Posted to rec.food.cooking
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Dish drainer crisis
"Ema Nymton" > wrote in message
...
> On 8/17/2014 1:31 PM, Roy wrote:
>> On Saturday, August 16, 2014 11:44:32 PM UTC-6, Julie Bove wrote:
>>> "Gary" > wrote in message
>>> ...
>>>
>>>> Julie Bove wrote:
>>>
>>>>>
>>>
>>>>> "jmcquown" wrote:
>>>
>>>>>> My cats' litterbox was in the master bathroom. On a bath mat
>>>
>>>>>> (frequently
>>>
>>>>>> taken outside and vaccuumed) on a tile floor. I didn't step on it.
>>>
>>>>>> The
>>>
>>>>>> floor was clean. I didn't need to have paper towels in the bathroom.
>>>
>>>>>> As
>>>
>>>>>> usual, your experiences are completely different from that of normal
>>>
>>>>>> people.
>>>
>>>>>
>>>
>>>>> Then I guess my whole extended family isn't normal as we all have
>>>>> paper
>>>
>>>>> towels in there. I have two cats and once in a while one will get a
>>>
>>>>> little
>>>
>>>>> something on the side of the box. Rather than having to empty the
>>>>> whole
>>>
>>>>> box, I use a paper towel to clean it up. They also sometimes deposit
>>>>> a
>>>
>>>>> hairball on the floor.
>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>> For that, in a bathroom, just use toilet paper and flush it. No need
>>>
>>>> for paper towels.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I prefer paper towels. We can only use 1 ply toilet paper and that's
>>> not so
>>>
>>> good for cleaning. We also use flushable wipes.
>>
>> Flush-able wipes are one of the best sewer plug-er-uppers available.
>> Plumbers love them as they get rich fixing situations that are clearly
>> avoidable. City sewer workers hate them as it makes their life miserable
>> finding the snafus in the system.
>>
>
> Started using baby wipes when my children were babies and I continue to
> use them every day, life would be sad without my baby wipes. My plumbing
> has been A-OK for decades, I guess I am lucky.
+1 to all that
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