For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston for May 30, 2014

  1. Mouse5
    ORMouseworks  over 10 years ago

    Drying laundry outside makes it smell sooo good…the only problem is the birds don’t wear diapers… ;)

     •  Reply
  2. 1682106 inline inline 2 mel brooks master
    Can't Sleep  over 10 years ago

    My neighbor hangs out clothes almost all year long. Even when they were building a new school next door, and clouds of dirt were blowing everywhere!

     •  Reply
  3. 08 01 15 11 20 pm
    krys723  over 10 years ago

    I don’t think my Dad did it right…when I was younger, he would always hang clothes out on the lawn. But when we got them off when they were dry-my parents were separated btw-they would smell musty. We live in Virginia so that might have something to do with it.

     •  Reply
  4. Theskulker avatar ic07
    TheSkulker  over 10 years ago

    It may seem “natural” in sunny weather but clothes still needed to be washed in the winter even without (or before) dryers.

    I remember frozen shirts hanging on the line. They did eventually dry but took much longer.
     •  Reply
  5. Dsc00030
    alviebird  over 10 years ago

    I guess I’m just too sensitive to odors. I can smell pollen, and/or any other pollution on line dried clothes. And if I wanted it, I can get that “line dried” smell by doing a second rinse, and drying on low. And no, I don’t use fabric softeners.

     •  Reply
  6. Tiny avatar
    L  over 10 years ago

    Dry clothes on the line. Then put in dryer for 5-10 minutes with no heat. They come out soft without fabric softener.

     •  Reply
  7. Millionchimps1
    tripwire45  over 10 years ago

    Who has clothes pins anymore?

     •  Reply
  8. Image000000
    MIHorn Premium Member over 10 years ago

    They make great wind-clips to hold music at outdoor concerts!

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    hughnsyl  over 10 years ago

    “But the man on the telly said the penguin’s going to blow up!”

     •  Reply
  10. Imagescasts1v2
    jeanie5448  over 10 years ago

    I love clothes from the clothes line…..that smell is wonderful. The only problem is drying towels and jeans, they are so stiff and scratchy. I used to put the liquid fabric softener in the washer to help but they still would be some what stiff. I do know that drying shirts on the line cuts down on ironing.

     •  Reply
  11. Cathyfacepalm
    gobblingup Premium Member over 10 years ago

    LOL!!!

     •  Reply
  12. 20210517 082929
    flagmichael  over 10 years ago

    Clotheslines (and fences) are prohibited by our HOA.

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    tlynnch  over 10 years ago

    I remember growing up and all the neighbors hung their clothes out to dry in the summer. Now some neighborhoods have deed restrictions that forbid clothes lines. Too bad. As for the winter, mom would hang some on the line indoors.

    I don’t remember any bird droppings on any of the clothes. They seemed to like the car after dad washed it on Saturdays better.

     •  Reply
  14. Silverknights
    JanLC  over 10 years ago

    That was great!

     •  Reply
  15. Bgfcvvesve4ipojsr
    Gokie5  over 10 years ago

    A couple of months ago, I learned how to make Limburger cheese in my very own dryer! I had run the dryer once, and noted that the laundry wasn’t dry, so ran it again. Later, noted that the dryer made a noise and sent clothes around when I turned it on, but it didn’t heat. Clothes were still wet. “Got to do something about that,” I thought. But being old and forgetful, I didn’t take the clothes out. The next morning I was planning to drive to the gym, and noted that the whole garage smelled exactly like the freezer chest at another house, after the freezer had been unplugged for quite a few days. (After all, this was Florida during a March warm streak.) Even the car, with windows cracked open, reeked.I re-washed the clothes using scented detergent, handfuls of OxiClean powder, and a boatload of baking soda. The clothes came out ok, and I dried them at a laundromat. The car aired out pretty quickly. The Limburger cheese? It had been in the interstices of the clothing, but I didn’t bother to refine it out to serve on rye with onions.

     •  Reply
  16. Boston terrier 7
    LV1951  over 10 years ago

    I still hang sheets, shirts and my housecoats etc…on the clothesline. Our house is up on stilts so we don’t have birds flying over the lines.

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    hippogriff  over 10 years ago

    flagmichael: That’s why you should rent (so you can move out easily, or buy, so you have control and equity – not that sucker-bait where you have all the liability and they have all the control.

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    potrerokid  over 10 years ago

    Be thou careful; thy mimicry may get thee a lightning bolt!!!

     •  Reply
  19. Waterfall
    platechick  over 10 years ago

    A woman I worked with always smelled so great so I asked her what perfume she used. She said she didn’t use ANY fragrance items but hung her clothes on the line over her grass after she mowed it the day before. AWESOME.

    Alos: The dollar store has clothespins

     •  Reply
  20. 20211115 131849
    samfran6-0  over 10 years ago

    I remember hanging my clothes out on lines (pre dryer days) and when I took them in, they would be covered in June bugs up in the creases where the pins were. Sometimes attached to thickest parts of my clothes.Guess they were trying to keep cool and get a drink attached

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    westny77  over 10 years ago

    Going back I visited my Grand Parents in the Bronx.They lived in a walk of tenement. The clothes lines in back on the building was hooked from one building to another.All you had to do was open the kitchen window and hang the clothes out. What a marvel idea.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    hippogriff  over 10 years ago

    Nun’Ya Bidness: In most places, that’s illegal. Turn them in anonymously, the fire will last long enough for the police to investigate and take it from there.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From For Better or For Worse