Clotheslines??

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Line drying is still very popular in the UK despite the gross misconception that it rains 365 days of the year here. In the summer I always dry outdoors and can dry a line of washing in no time at all on a hot breezy day. I always put towels and underwear through the dryer afterwards on low heat for about 10 mins to soften them up. I love the smell of line dried laundry and the risk of shrinking is eliminated. In the winter a dryer is a massive help but as soon as I can I am hanging laundry outdoors. In fact, I have dried three lines of laundry today and my bedlinen is currently blowing away in the early evening breeze (not all that warm though)
 
To this day, my 80 year old mother does not own a clothes dryer. (If she had her way, she'd still be using a wringer instead of an automatic, but I digress.) She has two lines in her back yard, both are on pulleys and run between the back door and a clothesline pole at the end of the yard. It's wooden and kind of sort of resembles a telephone pole, complete with spikes that you use to climb the pole if you need to replace a broken line or pulley. (I try not to let that happen. Once or twice a year, I use duct tape to join a new pieces of rope to the old lines and slowly -- very slowly -- thread it through the pulleys. It's easier then climbing the pole! Fortunately, pulleys don't have to be replaced that often. Wooden clothesline poles are getting harder and harder to find. There's only one clothesline pole dealer in the local yellow pages and a friend tells me that her parents replace their wooden pole with a metal one the last time that they needed to have theirs replaced.)

My parents live five blocks from me. I live in an apartment and have to make do with coin operated laundry equipment. Every once in a while, I bring some wet laundry over to my parents house and hang it on the line. I agree, there's NOTHING that smells as fresh as line dried linens. ESPECIALLY in the winter. I don't know why, but -- to me -- line dried clothes smell especially fresh during a cold winter day.

If I don't feel like walking over to my parents (we live in an urban area, so parking is at a premium), I sometimes stretch a small line in the hall between my bathroom and living room, so I can dry those things that I don't want to put in the dryer. I also have a folding rack for that purpose. It can take up to 24 hours to dry some of the heavier things, so I try not to do this too often.

My mom also still uses "pants stretchers". If they're used indoors (say on a rainy day), you can actually position them so that they remain "standing" while the pants are drying.

Mike
 
Haven't line dried in years.

We only would line dry during the summer. Ma taught, and during the school year, everything was dried in the dryer.

We had a succession of the umbrella style folding poles.

Ma actually preferred things dried in the dryer. I think it had something to do with her having been born in 1922, before dryers :)

We have always had gas heated dryers, and therefore until recently, drying hasn't been the major expense it can be with an electric.

My landlord was willing to put in the hookups because my dryer is gas. I don't think he wanted to put in a second 220 outlet.
(Now if I could get him to put in a gas stove!!)

I agree about sheets dried on the line, but do not like towels dried on the line. They may be more absorbing, but too scratchy, even with an overdose of Downy.

Here I couldn't. Even if the landlord would let me put up a line, this neighbourhood is "marginal," and things would walk off.

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
Hina and her Laundry problems

Hina had a big problem that she could not solve, which was frustrating for her as she was a goddess. The days were too short for her tapa clothes to dry successfully. So she asked her son, the demigod Maui, to do something about this. Maui ended up throwing a big rope around the sun. He promised only to let go of the sun if it would just walk more slowly across the sky. The sun agreed to Maui's demand, so now the days are long enough to get the washing dry. So our days are 24 hours long due to a laundry problem.
This legend is told by many South Pacific peoples. Maui did a few other cool things, but nothing else related to Laundry....
 
I have a nice clothesline. Use it as often as possible here in Louisiana's crazy weather. One problem, when the Starlings (Blackbirds) return in March every year, there are thousands if not millions of them that swarm my property and let me tell ya, they can destroy a days wash in a matter of seconds if they light in the trees over my clothesline. Droppings like you have never seen.
 
Observation about indoor line drying: How fast the clothes dry depends on how much stuff you're hanging at one time. This is because each article is releasing moisture into the air, which adds up and increases the indoor humidity, thereby reducing the rate of evaporation of all the pieces that are on the lines.

When I do one or two loads on a given evening (e.g. separate mid-week wash and weekend wash) and hang them up, everything dries in a matter of a few hours, even the blue jeans. If the weather is damp it can take overnight to get everything dry.

When I let the laundry accumulate for the whole week and do four loads on a Saturday afternoon or evening, it typically takes overnight to get everything dry; sometimes as long as 24 hours. And the indoor air feels noticeably humid while this is going on.

When the weather warms up starting in spring, and I have some windows open and have a fan running, it will be interesting to see how these drying times are affected.

NOTE: Fire safety! Do Not hang clothes above or anywhere near a heater unless you are watching them at all times, and turn off the heat before going to bed!.
 
Dual Fuel

My new house has a dryer and it is strange to adapt to the
convenience after using an outside 4 wire line for the last
7 years. I used several wooden racks over the floor furnace
during the winter. One of the things I will do when it warms up and dries out will be to rig a clothesline.
 
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