Thursday, May 22, 2014

less water & fuel


LESS WATER & FUEL

I know that you are all looking at each other and making faces, wondering what the hell this bison guy is talking about.  Use less fuel and water?  Why, the very notion is un-American and certainly unpatriotic, perhaps even enough that you want to call your duly selected CongressCritter and suggest that possibly he might want to exercise his lawful rights ( might does after all make right ) and have this cat “disappeared” on his way to the airport reroute to Uncle Obammy’s tropical paradise island.  Why, if we are given by Baby Jesus himself the imperative to drive SUV’s and shoot plastic guns with large banana clips, surely we can waste a few hundred gallons a day showering and flushing a few capfuls of urine.  If this idea caught on, entire swaths of the economy and local government would perish.  I trust I’ve been sarcastic enough?  One of these days, Alice, you are going to see sky high electric and gas bills, if not shortages, and even if you don’t see much higher water bills due to drought, the local municipalities WILL jack up your cost so they can balance their budgets precariously unstable due to past mayors retiring with 200% pensions after four years of “service”. 

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In the last ten years I’ve had fewer conventional showers than fingers on my hands.  I smell like a field of roses ( until you get too close to my ass ) and I don’t have strange and bizarre skin diseases.  I was listening to the radio last week and on one of the YakFests there was a piece on a doctor talking about daily showers.   According to him, as long as you wash your crotch and butt every day, there is no need to shower every single day.  This backs up my step-mothers practice ( she was a nurse for forty years ), started when she had serious injuries to her entire arm and side, if you recall my telling you when she got lippy with a local deputy while drunk and he face planted her, and couldn’t have pounding water on her.  Wash the crotch/ass daily ( I wash my head daily, but only because I have an oily top ), and every other day just use a washcloth and hot water everywhere else ( the cloth wet enough to drip water is better than it rung out too much ).  Some folks will need the feet washed daily with soap, others armpits.  It is going to vary.  You just experiment, go after whatever itches or smells.  I do a whole body soap twice a week, the remaining just hot water wipes ( except as noted above ).  I find the huge washcloths, almost a small towel, are much better than the regular sizes.  Between skipping several days of full body soap and now using an electric razor half the time ( I don’t care for them-they are expensive and inefficient.  But now I’m clean shaven every day instead of half the week ) I’m hauling about half the water I used to.  Keeping sparkly clean doesn’t require tons of hot water.

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14 comments:

  1. Yeah, I've noticed as I gotten older, the skin can't take the pounding of bar soap. I use Dove sparingly. mainly pits, face and butt. Unless I have real dirt on me. Also stopped washing my hair every day. 3 days or so, I'll lather it up.

    Probably another ploy to have us consume even more, like that LARGE dollop of toothpaste on your toothbrush. Only need pea sized.

    The main "stupidfier" of the people is TV. More you watch, stupider you are.

    We are sooo screwed....

    Gil

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    Replies
    1. I tried not watching TV ( when the power gen was far lower ) but it didn't make me smarter. I think I'm TOO smart and TV dumbs me down to earthly standards.

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  2. Good article. Most folks I know waste enough water to irrigate a 3rd world country.

    I spent five years using a pitcher pump and a rain water cistern. You learn real fast to be frugal with water.

    I upgraded to a DC pump when I was washing cloth diapers for child #2. The main problem was lifting 5 gallon kettles to heat the water on the wood stove and then lifting them again to dump into the wringer washer. Water is heavy!

    I've always had a composting toilet so that saves a lot of water.

    The thing that most people don't realize is that you don't need every drop of water to be treated and sanitized. Rain water is fine for showers, dishes, laundry, irrigation, etc. I just purify my drinking and cooking water.

    Idaho Homesteader

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    Replies
    1. I think a DC pump and its power generation far outweigh disposables. You saved money and resources.

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  3. Jim, this is exactly what I have said before; this is the type of practical info you can share with those of us that are still more grid bound. We benefit from not just the details but the fact that others are successfully doing it this way. More, more. On another note, I am rereading Jeff Cooper's "To Ride, Shoot Straight, and Speak the Truth" and am struck by how in tune the two of you are (the last time I read it must have been pre-Bisonia). If you haven't read it I highly recommend. He was not a fan of plastic poodle shooters, either.

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    1. I read one of his, almost pamphlet size, overpriced from Paladin. I should check out your recommendation- I recall hearing others praise this one

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  4. *****************************

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    And you work as a cook?
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  5. Given my sedentary job I am surprised I need to shower more than once a week- but given climate condition (hot, humid) or the occasional significant manual labor, I do - at times - need more than one. I wash my hands probably 10 times a day, face 3-4, and stinky bits at least once, but a whole soap up from head to toe, followed by scrub and rinse? not more than 3 times a week unless the week is both hot and filled with manual labor. I only use toothpaste on the tooth brush twice a day (I floss twice a day and brush after every meal, snack, or sugary drink - so you know 2-6 times a day once you include the wake up and pre bed brushing...)

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  6. Great article ! Along those same lines, I bought a plastic utility sink/washtub at a home improvement store for $26 . I set it up next to my shower although it is very lightweight and can be moved easily. I added a drain hose to it that drains into the shower. I fill it with a hose from the shower. Now, in an emergency, with no electricity, I can still have clean clothes. I have a mop bucket and wringer to squeeze the water out of the clothes, and a clothesline to dry my clothes on. If the weather outside is cold or wet, I can hang the clothes on hangers around the house.
    Also, I picked up a manual razor at a yard sale for only a dollar. If you check out the prices of disposible razors, and the price of double-edged razor blades, you can easily see the potential for saving money.
    Thank you for your excellent blog. The Bison Prepper is first on my daily reads.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Do you mean a straight razor? One of my long time and dear minions gifted me one, a nice one in carbon steel. It scares the hell out of me to use it. A "Razr Savr" from Lehman's and $10 in disposables will literally last you 20 years.

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    2. I realize this post is several years old, however I would like to extol the virtues of the old timey safety razor.
      With it, I have given up the shaving cream, as well as spending a fortune on disposables.
      It is now a quick shave once a day.
      The secret is a bit of hot water to soften the beard, the razor cuts right through. Do not Press on the razor, rather let gravity do the work. In order to get used to not using shaving cream, you may start with a bit of oil.
      After a while you won't need it.
      I will never go back to the old way.
      I can't really take credit for it, I found the suggestion online and decided to try it.

      It was included in the free pdf Bourbon for Breakfast by Jeffrey Tucker.

      Love the blog, thought I would start with the archives. Thanks

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    3. No one else will see this, two years after the fact, but thanks nonetheless. I'll try the Bourbon book out.

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