Plastic spoons and forks are so wasteful. Use a plastic spork instead and cut your utensil trash in half.
Nah, just use a titanium spork. I have one, and I love it.
http://www.thinkgeek.com/homeoffice/kitchen/8ace/
Plastic spoons and forks are so wasteful. Use a plastic spork instead and cut your utensil trash in half.
You do know that if you're stuck out in the dessert and have no water, it's safe to drink your own urine.
Other than the ewww factor, I don't think it's so much the urine that is worrying but the aerated fecal particles.
Crap! My entire house is probably filled with aerated fecal particles. I knew there was a reason I never want to sit near the restrooms in a restaurant. And think about public bathrooms or motel rooms.
Aerated fecal matter is hardly your biggest concern in a hotel. Ever see a typical hotel room under a black light?
Unfortunately . . . hotel rooms scare me.
EDIT: I always thought a motel chain could get a lot of business by advertising that they change the bedspreads and mattress pads along with the sheets. Of course, they would word it more strategically.
When you flush the toliet water molecules explode into the air unless the person closes the lid prior to flushing. Those molecules have bacteria that can become harmful.
So what distance can these germs fly in the air?
How long do they stay in the air?
The reason why i'm asking is because my bedroom is right across our bathroom and I was wondering is it even safe to have my toothbrush in my bedroom.
Sounds like germs from toilet seats etc are the last things we need to worry about. Anybody who steps out of their house is exposing themselves to millions of germs and that's before we've even touched anything.
This is why we have an immune system. Remove all germs and we don't function.
Relax
It's definitely not safe to keep your toothbrush in the bedroom, or even in the house at all. It should be kept in an air tight container at least one mile from home. Those bathroom germs will follow you everywhere, but they have a one mile limit. So your toothbrush is safe there.
Germs know who you are, especially those bathroom germs. Your life is in peril at all times. Protect yourself constantly...try to remain sterile.
(Is it just me, or is OP becoming more...er...never mind!)
Damn, and here I was all excited that Squilly and Waloshin were about to have an epic battle.
Do you believe we should wear one of these in our holmes?
When you flush the toliet water molecules explode into the air unless the person closes the lid prior to flushing. Those molecules have bacteria that can become harmful.
So what distance can these germs fly in the air?
How long do they stay in the air?
The reason why i'm asking is because my bedroom is right across our bathroom and I was wondering is it even safe to have my toothbrush in my bedroom.
This is exactly why I dont use the toilet in my house and instead go to the bathroom outside....(with a gun of course )
You revived a 3 year old thread for that? oh boy....Sounds like germs from toilet seats etc are the last things we need to worry about. ...
Relax
...
(Is it just me, or is OP becoming more...er...never mind!)
I heard the peeing on your feet can cure athlete's foot.
Aerated fecal matter is hardly your biggest concern in a hotel. Ever see a typical hotel room under a black light?