When pulling the ‘Safety Seal’ from the spout of a milk or juice carton, you have to be careful not to squeeze the carton too tightly. Same with opening thin-walled water bottles.
As a coastal elitist, I guess I’m not really conversant on plugger standards of masculinity, but before today I would’ve assumed that “you’re so feeble you need household tools to open a simple carton of milk” would be the sort of thing they’d use to make fun of me, not something they’d proudly declare, in the newspaper in front of God and everyone, to be something that defined their pluggerdom.
Got a thing mounted under a cabinet, two steel strips bent, toothed, and arranged in two V shapes to grab all common kitchen lids and some uncommon ones, too.
Kitchen shears often have a section with dull teeth for just such purposes. Wide mouth jars need a special tool (available in most kitchen supply aisles).
Yakety Sax about 2 months ago
Rubber coated gloves for the easy stuff and Vise Grips® for the tough ones!
Gent about 2 months ago
Carton cartoon eh.
Nuke Road Warrior about 2 months ago
H. habilis, “Handy man” invented the stone knife to open blister packs. (Apparently using the scientific name for genus man is banned by Go Comics)
juicebruce about 2 months ago
My vote goes for the vice grips ;-)
retiredgezzer about 2 months ago
Channel locks here.
Zen-of-Zinfandel about 2 months ago
Pluggers like the non-stick pizza scissors.
kv450 about 2 months ago
My wife has an app for that — me. (although I sometimes have to use the pliers myself ;)
kaycstamper about 2 months ago
Yep, I have pliers, you name it! A small hammer too.
ctolson about 2 months ago
When pulling the ‘Safety Seal’ from the spout of a milk or juice carton, you have to be careful not to squeeze the carton too tightly. Same with opening thin-walled water bottles.
EMGULS79 about 2 months ago
Careful with that milk carton, Plugger! You don’t want to inadvertently commit lactomangulation by handling those pliers too fiercely.
ladykat about 2 months ago
Same here! I’ve also been known to bash along the edge of a stubborn jar lid with a knife to loosen it.
David Rickard Premium Member about 2 months ago
From today’s Comics Curmudgeon:
As a coastal elitist, I guess I’m not really conversant on plugger standards of masculinity, but before today I would’ve assumed that “you’re so feeble you need household tools to open a simple carton of milk” would be the sort of thing they’d use to make fun of me, not something they’d proudly declare, in the newspaper in front of God and everyone, to be something that defined their pluggerdom.
DaBump Premium Member about 2 months ago
Got a thing mounted under a cabinet, two steel strips bent, toothed, and arranged in two V shapes to grab all common kitchen lids and some uncommon ones, too.
ragsarooni about 2 months ago
Nope…under the kitchen sink!
Frer Squirrel about 2 months ago
Gnaw, I just use my teeth and a little persistence.
mistercatworks about 2 months ago
I keep scissors for the human-proof chip bags.
rfdfolkart about 2 months ago
Since I had submitted a similar suggestion, I am glad to see so many have the same problem.
ComicsBinger Premium Member about 2 months ago
Vise grips, needle nose pliers, large bottle grips, small cap grips, etc
Diane Lee Premium Member about 2 months ago
I keep those little lobster dealies in my tool box to open bottles of glue etc. Never liked seafood, so finally found a use for them.
dsidney49 about 2 months ago
I pack a multi tool in my bathrobe… never know if I’ll happen upon a fresh container of creamer on my way to my morning coffee!!!
wildlandwaters about 2 months ago
I find a blow torch comes in handy for jars with a metal lid… (in case someone thinks I’m serious, I’m not… lol!)
CitizenKing about 2 months ago
Another plugger skill is using a butter knife to open a pickle jar.
macmantoo about 2 months ago
Scissors, pliers and a blowtorch.
eddi-TBH about 2 months ago
For the real challenges, I keep a pair of metal shears. Jaws of Life take up too much cabinet space.
g04922 about 2 months ago
LOL… hope he cleaned that tool after working on those rusty bolts…
goboboyd about 2 months ago
A long Channel pliers, and a needle nose… and a long, large flat blade screwdriver.
sincavage05 about 2 months ago
Also good for pulling grandchildrens baby teeth.
Lennia Machen Premium Member about 2 months ago
I have clean needle nose pliers for pulling fish bones, and channel locks for plastic drink bottles.
whelan_jj about 2 months ago
Kitchen shears often have a section with dull teeth for just such purposes. Wide mouth jars need a special tool (available in most kitchen supply aisles).