h a l f b a k e r yFlaky rehab
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I was a little confused until I realised this was for a machine
in a laundromat/communal laundry area.
Is it a North American thing to not own your own washing
machine? |
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Laundrette in UK, people still use them. Round here you get outdoors ones at petrol stations. |
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(+) If I can get our laundromat up and running I plan to build and install dual dog baths. For a while there I was getting sent all over the province building these things in pet stores. People go nuts for them. |
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We're considering calling it the Suds-yer-Duds & Sog-yer-Dog. |
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// People go nuts for them. // |
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Some dogs go nuts in them. A fifty kilo mud-caked Clumber Spaniel* that does NOT want a bath is quite a challenge. |
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*Net weight of Spaniel, 32 kilos; gross weight including layer of wet, sticky mud, 50 kilos. And there's all the lumps that fell off on the car on the way to the dog bath to be factored in, too. |
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Really, well I just stick my hand in and feel if the
dryer/clothes are still piping hot or ice cold. A bold move I
realize, you may end up in the pokey for attempted theft, but
well, it's the price one must pay. |
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//A fifty kilo mud-caked Clumber Spaniel* that does NOT want a bath is quite a challenge.// |
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I guess Dog-Shower would be a better term than dog-bath. People find it easier to get their dogs into one of these mini-shower stalls because they are not full of water. A very well anchored twelve inch leash keeps them in it when the spray starts. Seriously, I've built many of these things now. Rich folks are incorporating them into their own laundry rooms. Of course it won't hurt any that I intend to fence in an off-leash dog park with a water feature here on the property for our gusets. Muhahahaha! |
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All of those rich tourists thinking of heading back to Alberta trapped in their RV's with their soggy reeking dogs will pay a pretty penny to wash them and their clothes here before they embark. |
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So far the jingle is taking the form of yellow submarine in my head. |
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Suds yer Duuuuds... and sog yer dog. Or you can sog yer dog... and suds yer duds. 'Cause suds yer duds, and sog yer dog. Let's you suds yer dog, and sog yer duds. |
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We all suds our duds while we sog our dog. While we sog our dog. While we sog our dog. Oh! We all... |
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Cold muddy water, with plentiful weed, green slime, weird wriggly things and Unidentified Floating Stuff ? Just try and keep a Spaniel out of it ... WHOOOSH-SPLASH ... |
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Then they come bounding out, grinning, and shake ... |
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Warm, clean water and the slightest hint of soap or shampoo ? See that dot in the middle distance, still accelerating and leaving a trail of mucky prints ? That was your dog, that was ... |
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[2 fries shy of a happy meal]; (if possible) make part of the
Sog-yer-Dog look like a giant-sized front-loader washing
machine (with working hamster-wheel function). Spray
nozzles on the rotating bit, and/or have the bottom of the
cylindrical bit able to be under water (ie. in a trough of
some sort). |
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[2 fries shy of a happy meal] I think your dog
bath/shower should be in the form of a scaled-down
carwash |
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That would be cool. Here's a pic of what they currently look like. [link] |
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//Is it a North American thing to not own your own
washing machine?// |
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Ugh, that was a nasty surprise moving here. The first
place I lived was an apartment in an ex-hotel. Next door
was a communal laundry room, that was OK, if a little
expensive. I know lots of people who have lived in places
with no washer/dryer. And yet the Americans still marvel
at British TV where the washing machine is in the
kitchen, like having it inside the house next to the
existing plumbing is the weird thing. |
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I think the reason is partly tradition, partly the
practicality of the conventional washing machine being
larger than many London apartments. They're also
dreadful. Slow spin speeds, no detergent drawers, and
because they're vertical, the top part only gets washed
when it's run to max-fill, as such stuff grows up there and
will find ways to make your clothes stinky if you leave
them for any period after a wash. |
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Yeah, England = washing machine in the kitchen, (some of)
Asia = washing machine in the bathroom, USA = (communal)
washing machine(s) in the basement. I'm designing a house,
and mine is going under the stairs. One place I lived kept it
in a hallway cupboard. On the other hand, my Aunty in
Australia recently built a new house, and the laundry room
is almost as big as my garage...
Each to their own, I guess. |
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//washing machine in the bathroom,// |
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I've had that, I got on with it quite well, since you're in
there removing clothes, why not just throw them straight
into the washing machine and after 2-3 days run it. It fell
down in practical terms because it was a combo washer-
drier which either a: don't dry b: don't work at all. |
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If I was building a house, there would be laundry chutes,
multiple washers/driers for redundancy and some form of
cabinet for hanging delicates complete with a
dehumidifier & possibly the hot water tank to make use
of the leaking heat. |
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I change my clothes while I'm cooking so it's perfect for me in
the kitchen. Or it would be if I did. |
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//I change my clothes while I'm cooking// - are you
sure you're not cooking in your bedroom? |
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I had an old house with a laundry chute. It was handy but
carrying the baskets back up from the basement was a
chore. At one time I contemplated adding more chutes in
order to separate by color. |
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BTW, laundry chutes these days are against building code
for being
a fire path hazard. |
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My wife's parents had their laundry in the kids' upstairs
bathroom closet. It was always in the way for whomever
needed to use the bathroom. |
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My parents' ranch house had the laundry in the kitchen,
away from the cooking area. My mom hated it there. |
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Our present house has a laundry room that doubles as the
passageway to the garage, unfortunately too small but
landlocked by other rooms, so our drying rack always sits
in the kitchen. |
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Wow, you are laundry jinxed. Better encourage Mrs. M.
RayfordSteele to handwash, wring, and pin-up outside on the
line, before your next move. |
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And hippo, you could be right. If I don't have my glasses on I
could be just about anywhere cooking anything, up. |
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