    I don’t have a built in pool, so I bought an above ground pool, and several times a day, I would hit the pool, wearing shorts and a t-shirt. Then dry off to not dripping, and go inside. In front of a fan, a wet t-shirt can give you quite a chill. At night, the other 110v unit in my bedroom, while sleeping at a comfortable 80f. My average summer electric bill was $130 and winter $70. My neighbors average summer bills around $350 … winter $150.

    Did you like this comment? 4
    Reply
  5. Kre says:
    1 week ago

    Tappa – like the man said, your fine. Also, things are cyclic. NEW people, stay quiet, shy. Later, they get bold and start to post. they find out its OK and post MORE. Some fool ridicules them for punctuation, not realizing its the THOUGHT that counts ( I wont starve because someone used the wrong There, Their, or They’re or no ‘ in didnt)
    Then they post MORE, after a while all the topics seem OLD and they hold back comment.
    IF, you pay attention, you see some commentors post once in a while, but with great wisdom when they do.

    Red Ant, look at todays military, they go to day camp. Don’t hurt their feelings, don’t insult, don’t WORK them out. Then, when they get to combat, they DIE because they cant handle an 8 minute mile, because they asked why when you yelled DOWN, didn’t check rations, fuel, etc. WHO is your friend ? the DI that was HARD on you, or the one that let you slide ? ? ?
    In Airplane Mech school, I had a miserable SOB that was so hard on a few of us, and real easy on others ( the low achievers) Then one day near the end, a magazine clipping went up on our student post board. I forget the words, but close enough it said if you don’t PUSH HARD you will never find the best in a Man. Instantly, we knew WHO put it up and WHY. that Man, Larry M, made a few of us much better mechanics. We got to be closer to our best selves.
    So, go easy on your children. Expect little from them. You wont be disappointed, and you wont end up impressed either.

    PS
    Spray down that roof in the heat of the day not just the night. Evaporative cooling works in the heat of the day, better than the cool of the night. Let the water get cool first. A few gallons of water can bring down the temp a lot. in a certain year, in the SW they built shopping Malls with HVAC ducting that held a water fall section inside it. It filtered the Air and cooled the Mall about 12 Deg. F, Saved a lot on AC bills.
    If I was in the Mil, in the sand box, in a canvas tent, you bet I would rig a spray bar and a water pump and wet my tent whenever I was “in”

    PSS, want more comments, give thumbs up when you like something. They will be more prone to comment NEXT time.

    Did you like this comment? 4
    Reply
    • Outer Spice says:
      1 week ago

      Kre…you jog my memory…i did spray down my house only once in the summer evening..worked pretty good but the winters are so long i guess i forgot….but probably just started working swing shift….payed more money…..

      Did you like this comment? 2
      Reply
  6. TappaSV says:
    1 week ago

    Thank you all, it’s great to be here with you. Even amidst topics we’ve already mastered, this exchange of “handshakes” is very good and, in a way, reassuring, seeing that there are still people focused on protecting their own… I see that this was something the previous generation did; today many young people don’t care at all. I’m only 26 years old, but… I’ve been in this world for 10 years already.

    Hugs

    Did you like this comment? 4
    Reply
    • Kre says:
      1 week ago

      Tappa,
      your whole generation . . .
      NEVER is it a whole generation.
      That said, many from your generation are so in love with themselves they cant go 1 Hr without taking a selfie. My guess is, that’s NOT you either. The Kids behind you – Todays HS Seniors, I see them every day at work. Many of them scare me, mostly by what’s been done to them – 15 yrs of telling them that normal is to look like a parrot, walk like a parrot, dress like a parrot, show up to work whenever you want ( that’s a big one) they cant see that although it may be tolerated, the late kid is the not “BIG” promoted kid. I see so much wrong with them its not funny. And every now and then I get a nice surprise, I find one with their head screwed on right ! I mean, they know which way is up, not afraid of hard work, expect to start at the bottom and work up. Kids well positioned to ” Go Someplace In Life”.
      With your posts, we see your attitude. You are off to a GOOD start, just keep growing.
      Ps, I will give you a boost.
      Everyone, you included, looks at things from a different angle as you age, GROW.
      An 18 yr old, is ready to answer the call for war ! At 18, they are filled with Die, NOT ME.
      at 28, That starts to turn into, hope its not me. at 38 its might be ME. At 78 its a full out, NO NO NO NO NO I don’t want it to be anyone. And they are content to just pray the bad will slip away in the middle of the night if we just don’t look it in the eyes. Truth is, Sometimes, its a necessary evil to stand and fight evil. This is just one example of a natural perspective shift. Listen to your elders, they have more experience, I didnt say knowledge. Listen to the village idiot, he may be the only one that knows YOUR HOUSE IS ON FIRE. After you listen, then YOU make YOUR decision. So many dismiss a view point, without having considered it, don’t let that be you.
      I would add, 200 yrs ago, every dumb farmer with little education, could build a 50 foot long bridge over a stream, that would hold 20 ton load on narrow wheels. Today, not so much. Our founding fathers, look into them, they didn’t spit out our founding documents in an evening, while distracted by Instagram posting. JFK once said, to his full cabinet, while eating together, Never has so much brain power dined at one table, at one time, since Thomas Jefferson dined ALONE. I believe JFK was correct when he said that

      Did you like this comment?
      Reply
      • TappaSV says:
        1 week ago

        Thanks my friend!

        Did you like this comment?

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