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Mucky undies and Tea towels
22 August 2013, 20:16,
#11
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
Oh come on, you guys, this is basic hygiene! No-one who has any idea actually washes underwear with tea towels - do they?? I can't remember the last time I washed any underwear, sheets, duvet covers or towels etc at anything less than 90deg. All that nonesense about using a lower heat and saving energy is BS, unless you like grubby undies. This is bog standard stuff. If there is no chance of a washing machine, then just heat up water in a large (designated!) pan and boil the grubbies.
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
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22 August 2013, 21:29,
#12
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
Says Mary who only wears hers on Sundays Smile, Still its an improvement on SD whose undy hygiene is based on throwing his undies at the wall and if they stick he changes them, if they dont he wears em for another month.

Anyway Laundry hygiene is something that should be considered and understood especially after the power and water goes off.

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22 August 2013, 21:32,
#13
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
Oi, you, NR! What do you know about my undies? How do you know that I don't go "commando"? (Not a pretty thought)
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
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22 August 2013, 21:39,
#14
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
If TSHTF here I intend to pop across the road to the local primary school and relieve them of either a large copper they had on display or possibly one of their large steel cooking vessels, alternatively I will nick a beer bsarrel from the club and cut its top off and use that as an inprovised laundry boiler.

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22 August 2013, 22:34,
#15
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
Take a hot water tank from the first empty house you come across, cut it in half, then you will have two
A major part of survival is invisibility.
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22 August 2013, 23:58,
#16
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
It is only within very recent times that we have become as clean as we are,.. that's fine, except being as clean as we are has led to us becoming more and more at risk from infections and disease.

Going back a few decades we didn't care quiet so much about clean clothes, and we were in many cases a lot healthier and resistant to many of today's illnesses than we are today

Of course I realise that to go to an extreme, is to risk sever medical conditions, but it wouldn't harm any of us to find a medium where by we again built up resistance to common germs.

We dont really need to shower every day or to just wear items of clothing for one day only, one show or bath a week would do us just as well, and clothes could be left on our backs for a week ,.... in fact the chances are that both these may become the norm after an event anyway
A major part of survival is invisibility.
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23 August 2013, 06:03,
#17
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
There was a time when the Elizabethans sewed there clothes on during the winter and used scent to hide the pong. Nelson wrote to Lady Hamilton 'don't wash I'm Coming home'. HUM, HUM. POO. Kenneth Eames.
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23 August 2013, 10:45,
#18
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
(23 August 2013, 06:03)Kenneth Eames Wrote: There was a time when the Elizabethans sewed there clothes on during the winter and used scent to hide the pong. Nelson wrote to Lady Hamilton 'don't wash I'm Coming home'. HUM, HUM. POO. Kenneth Eames.
Quite right Mr Eames, the stench was horrific. The peasants would indeed sow themselves into their undergarments, with the obligitory "arse flap" in their breeches and then change them at the end of the year, or when they rotted off. The nobles although wearing the best fabrics were no less riddled with lice and intestinal worms. Washing was seen as a bad habit and the people honestly believed that building up a crust of grime and dead skin acted like a suit of armour protecting them against the "humours". Queen Elizabeth 1 was reported to have boasted that she had a bath "once a year whether she needed it or not". Most people did not wash or bath at all, the only two times in their life they would be washed wash was at birth and death.
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23 August 2013, 13:12,
#19
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
Fascinating.

When I saw the thread title - I thought I'd stumbled upon a kind of porn site.

Having said that, when I look at some of the kit in catalogues
it could be thought of as 'Prepper Porn'.


Tally Ho
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23 August 2013, 13:15,
#20
RE: Mucky undies and Tea towels
(23 August 2013, 13:12)River Song Wrote: Having said that, when I look at some of the kit in catalogues
it could be thought of as 'Prepper Porn'.

Hennie hayes catalogue is the worst for that.
I come over all giddy with excitement every time I look at it
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