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Laundry
I have 5 loads of laundry left to do still. 6 & 7 are in the washer & dryer right now. How much laundry do you have to do today??
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I live in an apartment, and I am currently drying 4 loads at the same time! I wish my apartment had W&D hookups; I'd go buy a set today!!
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We have hookups..but when we first moved in here..we didnt have a W&D..so we used to go to the other base and do our laundry for free. We'd be there for hours, lol. Then our friend gave us her W&D before she moved back to texas. But the dryer broke in 2006..so we bought a brand new W&D from the NEX. Its been a huge lifesaver.
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2 loads. One's on the line right now,...I need to do whites next.
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I LOVE DOING LAUNDRY.
Call me crazy. I love doing laundry/folding clothes. It's relaxing. My friends at college used to pay me to do theirs. |
Okay, I'll call you crazy :lol: I keep telling the hubby we need to get 2 more washers and another dryer so I can do it all at once and be done with it for the day. I usually do 2 loads a day...1 whites, 1 coloreds but yesterday I did sheets and rugs so ended up with 4 loads. I try to do laundry every day but some days I will skip a day. Today...just have one load to do which I am doing right now.
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I'm down to 4 loads now..this is gonna take forever. I want it all to be done today!!
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2 loads today. Whites and towels. It's strange, I've hated laundry all my life till now. Now it seems to be the only thing I can do consistently without too much protest.
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I have to do a couple loads today too. I usually put it off as long as I can because I hate folding clothes. It takes little to no effort, but I find it irritating. I feel the same way about putting away the silverware in the dishwasher. Weird I know.
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I wanted to do 4 but I live in an apartment where we cant own our washer/dryer ... and we only have 2 of each for the whole apartment building. Theyve been occupied all day long :(
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I've got one load in the dryer and one in the washer. That's all I NEED to finish today, and I'll probably stop when they're done.
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3 loads left!!! I've been putting them away as soon as I take them out of the dryer. Right now I'm waiting for the towels to dry, so I can go take a shower.
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Only have one more thing to wash and I'm done!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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I go to the laundry mat and do about 5-6 loads every other weekend, it costs about $20.00 and takes about 3.5 hours (including brining the loads down 2 flights of stairs and going to the bank for money, folding & hanging, and putting away)
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I have maybe 5 loads to do tomorrow....plus folding the ones I managed to wash before my brother's graduation party today.
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I don't have kids .. which makes a huge difference. I do ... mmmmm ... probably 3 loads a week of clothes. On the weekends I do towels and linens and probably once every other week I throw in the kitchen rugs. So, 2 loads on the weekend, at most.
I don't love laundry. I don't hate it, but it's just time consuming and a pain. I do, however loathe ironing with a purple passion. Ack. And I have 3 shirts and a skirt that are waiting to be ironed as we speak. . |
I dont have kids either..but me & dh will only do laundry when we're out of clothes and underwear. Needles to say I have about 400 pairs of undies and dh has a ton as well, lol. Plus..we have a lot of clothes between the both of us. The only stuff we wash regularly is towels, sheets, uniforms and the odd pair of dirty clothes every now & then, lol. Somehow though..after we cleaned our bedroom a few months ago...we managed to make a giant pile of clothes that hasnt been washed until today!! I finally did it!! I'm so proud of myself. WOOHOO!!
Btw..The only stuff we iron around here is uniforms. Things usually go from the dryer to the hanger..so we can avoid ironing, lol. |
I, too, live in an apartment which doesn't have hookups, so I either have to take my laundry down to the basement (and risk having my clothes removed mid-cycle from the dryer so someone else can use my time to finish their clothes), or to my mother's or my boyfriend's.
When I was in college, doing laundry was a luxury - it required planning (did I get quarters from the supermarket? is my neighbor doing hers?) - so when I got home and was able to do laundry as much as I wanted, I volunteered to make it my duty. Still to this day I feel lucky to be able to do my laundry at my leisure. |
im surprised at how many people in america have dryers...
i dont have one... i wouldnt ever use one, they are hugely uneconomical and massive waste of electricity! sorry! i use the line outside to dry things, and if its winter we hang on clothes horses in the house and on radiators.... i dont see the point in paying for something twice if that makes sense? i have about 10 loads waiting to be done... we are still catching up from moving here in november. (i know iknow!) im gonna do a couple today while i clean my house top to bottom!! and once its spotless Fiance has to keep it that way for 5 weeks... its a little test im making him complete as he is the messiest person EVER! it drives me v crazy!!! |
No kids here. I do laundry twice a week and usually do 2-3 loads each time.
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As far dryers go - yes, I would love to be able not to use one, and although it is not environmenally friendly (even with an Energy Star rating and all that jazz) it does have several advantages. First of all, where I live, winter can last a very long time, up to 6 months. I don't have trees between which I could stretch a cloth line and when I do laundry, there is way more than the unsightly laundry umbrella would accommodate. But, the main reason why I like dryers is because it takes out the wrinkles so no ironing is needed. But, the number 1 reason for me is that is takes care of dog hair that I have on all my clothes. With one dog being white, it really shows (I wear a lot of black or dark colours). I don't know how I could get rid of it otherwise. |
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A good, energy efficient dryer is not as huge a waste of energy as you would think. And really, the "waste of energy" thing is an argument that could be made about every piece of electric equipment anyone uses. Why use a washer which actually wastes energy and water, when you could just wash things in the sink? Same for a dishwasher. Etc. . |
i wasnt being funny..
im shocked at the rules about no line drying what a ridiculous law. so much for save the planet huh! how stupid is that. im gobsmacked! i also wouldnt have room for a dryer...houses here are probably smaller i think. |
My aunts do not use a clothes dyer. They have a line hung up in their basement, and they hang their clothes there.
If I had to wait for my clothes to line dry, I would never have anything to wear. I don't buy a lot of clothes. I only have 2 pairs of jeans. If I washed both pairs of jeans and then line dried them... I wouldn't have any jeans to wear for a couple of days at least. Of course, I am thinking that the only place I could possibly line dry things is in my basement since I could never line dry in the winter and parts of the fall and spring here. And its not necessarily warm in my basement. I do less laundry by wearing my pants and bras for more than 1 day. DH does physical labor and takes a shower and changes when he gets home. He tries to wear the fresh pair of clothes again the next day, but some times he doesn't. So he contributes way more than I do to the amount of clothes that need washing! Oh and PhotoChick wasn't saying it was a law that she couldn't line dry. In the US, some people buy houses in a neighborhood that has a home owner's association (HOA). The HOA can put in place rules about how the outside of your property should look. I've heard of some HOAs that don't allow you to park a truck in your driveway or on the street. It has to be hidden in a garage. I think its weird, but then again I hate the fact that my neighbor's fence is in disrepair and falling down and won't fix it. If I lived in a neighborhood with a HOA, I'm sure they'd have rules against things like that. But I don't! |
When I was living in WY it was so arid that the clothes would actually dry faster outside than in the dryer. I about fell over the first time this happened. My ex was so big that I couldn't put his clothes in the dryer for fear they would shrink and we couldn't replace them. If he had a cool shirt that I wanted, though, somehow it would accidently go in the dryer.:s: I have used the dryer since we moved, but I would love to find one of those retractable clothes lines to do our drying.
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I've gone without a washer and a dryer for a long time. When we couldnt drive our car and couldnt go to the other base to do our laundry..we'd wash everything in the bathtub..then hang up the clothes over our dining room chairs. I hated it so much. Things took too long to dry. We're not allowed to hang up clothes lines or anything outside (housing rules).
But my grandparents have a dyer..and still use a clothesline. My grandma prefers her stuff to dry naturally. And you know now they're making washers & dryers that are energy efficient. My friend just bought one like that, and she loves it. |
OMG. I just remembered one time we had to get ready for a wedding. As I said, I couldn't put his pants in the dryer, so I strung some bungee cords on our front porch, where the sun was, and hung his pants up to dry(we had about 6 hours before the wedding). He came home and looked at the porch and said, "Good Lord, Baby, we look like a bunch of Hillbillies." I looked right back at him and said,"Well, atleast we're CLEAN Hillbillies."
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Life in America is very very different from life in Europe. I know it's hard for people on both sides to understand sometimes :) I've lived in both and there are so many subtle differences ... things like dryers and public transportation issues and so forth. It can be a quite a culture shock, even just to hear about it. . |
You would think I had 20 kids and 2 husbands! I do laundry every other day and I have 2-3 loads each time! There are only 5 of us, and 1 is only 3 y/o so I know it isnt her!
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Another that lives in a subdivision (HOA) that does not allow clothes lines. I'm not sure I would use one even if they did allow them. With all the trees around I wouldn't hang laundry out to dry so the birds could poo on them. I do have an energy efficient washer and dryer so...
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I agree. I only use my dryer in the winter/when it rains (usually plan laundry around the bad weather, lol). Though I don't have room for hanging things in my tiny house, though if I did I would (mom and dad had a designated "laundry room" at home with lines strung up). It saves soo much electricity. |
6 washed and dried. 1 more to wash & dry. Then I will fold infront of the tv tonight after the kids go to bed. I hate matching socks. I love hanging and do all year round. I will set aside stuff from different loads if they need to be dried quickly and use the machine. But generally 80% of my stuff is dried au natural!
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I hate matching socks too. Dh is so weird about his socks matching that I usually just end up throwing his in the drawer so he can figure it out. Plus, its annoying trying to match 50 billion black socks. They're ALL different. And like I said..dh is weird about his socks, lol.
Mine are easy to match..they're all different colors, lol. |
Our Homeowners' Association rules include a restriction on clotheslines. However, the State of Florida passed a law in 1980 that invalidates bans on solar collectors, clotheslines, or other energy devices based on renewable resources.
However in my part of Florida, the average morning humidity is 88%. Not so good for outdoor drying. We have no basements. We have tropical showers summer afternoons. Indoor drying just puts more load on the A/C - the real energy user. |
Webrover-I know, put a line over one of your AC vents and Freeze Dry your clothes.
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