Calendargirl
Am sure most of these products are totally unnecessary.
Who needs wet wipes to wipe a toddler’s face?
Just use a damp flannel.
This 👍🏻
Does anyone flush wet wipes? We had a letter for everyone in my post code saying that the sewers were being blocked and they were going to try to pinpoint who was flushing them and prosecute. I immediately felt extremely guilty for no good reason as I don’t think I’ve ever bought any. I’ve bought 4711 colognettes for travelling but they are several years old and they are binned. I can’t imagine anyone flushing them or even needing to buy them these days.
Calendargirl
Am sure most of these products are totally unnecessary.
Who needs wet wipes to wipe a toddler’s face?
Just use a damp flannel.
This 👍🏻
I’d never heard of this product. Just looked it up on Amazon. Great idea. Thank you for telling us about it.
There's a product called Wype. Its fantastic for those of us with personal issues around digestion and cleanliness and an aversion to skid marks. I started buying it when my late husband was discharged from hospital with a problem TMI to explain. They are brilliant I use it myself especially on holiday. Its just a gel you put directly on toilet paper. It doesn't make the paper any weaker and does a blinking good job.
Missiseff
It tells you on the packet not to flush them
You can lead a horse to water……. Telling people not to flush them down the toilet sounds good, but there’ll always be some pathetic person who thinks that doesn’t apply to them.
Sarnia
NO wipes of any kind should be flushed down the toilet. They do not break down like toilet paper but form a very effective plug along the pipe system.
Exactly! But not only that, they get out to sea and cause all sorts of harm to the fish and other sea creatures there, not to mention being unsightly.
Why do people think it’s ok to dispose of wipes, nappies and the like in the sea?
I think you're confusing wet wipes for toilet flushable wet wipes aka toilet paper not ones for toddlers
They are like all new 'inventions' aren't they. They do have their uses, and lots of us came use them more during covid. But there is a right and a wrong way to use them. I use them sparingly, when there is good reason too, and dispose of them responsibly. I would never flush them. I understand why some people would be squeamish about putting them in the bin after 'personal' cleaning, but they need to find another solution.
posset
I have an aversion to all disposable wipes and think they should be banned (which will never happen!) They are environmentally bad on all levels, from the manufacture to the disposal, not to mention the packaging.
I just think there is no need for them.
Sorry if I sound self-righteous!
I agree - but I do buy & use a small amount of floor wipes - particularlywhen the place was a building site, or if I'm decorating.But no-one happier than me of they were banned outright.
Oreo
How about heftier fines for the fast food outlets creating fat bergs?
Why not both? Win, win.
I have used wet wipes when my digestion was re-establishing itself after a right hemicolectomy. I don't know how I'd have coped without them. But I NEVER flushed them, they went into the black bin with the incontinence pads i.e. adult nappies, also necessary at the time.
We did have a sewage blockage when next-door's au pair started putting wet wipes down the lavatory.
I use them for the Grandchildren but they go in the bin.. The ones marked "flushable" if they are not flushable why are they allowed to advertise them as such?
I use wet wipes and throw into bin.
I have an aversion to all disposable wipes and think they should be banned (which will never happen!) They are environmentally bad on all levels, from the manufacture to the disposal, not to mention the packaging.
I just think there is no need for them.
Sorry if I sound self-righteous!
I am goody two shoes only flush pee/poo/paper/puke.
JennyCee
Why not clean one’s bum with soap and use a plastic glove?
Nothing to chuck anywhere and you know it’s clean and glove can be use many times
Plastic glove what a good idea 😱 more plastic to be recycled, that’s on the off chance that they can be recycled.
It tells you on the packet not to flush them
Why not clean one’s bum with soap and use a plastic glove?
Nothing to chuck anywhere and you know it’s clean and glove can be use many times
.
I buy Kirkland bum wipes from Costco, they're great. And flushable. No more dozens of bidet flannels, for wiping, and to put in a separate bin and launder after just one use.
The only other "wipe' I use is a little eye makeup removal pad. One side one day, the other side the next day - which I do then just toss in the loo. Don't think that would cause any blockage!!
Always check that the packaging of any wipes you buy state clearly that they are flushable if you intend to flush them.
.
No we have had blocked drains twice that have come up on our property due to one of our neighbours flushing them down the toilet / the drains person showed us the amount
a lot of sanitary products say flushable but they are awful for clogging up drains. A lot of publicity re flushing wipes of any kind. I do not use wet wipes I come from the old fashioned flannel and water when I had my kids along with terry nappies, but I do use cleaning wipes for quick jobs i.e. just a quick wipe of loo seat etc though main cleaning is cleaning cream and cloth.
I did see that somewhere problems were caused by those things you hang on the side of the pan to freshen and clean the loo. if they fall off and flushed can really block things up, never used one
mabon2
How an earth did we manage before these dreadful wet wipes came to be? A clean cloth or flannel did the job well and environmentally friendly, washed and reused thousands of times. I am at a loss to why people use them knowing full well that they block drains even the disposable makes are known to be trouble.
People can use them without flushing afterwards. It is not the wipes that are the problem, it is the flushing. People use them because they are convenient when out of the house if there is no tap nearby to dampen a flannel. Maybe they should have to be printed with Do Not Flush, in the manner of Izal loo roll and Now Wash Your Hands Please
.
However, I do use tissues.
The younger generations have been brain washed into using these one time use toiletries. They go hand in hand with the disposable nappies. My first born was born in ‘73 and I never had these so called conveniences.
I remember also boxes of tissues at under a shilling, my DGC cannot visualize carrying handkerchiefs, they think they are disgusting.
I have never used them.
How an earth did we manage before these dreadful wet wipes came to be? A clean cloth or flannel did the job well and environmentally friendly, washed and reused thousands of times. I am at a loss to why people use them knowing full well that they block drains even the disposable makes are known to be trouble.
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