Boston Sunday Globe

An early heat wave is upsetting rhythms of life in the South

Temperatur­es take their toll on jobs, recreation

- By Emily Cochrane

DAPHNE, Ala. — The drum line stood beneath a canopy of trees and rattled through rolls of sextuplets, with reddened shoulders glistening. As the sun blistered the parking lot, rows of trumpet, tuba, and mellophone players marched back and forth, wiping sweat from their foreheads at the end of each passage of music.

Temperatur­es here in Daphne, Ala., had climbed past 90 degrees, and the humidity made it feel at least 10 degrees hotter. Yet even as a record-breaking heat wave seared most of the American South this past week, members of the Southwind Drum and Bugle Corps chose to push on, not wanting to miss a moment of the intensive camp they had been waiting all year for.

“The heat has gotten me once or twice this season,” said Gracie Binns, an 18-year-old member of the color guard. “It’s kind of worn me down already.” But, she added, “I like the challenge of it.”

This is summer in the South. The heat is pervasive, and it demands adaptation. Constructi­on workers, landscaper­s, and delivery drivers wear cooling rags underneath their wide-brimmed hats, and some even turn to Florida water — a citrus-scented, alcohol-based cologne — to help cool their necks. Dog walkers, joggers, farmworker­s, and almost everybody else know it’s best to venture out in the early mornings or the evenings.

But after a significan­tly warmer June, and with climate change driving temperatur­es ever higher, this longstandi­ng patchwork of medical and homemade remedies is becoming increasing­ly crucial for the preservati­on of both livelihood­s and summer traditions.

Before the Fourth of July holiday, the stifling humidity was set to persist along the Gulf of Mexico, maintainin­g hazardous and sweltering conditions even as temperatur­es began to drop a few degrees. And while the humidity should be lower in the West, Central California and places in the desert Southwest will also endure a blast of heat this weekend.

In the South, the early heat wave has heightened familiar fears about heat stress and dehydratio­n and added some new concerns. The combinatio­n of heat and dryness in the small town of Erath, La., at one point raised questions about the safety of the annual fireworks show.

Accommodat­ions are in place across the region: earlier start times for postal workers; more jugs of blue Gatorade at a summer camp on the shores of a Texas lake; and the opening of cooling centers in Tennessee, Texas, and Mississipp­i.

“All we can do is better prepare for it, because unfortunat­ely, it’s here, and it’s not going anywhere,” said Sonny Schindler, owner of Shore Thing Fishing Charters in Mississipp­i, who has been waking up at 2:30 a.m., an hour early, for a cooler start.

On the sprawling campus of Daphne High School, near Mobile, there was no question the heat felt worse this year. The musicians kept one another updated with heat index readings and data on how quickly the sun might burn them. Just days into a three-week camp, sunburns had begun to blister, and awkward tan lines marking socks, watches, sleeves, and shoe straps were deepening.

But band would continue, with barely two weeks left before they were set to trek across the country and compete in a series of performanc­es.

“The reward is definitely very delayed,” said Sophia Farfante, 19, the lone woman hoisting a tuba over her shoulder. “You’re here for three weeks, putting in all the work, working your butt off, sweating. But when you get the show on the field, and you start looking back at videos of you performing the show, and you start rememberin­g the things that you did and the traditions you got to share and all that — it really means the world.”

This stretch of summer is crucial for Southwind, one of 40 marching ensembles that compete under Drum Corps Internatio­nal, which has maintained the nation’s post-World War I tradition of civilian drum and bugle corps. Tuition for the entire year, including lodging, uniforms, food, and travel during practice and to each competitio­n, is about $4,200.

After months of auditions and more scattered practices during the winter months, these weeks are the opportunit­y for the musicians to drill down on the intricacie­s and precision of a roughly 10-minute medley and its accompanyi­ng choreograp­hy on a football field.

The musicians can practice their melodies and train their lung capacities inside, often to the insistent clacking of metronomes. Yet there is little substitute for the hours spent outside rehearsing how to crisscross the field in unison, incorporat­e towering set pieces, and, importantl­y, avoid collisions with equipment and one another.

“It’s like believing in an experience,” said Lucas Houston, 16, a mellophone player from Hernando, Miss. “Every single second you spend feels sentimenta­l in a way.”

Heat, however, remains perhaps the most insidious threat in a stretch of 12-hour days that are often riddled with injuries and emotional stress, including fingers broken and battered by twirling rifles and flags, strained hamstrings, performanc­e anxiety, homesickne­ss, and fire ant bites. Even at night, when members of the ensemble come together to rehearse entire sections of the performanc­e, the humidity keeps them sweating, with little opportunit­y to cool down.

By the fifth day of camp, some medical volunteers still appeared slightly bemused by the enthusiasm of their patients, particular­ly as temperatur­es climbed.

“I’m on the sidelines dripping from every crevice,” said Makayla Chrismon, a 27-year-old medical student among those keeping a watchful eye on the musicians. “And they don’t even look grumpy about it.”

 ?? BRYAN TARNOWSKI/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Camp musicians helped each other with sunscreen Thursday.
BRYAN TARNOWSKI/NEW YORK TIMES Camp musicians helped each other with sunscreen Thursday.

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