tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613061921096678940.post4197324199000332021..comments2023-05-09T02:42:18.447-07:00Comments on Lawnless Trials Goes Homesteading: The Stores Are Out of Toilet Paper!Pat Lentzhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06757050355770271169noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613061921096678940.post-6486757662516079682013-11-19T13:34:03.647-08:002013-11-19T13:34:03.647-08:00Arg! I wrote a nice long comment and accidentally ...Arg! I wrote a nice long comment and accidentally deleted it. I'm thinking of making a nice box of reusable TP in case of a grid-down situation, and I like your suggestion about flannel sheets- I'll keep an eye open for them on a clearance rack or at a thrift store.<br /><br />I have spent a lot of my life without a washing machine, and between using a WonderWash (a little pressure washer tub you spin by hand), stomping on laundry in the bathtub like grapes and using a scrub brush on the rough spots, washboards, and a nifty little thing called a Breathing Washer, hands down I pick the Breathing Washer. I have one for emergencies, but mostly I use it for king sized quilts or things I don't like putting through the washing machine- throw rugs and rag rugs, for instance, I never feel get really clean enough.<br /><br />My handwashing protocol is to fill the bathtub with a couple inches of water, some soap, some laundry, and then stomp it and swish it for a few minutes with my feet to get the soap into all the fibers, then about 30-100 strokes of the breathing washer to get everything crazy clean, then rinse the same way. I keep a little nylon nail brush to scrub up any stains. When I've had to do this, my clothes come out way cleaner than they do from the machine, with less wear and tear- which is why things like lovely quilts get this treatment, or expensive coats, but not the kid's socks!<br /><br />Hope that's helpful!The Nerdy Housewifehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00581461962216522118noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613061921096678940.post-69633608522739972792013-07-06T04:57:12.834-07:002013-07-06T04:57:12.834-07:00It is really a nice blog about bar mops I have rea...It is really a nice blog about bar mops I have read online. You have shared the incredible information which very real on home and business.<br />Thanks.<br /><br />Bob@ <br />https://www.towelsupercenter.com/wholesale/Bar-Towels-Bar-Mops.htmlAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12315879768066787095noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613061921096678940.post-40542713800614132222012-03-24T16:47:57.205-07:002012-03-24T16:47:57.205-07:00How silly we are to treat something this important...How silly we are to treat something this important as a taboo subject. I like the water bottle idea!Pat Lentzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06757050355770271169noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3613061921096678940.post-31862932960465993792012-03-24T16:27:40.991-07:002012-03-24T16:27:40.991-07:00I like the article because most folx won't tal...I like the article because most folx won't talk about the subject.My solution..A water bottle near/on top the toilet with the squeeze top in it. I keep a clean fresh bottle of water for washing off in a 'no toilet paper emergency' I don't think I would blink an eye at the change. Then those little nappy's would be a lot cleaner on wash day or in the trash Wilde Hildehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14945557815189219755noreply@blogger.com