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Skills For "Living The Era"

sheeplady

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
4,479
Location
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, USA
They still beat using an outhouse. :D

Barely. For me it would depend on how far away the outhouse is from the house to judge.

There are a few companies that sell dual flush toilets in the U.S. (similar to the ones they have in Europe). I admit I'm intrigued by these and wonder if they really work as well as the European toilets. If they do, they're worth the extra cost.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,136
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
What gets me is that the people who insist we must have low-flow toilets can find plenty of excuses for automatic washing machines and dishwashers. (And yes, I've read the studies that claim dishwashers use less than washing by hand. And those studies were paid for by -- a dishwasher manufacturer.)

HOW TO WASH DISHES BY HAND.

Do this immediately after preparing/eating your meal. Don't allow grease/scraps to harden on dishes.

1. Do not fill *sink* with water. That's what dishpans are for. Do not stack dirty dishes in dishpan -- stack them on drainboard at left of sink (or at right if you are left handed.)

2. Drop a bar of Octagon, Kirk's, Ivory, or other hard milled kitchen soap in the dishpan. Fels Naptha will work too, but it's rough on your hands. Run hot water over cake of soap to whip up suds, filling dishpan about 2/3 way with water, probably about half a gallon's worth.

3. Add dishes, one at a time, with least dirty dishes going in first. Allow to soak in hot water for a few moments to loosen grease, swishing them around as needed.

4. Swab each dish with sponge. Faucet should not be running while dishes are being washed.

5. Run just enough hot water over dish to rinse soapy water off. Turn off faucet. Go back to step 4 and repeat until all dishes are done. Do silverware in handfuls rather than one piece at a time.

6. Either set dishes on edge in drainer to dry, or wipe lightly with clean cotton dishtowel.

7. Put dishes away.
 
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dnjan

One Too Many
Messages
1,687
Location
Seattle
I seem to remember one of those around the house when I was a kid, used for doing baby diapers.
 

dnjan

One Too Many
Messages
1,687
Location
Seattle
As I said - Youngster!
I don't think disposables were available from the time period that I remember the previously-mentioned mini-washer being from.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,136
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
"Chux" brand disposable diapers were actually on the market as early as the mid-thirties, but were not intended for everyday use: they were originally marketed for use while traveling, to eliminate the problem of rinsing out diapers in a Pullman washroom or in a hotel. They were inspired by the way some mothers had solved the problem on their own by home-making disposable diapers out of layers of surgical gauze and absorbent cotton.

PR2_127.JPG


Ad from 1936.

"Chux" weren't shaped like a modern disposable -- they were flat and rectangular like a cloth diaper, and had to be pinned. But they were the ancestor of the disposable of today.

Disposables didn't become dominant until the seventies. Both my sister and I were strictly cloth-diaper babies, and my brother started in cloth and ended in disposables.
 
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