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Sun Block
by
Viking
on 17 Feb, 2013 14:17
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So this July I'm off to the caribbean for a few weeks and I'm from England, so that means the ol' solar panel isn't used to the baking it will be getting this summer!
What do you guys use to keep your domes from melting away in the sun??
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#1
by
Lynchy
on 17 Feb, 2013 14:29
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Whatever you decide to go,with the key is to apply it often!
I am yet to find anything that doesn't turn greasy when I start sweating.
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#2
by
Hingatao
on 17 Feb, 2013 15:24
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There's a lot to choose from but lynchy's right. Get something with a high SPF rating and apply it often. Or wear a cap.
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#3
by
Viking
on 17 Feb, 2013 15:55
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I'll be taking some sort of hat along, don't want to wear it all the time and end up with silly tan lines!!
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#4
by
clarinetguy
on 17 Feb, 2013 17:53
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Headblade Headlube SPF 30 - not sur that is strong enough though.
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#5
by
Gary~
on 19 Feb, 2013 23:18
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Nothing beats a good hat and there's none of that greasy stuff. You will get tan lines but these are not "silly" but lines of wisdom that will help protect you from skin cancer and other skin nasties later on in life.
However, you're in the UK so probably don't get that much sun so maybe it isn't a problem. Tanned skin looks so much more aged and damaged than untanned skin. At least you have free health care to use later if necessary.
Have a great holiday.
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#6
by
skram
on 22 Feb, 2013 08:51
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Last summer I found a Life brand sunscreen - Sport spf50 - that didn't run into my eyes as much as others had (I have a real issue with that when I'm golfing).
Life brand is a store brand here in Atlantic Canada (either Lawton's Drugs or Shoppers Drug Mart - can't remember which at the moment), however, from the bottle, label colour and styling, I think it's a knock-off of Coppertone Sport SPF 50 Ultra Sweatproof, so you might want to try that line.
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#7
by
antoniom
on 07 Apr, 2013 20:32
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I sometimes use the bald guyz sunscreen gel with spf30+ [after my head + face shave] good for head and face its good but kinda fast drying. You'll need to apply it quick or enough so the gel dose not clump up on you. If you use products like these is this common for me to yawn or feel like i'm tired or to have a runny nose or buring of the eyes if any gets in my eyes?
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#8
by
mahaw90
on 07 Apr, 2013 22:12
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P20 is the absolute best thing I've used. Check it out.
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#9
by
bella
on 14 Apr, 2013 17:52
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I've always done well with the generic drug store oil-free SPF 30. I'm a fair Irish lass so I regularly douse myself in the stuff before setting foot outdoors.
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#10
by
TV guy
on 14 Apr, 2013 19:46
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"Life" is the house brand for Shoppers Drug Mart and almost always a name brand in different packaging as most store brand products are.
I'm a big fan of hats, long sleeves and long pants ...and extreme moderation with sun block. The active ingredient in most sunblocks is a known carcinogen that CAUSES skin cancer. The "natural" products seem to leave a white chalky looking residue. There is no single right answer.
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#11
by
Adamski1972
on 23 Apr, 2013 16:25
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I live in South West England and we have had a few days of wonderful weather in the last week. I have been using SPF 20 mans face moisturiser from body shop to protect my head from sunburn. Been careful to not expose my head to the sun too much and now love how my head is finally tanning up a bit. No more white head!
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#12
by
DonM
on 29 May, 2013 09:38
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I am happy so far with Neutrogena Ultra Sheer 30 SPF. In FL sunscreen is a must and this one is not as oily as most. After applying, it has a dryer feel to it and I haven't got that oil slick feel with it as I did with others when you sweat
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#13
by
buddha
on 29 May, 2013 10:06
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I'm a big fan of hats, long sleeves and long pants ...and extreme moderation with sun block. The active ingredient in most sunblocks is a known carcinogen that CAUSES skin cancer. The "natural" products seem to leave a white chalky looking residue. There is no single right answer.
I'm glad someone else brought this up. It's been insinuated that I'm some kind of kook or conspiracy theorist in the past when I've cautioned about this. Good that someone else in here is willing to read up on this stuff.
Aside from the carcinogenic nature of some of these ingredients there is another problem with a lot of the commercial sunscreens and that is a synthetic estrogen that is added for a reason that I cannot figure out.
The following might be a good read:
http://www.uvnatural.com/australia/resourcessunscreendataextracts.htmIt is for this reason that I opt for a hat. I couldn't care less what the people around me think of my hat or my tan lines. Once I had a chunk of my forehead surgically removed due to basal cell carcinoma it changed my outlook.