by steam_cannon » Fri 23 Nov 2007, 01:17:34
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Leanan', 'S')omeone who lived in Yugoslavia during the war posted a list of things that were valuable when TSHTF. (Gold wasn't one of his recommendations.)
He suggested a mop bucket and wringer, for doing laundry by hand.
A wringer would probably be a very good investment!
Drying my own laundry
I washed my cloths by hand for a couple years (saving money in College and in Ukraine). I never did actually use a wringer though, but it would have been a good investment. Mostly I just rolled up clothing and hand wrung it. In Ukraine the bathrooms had the hot water pipe go in a zig zag up the wall so you could hang dry cloths... Instead of that, you could install bars on a bathroom wall with a drip tray underneath...
In college, I often would set up a cloths line in a room and put plastic on the floor under it. And I used some tape to put a lip on the plastic so dripping water would pool up on the plastic. Then I would sponge up the water. Metal trays would have worked better. And the drying time was 12 - 24 hours. Though fans would have shortened that...
Washing my own cloths
For washing the cloths, a tub or washbin worked and agitating the cloths by hand for an 20 - 40 minutes worked well too. Then I would drain it and rinse them... Also many internet stores sell hand crank washers and miniature washers powered by electric motors. In Ukraine I used a miniature motor powered washer and it was great! It was cheap, easy to carry and fast! It fit in the bathtub and it got the wash done in no time. Then things just needed to be wrung and hung. Motor powered and hand crank mini-washers are definitely worth trying and get the job done!
Regarding Mops...
You can make a great mop with just a towel and a stick in a piece of wood making a T shape. Then the towel hangs on it to dry. These were the most common mops I saw in Ukraine. They worked great and pushing around any rag worked pretty well...