Heat and the City - Protecting your child
When you have children, especially pale-skinned ones, whose genes come from generations of rainy skies and low-hung cloud, the very sunshine that was your friend may suddenly become your foe. My daughter was born in the baking heat of of a Barcelona city summer. Although I was lucky enough to spend the first few days in a cool hospital room, I found the return home to a non air -conditioned apartment and the subsequent hike in temperature overwhelming.
My friends' son was born only shortly after and when I visited their newborn in the July heat of the Hospital Sant Pau, Mum, Baby, and even Dad were languishing around the incredibly hot ward room half-naked. A small fan, sat on the floor, was being shared for alloted times between them and the mother on the bed next door in a futile attempt to cool them.
All those newborn, white, crisp outfits, that I had neatly piled in my drawer at home, never really saw the light of day. My daughter, in fact, did not wear clothes regularly until she was 3 months old. It was a 40 degree summer and the possibiliy of her over-heating terrified me. The ceiling fans I was adamant needed to be fitted when we refurbished our new flat weren’t working. Instead I carried an electric fan around with me and baby wherever we were at home and even, (my husband still can’t believe it), outside when she was laid out in the moses basket on our patio.
Whereas the danger of over-heating your child was possibly the one informative element to the reasonably uninformative couple of ante-natal classes that I had attended, this message does not seem to have passed on to some other members of the Barcelona parent community. We have all, I am sure, gasped in amazement at the Fort Knox style arrangment on some passing prams. Plastic raincover hermetically sealing a newborn's pram with their tiny occupants swathed in woollens on a hot day in July. I have since been told this is not for fear of baby getting cold but a protective measure against city pollution!
During my first summers in Barcelona, I had loved watching next day weather reports. Even though I knew the metric system well, I would convert the temperature from Celsius to Farenheit so that I could call folks at home in the UK and utter those thrilling words “it's well into the 90’s!” Now, with a newborn in tow, I was suddenly scared to venture into the street. That pesky all-purpose, universal-pram-fitting parasol just never seemed to do its job. Sun would target her from every angle. Luckily my daugher is a little more olive-skinned than some of our friends' children with Scottish and Irish blood in them. If she weren't, I can imagine every mildly sunny day for ever more being wrought with paranoia. At least I am more aware of the risks associated with the sun than during my own childhood, when it was not unusual for me to lie out in the garden at home applying nothing more than "low-factor" olive oil from the kitchen.
Autralian friends we have in Barcelona take sunshine in their stride. They always seem to come prepared and instinctively know that even on a cloudy day, at some point, full summer armour will be necessary. At the beach, their young kids amaze me as they wait patiently to be coated in full-body beachway, flap-necked hats and barrier-style creams with factors so high I never knew existed. I meanwhile struggle to get my own daughter into nothing more than a small swimsuit while she attempts to use her wide-brimmed hat as a frisbee.
Be prepared for the sun. Universal fitting Ray Shade screens from Kiddopotumus, USA are available at Mujer, mother and baby shop, Carders, 28 Tel. 93 315 1531. Visit www.kiddopotumus.com
Sun Protection for Babies - Advice from the Australian Cancer Council
Before you go out
Adivce from the Cancer Council of New South Wales
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Feature Articles
If, like myself, you originate from Northern climes, you have probably
spent most of you life sunseeking not sunscreening. Let's face it,
although you may not like to admit it as the top priority, the Spanish
sunshine is probably one of the main attractions that brought you to
live here. Those warm evenings that last for so many months of the
year together with that consistent summer tan, cannot fail to surround
you with a distinctive "holiday" feeling.


