Or lease.
Rinse? You don’t use soap?
I have used a bidet, soap and water since I was a kid and cannot imagine doing without. I never understood how or why Americans act so superior in matters of hygiene with respect to Europeans. Really. They smear feces around their buttholes and then their underwear. This is like handling animal excrement and then just wiping your hands against the bark of a tree before eating your lunch. I was about 4 years old when I was taught that was just not enough and using soap and water was necessary. There is no way I am getting dressed again without washing my butt with soap and water thankyouverymuch. And my lovers better do the same thing if they expect me to go anywhere near that neighborhood.
In countries where bidets are not available you can always take a shower but I have found I can use a bucket very very easily and conveniently. Crouch over the bucket with one foot forward and one back and you are right over the bucket. Most hotels will have a waste basket in the bathroom which is a bucket which will hold water.
And you need to wash your hands anyway so why not wash your butt as well?
And the only meaningful way to compare how much toilet paper you are getting is by weight.
I get the cheapest 1000 sheet roll stuff I can find. I do a cents/square feet cost analysis.
I didn’t know some bidets use soap. That’s nifty
Almost everywhere I’ve been in Europe, but especially Italy, I’ve seen bidets. Even in public restrooms. I was in a tiny little dive bar in some town I couldn’t pronounce, but sure enough they had a nice bidet in their otherwise crummy bathroom.
When did the fascination with super clean bung holes start in Europe, and if it was before the 19th century why didn’t it carry over to America? I know of almost nobody with a bidet and I’ve never seen one in a public or hotel bathroom in the U.S…
It’s called “product”, and yes, an accident free month for the whole plant and here comes a case or two. Break a production record, same thing. This is not product theft, it is provided free by the company to the people who make it. In case I wasn’t clear, the wife makes toilet paper for a living, a very good living. The cost at the manufacturer for the company to provide this is very minimal. It’s not like giving away free iPads.
We usually have about 4 full cases of each on hand.
With what?
Personally, I prefer the neck of a goose.
One would think they had the process in reverse…
Close enough for gummint work.
What do you mean? How do you wash your butthole in the shower? Do some showers and bathtubs “use soap”?
Every bathroom in Spain will have one.
I believe it was invented around the time of the French Revolution by French nobleman Baron de Bidet who wanted to wash his butthole in a more dignified way
The thing I don’t get about bidets is, isn’t the water cold? And if you have one connected to the water heater, don’t you have to wait for it to warm up? How does that even work?
I use three seashells
Cannot believe no one thought to inquire, “Need answer fast?”
I’ve found the CVS Earth Essentials to be the most cost effective (for me) recycled TP. A 12-pack is regularly priced just over 8 bucks and is often on sale for 6. Don’t know how that compares for you, my most northerly neighbor, but might be worth checking out.
The question comes in two parts.
How many ply is required
and,
how to work out the economics ?
How many ply ?
Well it turns out that one ply is too weak, each ply can tear too easily
There is a strength added by two ply, as the two layers stuck together are stronger than the sum of the parts.
There is no added strength from moving from 2 ply to 3 ply.
The way to calculate it ? Well look at the price per 100 sheets.
So if you have X (times 100 ) sheets per roll, and Y rolls per pack, then the price per 100 sheets is
price / (X * Y ).
OR you could do price per 1000 sheets if you buy 6 packs or larger.
Let me just be your big sister for a minute. Girl, get yourself one of these. Seriously, It will take a day or two to get used to; but I’m gonna be your new favorite person after that. Pay $10, one time, and you’re set for at least three years.
Yeah, but the sheets aren’t a standardized size: width maybe, length never.
It’s a washbasin at lower level. I know it’s hard to believe for some people but we do have hot and cold running water in Europe. You fill enough water at whatever temperature you want, lather, rinse, repeat (or not). Really, you need to have explained how to wash your butt or genitals?
Ummm…yes.