Ok.. I don't want to admit this....
Ok.. I don't want to admit this....
But, I really don't like Dr. Bronner's soaps. I wash grocery shopping and was amazed to find it in the organic isles... I bought the small lavender to take home and try. I hate it.
I've tried using it different ways, with washcloths, poufs, just my hands, and in the bath AND shower...
I hate it. I know this is blasphemy to say.. but I hate Dr Bronner's Soaps.
Has anyone known of anything else that is safe to use out on the playa?
Or do all natural, organic based soaps work ok? I've heard conflicting opinions about this...
Please and tanks..
Kate<3
I've tried using it different ways, with washcloths, poufs, just my hands, and in the bath AND shower...
I hate it. I know this is blasphemy to say.. but I hate Dr Bronner's Soaps.
Has anyone known of anything else that is safe to use out on the playa?
Or do all natural, organic based soaps work ok? I've heard conflicting opinions about this...
Please and tanks..
Kate<3
It has that glycerin feel like a bar of soap does, stripping your skin of all the natural oils.. I don't care for the consistency at all, and my skins way too dry afterward...
I'm already living in the Arizona desert, so most of my skin products are very, very moisturizing.. and lotion doesn't help because of the residue like feel on your skin after using this soap...
I'm already living in the Arizona desert, so most of my skin products are very, very moisturizing.. and lotion doesn't help because of the residue like feel on your skin after using this soap...
My favorite soap right now is Trader Joe's shea butter soap. I wish it was scent-free, but the lather is out of this world, and rather moisturizing. I'm guessing that other shea butter soaps are similar.
There's nothing wrong with using a regular bar soap on the playa- you're not going to put dirty greywater on the ground anyway so whatever you use, natural, detergent, whatever, is all going into the landfill with whatever your greywater residue is at the end of the event, you're not trying to get it to biodegrade. If you're worried aobut soap drying your skin too much, look for a moisturizing soap, which Bronner's isn't.
I'm actually trying to get it together to make my own soap right now after being frustrated with my scent-free options. I wish I had a hunk of shea butter to start with= I actually had one for a while that someone had brought back from Africa and I eventually threw it out last year. Sigh...
There's nothing wrong with using a regular bar soap on the playa- you're not going to put dirty greywater on the ground anyway so whatever you use, natural, detergent, whatever, is all going into the landfill with whatever your greywater residue is at the end of the event, you're not trying to get it to biodegrade. If you're worried aobut soap drying your skin too much, look for a moisturizing soap, which Bronner's isn't.
I'm actually trying to get it together to make my own soap right now after being frustrated with my scent-free options. I wish I had a hunk of shea butter to start with= I actually had one for a while that someone had brought back from Africa and I eventually threw it out last year. Sigh...
I don't understand the obsession w/ dr. B either.
Hell, if you already live in the desert then you already have a pretty good idea of what soap you need.
My .02
Hell, if you already live in the desert then you already have a pretty good idea of what soap you need.
My .02
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- illy dilly
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Ok, I'm glad I'm not the only who didn't get it. I understand bacon, its delicious, it smells great (invites neighbors), its full of protein, and its easy to cook.
ygmir you know gasoline will kill the crabs too?
ygmir you know gasoline will kill the crabs too?
Why don't ya stick your head in that hole and find out? ~piehole
Plan for the worst, expect the best. Make the most out of it under any conditions. If you cannot do that you will never enjoy yourself. ~CrispyDave
Plan for the worst, expect the best. Make the most out of it under any conditions. If you cannot do that you will never enjoy yourself. ~CrispyDave
- ygmir
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did I say "Vin", IBD?........no, no, that's your fantasy........."no hands"........ibdave wrote:You wash with Vin Diesel???ygmir wrote:I wash with diesel![]()
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I've heard that, Illy Dilly........but, the diesel is a solvent, moisturizer, and flea repellent, as well as helps with poison oak oil removal...........
how could it be any better?
Gasoline has no lubricant...........
YGMIR
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Incidentally, if by "safe to use" you mean safe to dump the greywater on the playa, there are none. including Dr. Bronners. Any water you've soaped up has to be collected and evaporated or hauled off.
“We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered.”
Ha ha ha ha...that was a little anti-climactic (you don't like Dr. B).
None of the water you use will be touching the sacred playa. All of the water you use will be packed out with you, since you packed it in.
Use whatever you want.
As far as Dr. B, I use it mainly because it's cheap and follows my KISS beauty care rule. Plus, I don't have issues with dry skin.
Many use it as the base for making their own soaps/shampoos, so theoretically you could make it do/smell as you please (by adding oils and such).
None of the water you use will be touching the sacred playa. All of the water you use will be packed out with you, since you packed it in.
Use whatever you want.
As far as Dr. B, I use it mainly because it's cheap and follows my KISS beauty care rule. Plus, I don't have issues with dry skin.
Many use it as the base for making their own soaps/shampoos, so theoretically you could make it do/smell as you please (by adding oils and such).
- Fire_Moose
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I don't like Dr. Bronner's either, I tried washing dishes with it once because someone said it made a good natural camp soap (somewhere other than the playa, of course), it was awful, all the dishes had a slightly sticky film on them - gross. Tried it on my hair once, too...double gross. Still have the little bottle I bought 6 years ago, maybe it'd be good for handwashing, but I don't have the love affair with it that others do, either.
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- Ugly Dougly
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Dr. B's is touted as being "biodegradeable," and safe for lakes, rivers, etc., human consumption and so on.Captain Goddammit wrote:I am curious about what you mean by safe to use on the playa.
Dr. Bronners is what hippies bathe with. That about covers that subject.
Can be good for those with sensitive skin, due to it's lack of chemicals - and the peppermint? Well...it can get "fresh" depending on where applied.
But, since Miz Victorian will carefully ensure not a DROP of her moop touches the playa, or remains there after her departure, it isn't a big deal @ Burning Man.
ETA:
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[youtube][/youtube]
- Ugly Dougly
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> incase some spills?
There used to be a BLM ranger at Winnemucca named Bilbo, if I recall his name right. He was very interested in the playa and wrote very interesting several articles about it. They were posted for awhile on the Winnemucca site of the BLM, but they've been taken down or amended. He's been transferred as part of the normal process of being a government employee in the BLM.
In one of his articles, he mentions gray water. There's no standard definition of gray water; different organizations define it to meet their particular agendas. The BLM defined it for Burning Man 2 or 3 years ago for the first time.
Bilbo's article on gray water says it makes no difference on the playa since nothing in the gray water makes it to any potable water that is consumed. My hazy recollection is that there is no water table at all under the playa. The reason for prohibiting gray water disposal is that gray water contains bacteria and other life forms what will reach potable water and contaminate it. Dishwater, for example, is often included in the definition not because of the soap or other detergent, but because it contains food particles washed off the dishes. These food particles, as we all know, can cause food-borne illnesses as a part of the rotting process.
BMOrg used to have instructions on treating gray water and disposing of it on the streets to keep dust down - put chlorine bleach in a bucket of filtered gray water and let it stand till the chlorine odor disappears. The bleach kills the organisms. (Filtering it keeps the pieces of food out.)
Now this comment I'm making is 'real world,' not playa world. So whatever the rules are on the playa are the rules on the playa. If anyone is concerned about disposing of soap on the playa, soap is not the problem. It's whatever bacteria, germs, and such that you've washed off that are the problem. And in reality, it's not a problem on the playa because the germs will never reach a water table. They'll sit there in the silt for however long and die.
My comments do not apply to 'black water' which is untreated sewage.
There used to be a BLM ranger at Winnemucca named Bilbo, if I recall his name right. He was very interested in the playa and wrote very interesting several articles about it. They were posted for awhile on the Winnemucca site of the BLM, but they've been taken down or amended. He's been transferred as part of the normal process of being a government employee in the BLM.
In one of his articles, he mentions gray water. There's no standard definition of gray water; different organizations define it to meet their particular agendas. The BLM defined it for Burning Man 2 or 3 years ago for the first time.
Bilbo's article on gray water says it makes no difference on the playa since nothing in the gray water makes it to any potable water that is consumed. My hazy recollection is that there is no water table at all under the playa. The reason for prohibiting gray water disposal is that gray water contains bacteria and other life forms what will reach potable water and contaminate it. Dishwater, for example, is often included in the definition not because of the soap or other detergent, but because it contains food particles washed off the dishes. These food particles, as we all know, can cause food-borne illnesses as a part of the rotting process.
BMOrg used to have instructions on treating gray water and disposing of it on the streets to keep dust down - put chlorine bleach in a bucket of filtered gray water and let it stand till the chlorine odor disappears. The bleach kills the organisms. (Filtering it keeps the pieces of food out.)
Now this comment I'm making is 'real world,' not playa world. So whatever the rules are on the playa are the rules on the playa. If anyone is concerned about disposing of soap on the playa, soap is not the problem. It's whatever bacteria, germs, and such that you've washed off that are the problem. And in reality, it's not a problem on the playa because the germs will never reach a water table. They'll sit there in the silt for however long and die.
My comments do not apply to 'black water' which is untreated sewage.
- epic_elite
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- motskyroonmatick
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Doesn't this totally leave out "Leave No Trace." Do we want people thinking that if you can't see it then it is ok to apply it to the playa?phil wrote:> incase some spills?
There used to be a BLM ranger at Winnemucca named Bilbo, if I recall his name right. He was very interested in the playa and wrote very interesting several articles about it. They were posted for awhile on the Winnemucca site of the BLM, but they've been taken down or amended. He's been transferred as part of the normal process of being a government employee in the BLM.
In one of his articles, he mentions gray water. There's no standard definition of gray water; different organizations define it to meet their particular agendas. The BLM defined it for Burning Man 2 or 3 years ago for the first time.
Bilbo's article on gray water says it makes no difference on the playa since nothing in the gray water makes it to any potable water that is consumed. My hazy recollection is that there is no water table at all under the playa. The reason for prohibiting gray water disposal is that gray water contains bacteria and other life forms what will reach potable water and contaminate it. Dishwater, for example, is often included in the definition not because of the soap or other detergent, but because it contains food particles washed off the dishes. These food particles, as we all know, can cause food-borne illnesses as a part of the rotting process.
BMOrg used to have instructions on treating gray water and disposing of it on the streets to keep dust down - put chlorine bleach in a bucket of filtered gray water and let it stand till the chlorine odor disappears. The bleach kills the organisms. (Filtering it keeps the pieces of food out.)
Now this comment I'm making is 'real world,' not playa world. So whatever the rules are on the playa are the rules on the playa. If anyone is concerned about disposing of soap on the playa, soap is not the problem. It's whatever bacteria, germs, and such that you've washed off that are the problem. And in reality, it's not a problem on the playa because the germs will never reach a water table. They'll sit there in the silt for however long and die.
My comments do not apply to 'black water' which is untreated sewage.
I think the depths of the playa hold a huge amount of water. Yah it may be bound up in clay and hard to get out. It may not migrate far like water in volcanic rock. I thought the only reason we can drive on the top of the playa is it's being exposed to the atmosphere so it dries out and stabilizes.
Didn't Thrust SSC have a problem with the pressure wave bringing liquid to the surface of the playa causing handling troubles?
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When you pass the 4th "bridge out!" sign; the flaming death is all yours.-Knowmad-
- Elderberry
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- epic_elite
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good to know. concidering i haven't seen a Dr. B bar n e where, and i know how to get this i may pick some up.C.f.M. wrote:I had one of those (it's a body/shampoo bar) and I loved it - left my hair fairly dry, but it was worth the convienence.epic_elite wrote:i have no experience with Dr B's but ive bumped seen a bar of Bert's Bees spearmint and rosemary at the store one time
Any place that sells the liquid usually sells the soap (Dr. B). I think they might have stopped making the shampoo bar (BB's) - since they got bought out by a big corporation who moved it all to WalMart...epic_elite wrote:good to know. concidering i haven't seen a Dr. B bar n e where, and i know how to get this i may pick some up.C.f.M. wrote:I had one of those (it's a body/shampoo bar) and I loved it - left my hair fairly dry, but it was worth the convienence.epic_elite wrote:i have no experience with Dr B's but ive bumped seen a bar of Bert's Bees spearmint and rosemary at the store one time
- Ugly Dougly
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