Oh, and that bit about bicycling around in the noonday sun looking for my lost security badge ... while wearing a tank top for one of the first times in the season?
Right, then; don't bother coming to visit Lochac. You've just got the most memorable experience of such a journey without even leaving home. (Well, second most memorable, but since I doubt you want to come all this way just to be mortally wounded by a vicious koala, I suspect you're better off not doing it.)
Might I recommend light-weight, long sleeved silk shirts for your mid-day rides? Nearly as cool as the tank-top, but prevents sun burns, without needing to rub on a bunch of sunscreen...
(And ignore Bat--I've been in Australia three years and never had a sunburn! and the only koalas I've seen have been sleepy things content to be shown off to the tourists at the animal park.)
Silk shirts aren't a guarantee on sunburn prevention. I burnt through on on a Costa Rican beach several years ago. I had an interesting line where the burn changed intensity because of the shoulder yoke. Either way it stung.
I never burn when I visit hot places like Portugal or Colorado because I know to cover up and slap on the sunscreen, but I usually get caught out at least once per year due to our changeable Welsh climate.
I have fair skin which has been crispied a number of times in my years of biking the sun-filled Mt Diablo Valley for hours at a time.
Since I discovered Nutrogena bath oil about 20 years ago, I seem to be burning far less .. even when I've forgotten to use the sunscreen. Give it a try. After showering, just spread it on all over. It's good stuff. (and I don't even sell it!)
What colour & thickness was the shirt? I've never managed to burn through silk, but I wear only dark colours (navy blue, black, or burgundy). The silk shirts I've used to keep the sun off of me have been of a thick enough fabric/tight enough weave that even the huge swarms of mosquitoes in the Brooks Range*, Alaska don't bite through the fabric.
Your experience has me wondering if the difference between our experience is attributable more to A) differences in the shirts such that mine gave better protection than yours B) differences in body chemistry such that I am sufficiently harder to burn that I require less protection C) differences in local sun intensity/length of time out in it when the shirts were worn?
*Ever stand in a popcorn popper? There so many mosquitoes in the Brooks Range in the summer that they are constantly colliding with geologists as they go about their mapping. Face netting is strongly recommended!
I think it was mostly A and C. The shirt was a dress-shirt weight -- on the thinnish side. It was also bright red (we originally thought I might have sweated the dye out of it as it was not terribly colorfast).
I had been beachcombing in Costa Rica for a month or so at that point, so I shouldn't have burned, but the tropical sun can get you at any time (except night).
One of things going on here ... you know how I've been whining about how cold it's been here and where was my summer? Well, that's meant that I've been wearing long-sleeved shirts to work (and therefore, on my lunchtime ride) until just this week. Normally I'd transition gradually into tanning as the sleeves shortened and the sun brightened. This time, it all conspired to make me forget that I hadn't laid down a good foundation.
But also, normally I'm only out there for an hour. If I'd only been out for an hour, even with the pasty-white skin showing on my shoulders, I wouldn't have burned. I assure everyone that when I'm planning to be outdoors with exposed skin for an extended period of time, I apply the SPF 1,000,000 liberally.
Different clothes have a different SPF -- most T-shirts have an SPF of about 4, for example. Red clothes are reported to let more UV through than blue clothes, meaning you're more likely to burn through a red shirt than a blue shirt. Sadly, I can't find the article I read that claimed that the color made a difference to give you a citation. A quick stroll through .edu sites for "sun protective clothing" turns up several comments that dark colors are best (along with tightness of weave and fabric thickness), but nothing specifically blue vs. red.
Ouch! Hope you at least found the badge. Since I'm well over a week behind in reading, I'm sure it's moot now, but I echo the aloe suggestions. I'm not good at breaking parts of plants off, but if you look hard enough, you can find goop in a bottle that is actually mostly (over 99%) aloe (I'll bet the rest is for the texture and perhaps a preservative) -- I've seen it in both green and clear). And when it's not quite so red and angry, lotions with vitamin E will help with the pliability and all.
no subject
It will help reduce the burning sensation as well as help it heal faster.
S
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Might I recommend light-weight, long sleeved silk shirts for your mid-day rides? Nearly as cool as the tank-top, but prevents sun burns, without needing to rub on a bunch of sunscreen...
(And ignore Bat--I've been in Australia three years and never had a sunburn! and the only koalas I've seen have been sleepy things content to be shown off to the tourists at the animal park.)
no subject
These days I don't go out of the house w/o spraying on the Neutrogena SPF 70 'body mist' sunblock.
no subject
S
no subject
I never burn when I visit hot places like Portugal or Colorado because I know to cover up and slap on the sunscreen, but I usually get caught out at least once per year due to our changeable Welsh climate.
no subject
Since I discovered Nutrogena bath oil about 20 years ago, I seem to be burning far less .. even when I've forgotten to use the sunscreen. Give it a try. After showering, just spread it on all over. It's good stuff. (and I don't even sell it!)
no subject
Your experience has me wondering if the difference between our experience is attributable more to A) differences in the shirts such that mine gave better protection than yours B) differences in body chemistry such that I am sufficiently harder to burn that I require less protection C) differences in local sun intensity/length of time out in it when the shirts were worn?
*Ever stand in a popcorn popper? There so many mosquitoes in the Brooks Range in the summer that they are constantly colliding with geologists as they go about their mapping. Face netting is strongly recommended!
no subject
no subject
I had been beachcombing in Costa Rica for a month or so at that point, so I shouldn't have burned, but the tropical sun can get you at any time (except night).
S
no subject
One of things going on here ... you know how I've been whining about how cold it's been here and where was my summer? Well, that's meant that I've been wearing long-sleeved shirts to work (and therefore, on my lunchtime ride) until just this week. Normally I'd transition gradually into tanning as the sleeves shortened and the sun brightened. This time, it all conspired to make me forget that I hadn't laid down a good foundation.
But also, normally I'm only out there for an hour. If I'd only been out for an hour, even with the pasty-white skin showing on my shoulders, I wouldn't have burned. I assure everyone that when I'm planning to be outdoors with exposed skin for an extended period of time, I apply the SPF 1,000,000 liberally.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject