More than UK soap, yes. More than German, French, Swedish or Spanish soap, no.
That makes sense if you only take cold showers. But hot water would be a multiple of the cost of cold water just about everywhere I should presume.
I have purchased a shower timer clock, with suction cup to attach to the bathroom tiles, to try and make good on my commitment made to my wife to only have the hot water running for 2 min 30 s during showering, in order not to (allegedly) bankrupt us with the hot water bill.
My shower procedure:
- shower head and body, with warm water, running handheld showerhead over body, for ca. 10 s. Shut off water.
- put shower gel into cupped hand, rub into head and other hairy sites, spread on skin (from the top down, for obvious reasons). It helps very much that your body already is wet.
- Rinse off head and body with warm water, running handheld showerhead over body, for ca. 2 min 20 s. Change water temperature to cold.
- Run handheld showerhead over arms and legs, front and back, for at least two passes (I may use as much cold water as I like. Even if I don’t like.) That last step is pretty invigorating. Shut off water.
Americans tend to treat energy as if it has no cost.
We have a natural gas water heater in a state that generates more natural gas than it consumes and has extensive proven reserves of same. Heating the water is also very cheap locally.
Exactly this, especially about the “barbershop” method of shampooing/rinsing in the shower.
Where we differ is that I really only tolerate water on my face with my eyes shut. I find even plain water on my sclera and tear ducts uncomfortable, and I am a lot more sensitive than other people to soap/shampoo in my eyes. I do still soap up my face and let the shower rinse it off, but I do it with caution and I “overclose” my eyes while doing so (a really consciously-applied, tight eye closing/scrunching).
You can get an in-line cutoff valve at the hardware store and install it between the threaded pipe coming out of the wall and your handheld shower head. I have one and I love it. And they’re like $2.
Nice to know I am not the only person who does it that way =)
I actually discovered that Tresemme all in one shampoo makes a great moisturizing body wash - I don’t use it on my hair, I do a sulphite/whatever free shampoo and conditioner on my hair and didn’t want to waste an almost full bottle of tresemme that someone left behind. Works better than the Dove stuff and the Oil of Olay stuff I have also tried.
It’s not that much for us. A natural gas hot water heater here in Chicago with average usage of 64 gallons/day (~250 liters) costs a little less than $20/month to heat. It wouldn’t make a significant dent in my bill to change a 10 minute shower to a 2 1/2 minute one. (Though I personally take baths.) And the water cost is the same for me, as our house does not have metered water (so whether I fill up a swimming pool or don’t run the water at all, my water cost is the same. I should actually get around to switching it to metered water, as we don’t generally run water for the grass during the summer or have a swimming pool or have any other kind of deep water usage activity.)
I don’t know about most people. The only body part I rub soap on is my hands. Work into lather, apply lather elsewhere as needed. But at home I use liquid soap everywhere. The bar soap just sits there and is occasionally rubbed onto a washcloth or a pair of exfoliating gloves. Judging how long a bar will sit there (before it finally gets too disgusting and has to be thrown out) “most people” in my household don’t use it at all.
This. Every morning. Gel is just soap in liquid form and you need just a wee little bit to clean your whole body and hair. And afterwards my hands are so clean and soft that it is just perfect for cleaning my contact lenses and putting them in my eyes and the day can start. Which it does, of course, without my help or encouragement.
I don’t think it is the soap, I guess it is the water. I think the water where you live is very soft, that makes it difficult to rinse off the soap. But I would be surprised if there were not places with hard water in the USA too.