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Historical_Tea2022 t1_jcmtknh wrote

You all must have to cover yourselves in sunscreen. I heard the stuff we have in America isn't even strong enough for Australian sun

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Daddyssillypuppy t1_jcn80im wrote

We have light 'spf 15' ones but they're mostly face lotions and such that are meant to be worn under makeup or indoors.

For outdoors we have spf 30 or 50 generally. After 50 the protection doesn't increase much so spf100 isn't much better than the 50.

I know our sunscreens have to go through testing and meet regulations but I assume the rest of the world does that too.

We have a long long running TV add campaign called Slip, Slop, Slap, Seek, Slide.

Slip on a hat, Slop on sunscreen, Slap on a hat, seek shade, slide on sunglasses.

Edit- Slip on a Shirt

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palbertalamp t1_jcnh2rj wrote

>Slip on a hat, Slop on sunscreen, Slap on a hat, seek shade, slide on sunglasses.

HA. Only two hats.

Amateur.

I too Slip on the first hat, Slap on the 2nd, but the trick is to Scrunch on the third hat to hold down the slippy slappy first two hats.

But then, I only go outside at night, so I keep losing hats in the dark , unless there's moonlight .of course

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Techutante t1_jcnijgp wrote

They suggest a 30+ for everyone nearly everywhere if you don't want to look like a leather sack at 70.

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gauchocartero t1_jcniwft wrote

If you want to experience the most loving solar embrace visit the Altiplano in December and play a football match at 3500m! The sun is exactly directly overhead, and the UV index is over 20 every day. The crazy thing is, it’s the craddle of South American civilisation.

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TinyDemon000 t1_jcnk78r wrote

You'll be happy to know our work clothes are also spf50. If you work in the trades, the shirts have to meet this standard. People were getting burnt through thin cotton t shirts.

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