I will normally keep a towel or two handy for use around the house and for the deck if needed. I like to keep things as tidy as practical and the towels help in all aspects. Andyesour towel stack is quite large on wash day.
Know that you can get a bidet attachment for you toilet that uses the bolt holes for the seat and taps into the water supply for the tank. Cost for the one my wife bought was less than $50.
We have one as well. The bidet portion does shorten the effective length of the seat, so they work better with an elongated seat than a round one.
We use towels at home all the time even on vinyl kitchen seats just to keep sweat and oils off the furniture. Even at nudist resorts when we camp we use towels on our camp chairs to keep sweat off of them. Being clean is a good start but just protecting the furniture is also nice to do.
Know that you can get a bidet attachment for you toilet that uses the bolt holes for the seat and taps into the water supply for the tank. Cost for the one my wife bought was less than $50.We have one as well. The bidet portion does shorten the effective length of the seat, so they work better with an elongated seat than a round one.
This may help for those shorter seats. There are hand held sprayer Bum Gun is one name. It looks similar to a kitchen sink sprayer but with a longer handle. I have one. if you are prone to skid marks, spray the crack clean then hold the sprayer tight to the sphincter, Relax and let a cup or so of water in, then push it out. If you flush before you do this, you may be surprised at how much you could not push out the first time. I find sometimes almost nothing, but then again other times "OMG why couldn't I push that out".
Yes, very much so. I have many nudist friends. We all have our towels and stuff. I have a bunch of sheets that I bought that I put over the furniture when my nudist friends come over. All of us do this.
We also bring our own towels but generally, the host takes the precautions in our group.
Know that you can get a bidet attachment for you toilet that uses the bolt holes for the seat and taps into the water supply for the tank. Cost for the one my wife bought was less than $50.
Looked into those but too many reviews and pictures of the supply hose rupturing kept me away from them. I'm old fashioned, when running supply lines to toilets and faucets I always use solid tubing, nothing to weaken over time due to temperature exposure or pressure, once they are tightened at each end and are not leaking you're finished. A peri bottle is cheaper, doesn't have leaking problems and you can fill it with water at whatever temperature you like.
I'm old fashioned, when running supply lines to toilets and faucets I always use solid tubing, nothing to weaken over time due to temperature exposure or pressure, once they are tightened at each end and are not leaking you're finished.
Off topic, but interesting comment. My sister and a friend of our have both had their homes flood when solid tubing failed for their toilets. My sister said her insurance person and a plumber have both said they see solid tubing fail far more often.
I always use a towel even when at home.
We do too. Towels are a lot easier wash than furniture. We keep plenty of towels handy for guests however most are here to enjoy the pool deck and they bring their own beach towels. If we are the guests, we bring our own. To us, it is just common courtesy.
I'm old fashioned, when running supply lines to toilets and faucets I always use solid tubing, nothing to weaken over time due to temperature exposure or pressure, once they are tightened at each end and are not leaking you're finished.Off topic, but interesting comment. My sister and a friend of our have both had their homes flood when solid tubing failed for their toilets. My sister said her insurance person and a plumber have both said they see solid tubing fail far more often.
Interesting, I would have to talk to my plumber friend and call my insurance.
But again, a solid supply line from your shut off to the bottom of the toilet tank is solid brass. I have seen solid brass p-traps corrode at the bottom of the trap because of all the grey waste that goes down a kitchen and bathroom sink and as it sits in there would eat into the brass, so I always use PVC there, but a supply line to a toilet is only seeing fresh water so again the only place they would leak is if not tightened enough upon installation, which gets corrected right away. Once done that's it. If these cases were due to an amateur installing it incorrectly and not done by a professional plumber I could see that here could be the possibility of them leaking and if that's the case the insurance might not cover damage due to a repair that was not done correctly and by a licensed professional.



