Welcome to your latest obsession

I'm only 2 batches in and hooked.
I've already learned that temperature control is
key; my first batch has a little bit of off-flavoring due to a temperature spike.
If your climate supports it (and it sounds like it might), you can always put a
temperature controller and a
seedling mat in an insulated box outdoors.
The natural climate will provide the cooling aspect; the insulation and the electronically controlled seedling mat (don't use a regular heating pad unless you want to flambe' your beer!) will keep the temperature warm enough for your target temperature range.
That's what I'm doing for batch #2, with average outdoor temperatures in the 40s F right now - and fermentation temperature seems to be a rock solid 66F/18C.
However, this has a limit once the weather starts to get warmer; your batch can only get as cool as your average temperature for that time of year - and you're wondering how to deal with a temperature spike.
You can either start to add ice packs in place of insulation as temperatures warm up (the seedling mats are waterproof),
or change up your styles and yeast strains to match the season (very "old school" - like 1700s olde

). For example, a Saison, using Wyeast's Belgian Saison #3724 would be good between 70F - 95F (!); good for even warm mid-summer, which is when the beer was traditionally made.
And Lagers in the cold winter months should be dead simple.
Best of luck, and have fun!
