How to Take a Bath in a Sink, Bucket, or River |
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How to Take a Bath in a Sink, Bucket, or River |
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Keep clean when travelling or living in the bush. This well-tested method requires little water or soap, and you do not even need a towel! Nor do you need to disrobe, as this technique allows you to bathe while wearing your clothes.
Find a place with some water, for example: public restroom, restaurant or petrol station bathroom, hose and a bucket, campground with running water, a stream, river, or lake. You can also carry water with you in a refillable spray bottle.
You have many options as to with what to scrub yourself. Try the bottom corner of a tee-shirt, the corner of a towel or washcloth, a handkerchief, paper towels supplied at a public restroom, or a sea sponge. Choose something absorbent and soft that you can wring. Soap is key. Use the hand soap provided in a public restroom, a small bar you carry in a plastic bag, or a bit of shampoo. Soak the scrubber in water and wring until wet but not dripping. Add enough soap to thinly cover the wet area. Scrub the grime and bacteria-prone body parts, from the head down: face, ears, neck (front and back), hands and forearms, armpits, beltline, crotch and bum. Rinse all of the soap and grime from the scrubber. Wring all the water out of the scrubber. Wipe the soap off your face. Rinse and wring the scrubber. Repeat wiping, rinsing, and wringing for each of the soapy body parts individually. Rinse and wring the scrubber, removing as much water as possible, and then spin-dry the scrubber by swinging it like a lasso above your head. If you used a paper towel, dispose of it in the bin. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This information come from internet, the point has nothing to do with this website, If a violation of your rights, please contact us, we will delete the information. |
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