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Short Wave Sportfishing February 6th 07 04:47 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
On Feb 6, 9:26 am, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:07:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"

wrote:

You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.


Consider that a lot of this goofy posting is from a largely, if not
totally, anonymous poster using a particularly old version of Debian
Linux and associated news client.....

Google up the rec.boats proponents of Debian Linux and you will have
most of the usual suspects.....


He seems fairly straight forward to me - I'm not sure where
you developed this idea about goofy posting.

Besides, as somebody who suffers from skin infections of
one sort or another, it seemed like a perfectly valid question
and one that deserved a appropriate answer.


JoeSpareBedroom February 6th 07 05:29 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
wrote in message
...
On 6 Feb 2007 08:47:53 -0800, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:

On Feb 6, 9:26 am, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:07:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"

wrote:

You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.

Consider that a lot of this goofy posting is from a largely, if not
totally, anonymous poster using a particularly old version of Debian
Linux and associated news client.....

Google up the rec.boats proponents of Debian Linux and you will have
most of the usual suspects.....


He seems fairly straight forward to me - I'm not sure where
you developed this idea about goofy posting.

Besides, as somebody who suffers from skin infections of
one sort or another, it seemed like a perfectly valid question
and one that deserved a appropriate answer.


I'm not sure.... some of his prior questions have had such obvious
answers.... it just looked suspect. Some of those questions I offered
my advice. This latest one just seemed extremely obvious and, well,
odd..... and then I noticed that he was using the same posting schema
as the old anon-posting smithers.... made me even more suspicious....



In a cooking newsgroup, about six months ago:

"Can I make lasagna at home? How?"

Somewhere, these people are being stamped out like cookies.



Reginald P. Smithers III February 6th 07 05:33 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
wrote:
On 6 Feb 2007 08:47:53 -0800, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:

On Feb 6, 9:26 am, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:07:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"

wrote:

You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.
Consider that a lot of this goofy posting is from a largely, if not
totally, anonymous poster using a particularly old version of Debian
Linux and associated news client.....

Google up the rec.boats proponents of Debian Linux and you will have
most of the usual suspects.....

He seems fairly straight forward to me - I'm not sure where
you developed this idea about goofy posting.

Besides, as somebody who suffers from skin infections of
one sort or another, it seemed like a perfectly valid question
and one that deserved a appropriate answer.


I'm not sure.... some of his prior questions have had such obvious
answers.... it just looked suspect. Some of those questions I offered
my advice. This latest one just seemed extremely obvious and, well,
odd..... and then I noticed that he was using the same posting schema
as the old anon-posting smithers.... made me even more suspicious....


Gene,
I have never used an anon-posting address or machine.

Doug Kanter February 6th 07 05:45 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 

"Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message
. ..
wrote:
On 6 Feb 2007 08:47:53 -0800, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:

On Feb 6, 9:26 am, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:07:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"

wrote:

You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.
Consider that a lot of this goofy posting is from a largely, if not
totally, anonymous poster using a particularly old version of Debian
Linux and associated news client.....

Google up the rec.boats proponents of Debian Linux and you will have
most of the usual suspects.....
He seems fairly straight forward to me - I'm not sure where
you developed this idea about goofy posting.

Besides, as somebody who suffers from skin infections of
one sort or another, it seemed like a perfectly valid question
and one that deserved a appropriate answer.


I'm not sure.... some of his prior questions have had such obvious
answers.... it just looked suspect. Some of those questions I offered
my advice. This latest one just seemed extremely obvious and, well,
odd..... and then I noticed that he was using the same posting schema
as the old anon-posting smithers.... made me even more suspicious....


Gene,
I have never used an anon-posting address or machine.


Gene is clueless as usual.



--
Posted via a free Usenet account from
http://www.teranews.com


[email protected] February 6th 07 05:59 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
On Feb 6, 6:35 am, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:
On Feb 5, 8:11 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:


wrote in message


oups.com...


On Feb 5, 1:07 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
wrote in message


groups.com...


I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with
fresh water.


My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink
and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my
need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as
the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I
only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one-
gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons
use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish
this.


What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray
bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short
lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small
water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet.
When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn
on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er
away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down
to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am
done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it
probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough
water pressure in the system.


Is there such a thing available in the market?


Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But
this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more
water than I really need.


I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that
has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the
water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above
the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to
lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a
small boat).


Thanks for any pointer in advance.


Jay Chan


You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Why is it a joke? I always carry a water bottle for washing the salt
from my hands after I have washed my hand in sea water. This
minimizes the irritation on my skin and helps keeping the skin problem
down. Of course, I also use hand cream; this is a given. I guess not
everyone has this skin problem; therefore, most people probably don't
understand how this feels. Let's just say that this problem is
physical, not mental.


That water bottle works. But it is a bit too ad-hoc and tends to use
more water than needed. That's the reason why I want to find
something more convenient.


Jay Chan


Your own perspiration contains salt.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


I can understand his concern - I have a similar problem on
board but related to infection as a result of my arthritis
treatment. I'm more prone to infection as a result of that
treatment and fresh water is much better to rinse with than
salt - in particular in a harbor that has a sewer treatment
near it. Or the CT River after rain which is full of...well
this is a family group.

What I do is carry a gallon of fresh water and use a hand
sprayer - hence my advice to jay. Stick the gallon under
the console and use it if I need to.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Sorry to hear that you have a similar problem. I started having that
problem when I got out from the college and started cooking and
cleaning dishes for myself. The detergent seems to have something to
do with the problem.

I was also thinking along the line of mounting a sprayer on the boat.
But I just find several hand-powered water pump fixtures in WestMarine
that I may choose from. Somehow I didn't find them in BoaterWorld.
This is odd because because normally those two stores carry the same
thing. Anyway, I am glad that I have several different choices
available (a spray bottle, a hand powered water pump, or an electric
powered water pump). I am all set.

Nice to talk with you.

Jay Chan


Reginald P. Smithers III February 6th 07 06:01 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
Doug Kanter wrote:
"Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in message
. ..
wrote:
On 6 Feb 2007 08:47:53 -0800, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:

On Feb 6, 9:26 am, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:07:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"

wrote:

You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.
Consider that a lot of this goofy posting is from a largely, if not
totally, anonymous poster using a particularly old version of Debian
Linux and associated news client.....

Google up the rec.boats proponents of Debian Linux and you will have
most of the usual suspects.....
He seems fairly straight forward to me - I'm not sure where
you developed this idea about goofy posting.

Besides, as somebody who suffers from skin infections of
one sort or another, it seemed like a perfectly valid question
and one that deserved a appropriate answer.
I'm not sure.... some of his prior questions have had such obvious
answers.... it just looked suspect. Some of those questions I offered
my advice. This latest one just seemed extremely obvious and, well,
odd..... and then I noticed that he was using the same posting schema
as the old anon-posting smithers.... made me even more suspicious....

Gene,
I have never used an anon-posting address or machine.


Gene is clueless as usual.



I really don't know, because I didn't bother to follow his previous
thread or see if anyone was posting via an .edu account, but if he
thinks I have ever used an anon-posting method or a similar posting
schema as anyone else in here, then he is clueless.

JoeSpareBedroom February 6th 07 06:04 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
On Feb 6, 6:35 am, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:
On Feb 5, 8:11 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:


wrote in message


oups.com...


On Feb 5, 1:07 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
wrote in message


groups.com...


I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand
with
fresh water.


My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a
sink
and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my
need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater
as
the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore,
I
only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that
one-
gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several
persons
use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to
accomplish
this.


What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump
spray
bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a
short
lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a
small
water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet.
When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times,
turn
on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the
sal****er
away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run
down
to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I
am
done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use
it
probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough
water pressure in the system.


Is there such a thing available in the market?


Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands.
But
this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use
more
water than I really need.


I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank
that
has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the
water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet
above
the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to
lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a
small boat).


Thanks for any pointer in advance.


Jay Chan


You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.- Hide quoted
text -


- Show quoted text -


Why is it a joke? I always carry a water bottle for washing the salt
from my hands after I have washed my hand in sea water. This
minimizes the irritation on my skin and helps keeping the skin
problem
down. Of course, I also use hand cream; this is a given. I guess
not
everyone has this skin problem; therefore, most people probably don't
understand how this feels. Let's just say that this problem is
physical, not mental.


That water bottle works. But it is a bit too ad-hoc and tends to use
more water than needed. That's the reason why I want to find
something more convenient.


Jay Chan


Your own perspiration contains salt.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


I can understand his concern - I have a similar problem on
board but related to infection as a result of my arthritis
treatment. I'm more prone to infection as a result of that
treatment and fresh water is much better to rinse with than
salt - in particular in a harbor that has a sewer treatment
near it. Or the CT River after rain which is full of...well
this is a family group.

What I do is carry a gallon of fresh water and use a hand
sprayer - hence my advice to jay. Stick the gallon under
the console and use it if I need to.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Sorry to hear that you have a similar problem. I started having that
problem when I got out from the college and started cooking and
cleaning dishes for myself. The detergent seems to have something to
do with the problem.



Have your pharmacy order you a bottle of U-Lactin. CVS can get it. $10 for
16 oz. My doctor and the pharmacist were at a loss to explain why it's not
stocked along with all the other skin creams. It's great stuff.
Non-prescription.



Reginald P. Smithers III February 6th 07 06:05 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
wrote:
On Feb 6, 6:35 am, "Short Wave Sportfishing"
wrote:
On Feb 5, 8:11 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:


wrote in message
ups.com...
On Feb 5, 1:07 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with
fresh water.
My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink
and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my
need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as
the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I
only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one-
gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons
use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish
this.
What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray
bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short
lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small
water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet.
When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn
on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er
away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down
to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am
done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it
probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough
water pressure in the system.
Is there such a thing available in the market?
Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But
this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more
water than I really need.
I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that
has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the
water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above
the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to
lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a
small boat).
Thanks for any pointer in advance.
Jay Chan
You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Why is it a joke? I always carry a water bottle for washing the salt
from my hands after I have washed my hand in sea water. This
minimizes the irritation on my skin and helps keeping the skin problem
down. Of course, I also use hand cream; this is a given. I guess not
everyone has this skin problem; therefore, most people probably don't
understand how this feels. Let's just say that this problem is
physical, not mental.
That water bottle works. But it is a bit too ad-hoc and tends to use
more water than needed. That's the reason why I want to find
something more convenient.
Jay Chan
Your own perspiration contains salt.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -

I can understand his concern - I have a similar problem on
board but related to infection as a result of my arthritis
treatment. I'm more prone to infection as a result of that
treatment and fresh water is much better to rinse with than
salt - in particular in a harbor that has a sewer treatment
near it. Or the CT River after rain which is full of...well
this is a family group.

What I do is carry a gallon of fresh water and use a hand
sprayer - hence my advice to jay. Stick the gallon under
the console and use it if I need to.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Sorry to hear that you have a similar problem. I started having that
problem when I got out from the college and started cooking and
cleaning dishes for myself. The detergent seems to have something to
do with the problem.

I was also thinking along the line of mounting a sprayer on the boat.
But I just find several hand-powered water pump fixtures in WestMarine
that I may choose from. Somehow I didn't find them in BoaterWorld.
This is odd because because normally those two stores carry the same
thing. Anyway, I am glad that I have several different choices
available (a spray bottle, a hand powered water pump, or an electric
powered water pump). I am all set.

Nice to talk with you.

Jay Chan

Jay,

I have a electric pump powered hand held shower on my transom, it was
installed by the mfg'er, and actually has a hot water heater that runs
off of the engine block.

it is very similar to this one:


http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs...allpartial/0/0


[email protected] February 6th 07 06:07 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
On Feb 6, 7:30 am, Vic Smith wrote:
On 5 Feb 2007 18:02:57 -0800, "

wrote:

Why is it a joke? I always carry a water bottle for washing the salt
from my hands after I have washed my hand in sea water. This
minimizes the irritation on my skin and helps keeping the skin problem
down. Of course, I also use hand cream; this is a given. I guess not
everyone has this skin problem; therefore, most people probably don't
understand how this feels. Let's just say that this problem is
physical, not mental.


One of my sisters has a similar skin problem. If she isn't careful
about what gets on her hands she ends up with sores.

That water bottle works. But it is a bit too ad-hoc and tends to use
more water than needed. That's the reason why I want to find
something more convenient.


The portable hand wash stations I've seen for sale don't match your
needs. I suggest a suitable vented plastic tank to which you attach a
12v RV-type pump, or an automotive windshield pump.
You can run a rubber water line and the switch wiring to where you
want it in the boat, spraying over the side or over a pan. Use a
nozzle that produces the spray you want. The switch can be foot
operated if you so desire. Not much different than a car windshield
washer setup.
It will be an elegant and useful addition to your boat if properly
done, and soon your boating friends will want one too (-:

--Vic


Sorry to hear that your sister has a similar skin problem on her
hands. Mine was coming from washing dishes, and may have to do with
the use of detergent. Guess what, this problem tends to run in the
same family (my brother also has the same problem). This means you
may develop this problem if you wash dishes without wearing gloves.

Anyway, I have found several hand-powered marine water pump fixtures
in one of the marine supply store. Somehow, they are not as
inexpensive as what I thought. In fact, they cost more or less the
same as a simple electric water pump fixture. I guess I may have to
go for the simple electric water pump instead of the hand powered
version that I originally looked for. Oh well; but at least I have a
choice :)

Jay Chan


[email protected] February 6th 07 06:13 PM

Need a Way to Wash Hand with Fresh Water
 
On Feb 6, 10:26 am, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 18:07:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"

wrote:

You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.


Consider that a lot of this goofy posting is from a largely, if not
totally, anonymous poster using a particularly old version of Debian
Linux and associated news client.....

Google up the rec.boats proponents of Debian Linux and you will have
most of the usual suspects.....
--

Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC.

eMail


Homepagehttp://pamandgene.idleplay.net/

Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguidehttp://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats
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I am very puzzled of the reason why you may think that I am posting a
troll.

Honestly I am not very familiar with boating (a lot learned from books
and newgroups, but no practical experience). This is the reason why I
post my questions. I understand that those may be simple questions
for most people in this newsgroup. But I am not up to that level yet.

Jay Chan



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