These policies are all over the place if you cared to look. Many lost & founds have a policy that's effectively "if it touches your lips, we're not taking it." Now you know. "For sanitary reasons, DEN Lost and Found does not keep water bottles, hats, pillows or blankets." https://www.flydenver.com/app/uploads/2023/09/21-60-Lost-and-Found-1.pdf "What We DO NOT Hold Water bottles" https://lostandfound.byu.edu/ "Campus Safety does not take the following items in as found property; water bottles, hats and gloves, cables and chargers, paper notebooks, perishiable items, other items of low monetary value." https://www.luc.edu/safety/lost_and_found.html |
Meh. If you come and go out of a place often it doesn't hurt to ask if someone turned in your missing item. And it's a reminder that there are nice people out there because someone turned it in whether it be a water bottle or something else. It doesn't matter that you think someone wouldn't bother to do that or their item was meaningless. |
Yep, there it is in a nutshell. |
I'll remember to keep my water bottle next to me at all times when in those places. Luckily many other places have their own rules. |
It seems you have some research to do since you were speaking on behalf of all lost & founds. |
I said if you ask, they may have it. Still true. |
Why "luckily"? Lost & founds that have less sanitary rules are now more virtuous? Because they may hold on to the fabled water bottle? |
It's lucky for the person who lost the item, is it not? |
Yeah, no. She was playing on the playground, put her stuff down and came back and it was gone. She and I both went to the lost and found after school, nothing. She leaves her stuff in a particular spot so she knows where to find it. Ther is at least one other kid stealing her stuff. Ad I said, if your kid comes home with something not specifically purchased by or for them, send it back to whence it came. |
I am annoyed the schools send stuff to lost and found so frequently, and don’t really publicize it.
If you see a hoodie at the playground, maybe leave it. The kid will find it tomorrow. I say this a little bit tongue in cheek. But really, kids will find misplaced stuff at school within 24 hours. Just leave it in the classroom for a day. This is beside the point—re: the OP |
Drinking out of plastic is so gross at this point, even if it is bpa free. |
Not really. Also, unless you’re getting your water from a spring, most of it comes out of a PVC pipe, which is made of plastic. |
No they wouldn’t. I have found my kids’ water bottles in most and found. |
This thread is so entertaining! Following for fun. |
+1 and new poster. Such drama over water bottles in a post and behind the scenes I never knew could exist! We have our story for those that want to be entertained. Hahahaha. My daughter, tween or maybe young teen a few years back is also hard on her insulated Klean kanteen. She chews the sport spout and her tooth marks are everywhere all over the spout. Looks awful but that’s the way she likes it. One day when I was taking it out of the dishwasher, I found the spout was totally free of tooth marks. So I asked if she got a new spout or something and she said no. She says it’s her friend’s! So apparently they had something at the gym. She left her bottle there and went back to get it after but all the left behind items and water bottles have been put to the side and would nearly have been disposed end of the week. So she picked up one that she thought was hers and brought it back to class but only realized it wasn’t actually hers when looking at the spout. It wasn’t chewed. She had no stickers and the sharpie she wrote at the bottom has probably worn off. At the end of the day she saw one of her school mates waiting out at the driveway with the same bottle and she stared at the spout. She says it seemed like hers. I was like wow. How could you tell and my daughter giggled and said she recognized the two deep tooth scratches she knew she made on it when she was bored at gym class and was biting away and twisting the spout around her mouth. she had just lost a tooth then so the other tooth was really sharp and so made a few deep tooth gashes on the spout that was really distinct! Wow. That’s one sure way to recognize your own water bottle! Anyway, the girl said no. Insisted the bottle in her hand was hers, claimed she also chewed her bottle and was sure it was hers. She also didn’t want to entertain the exchange back for a nicer looking bottle spout. Whatever the case, it didn’t take longer than a week and more tooth marks are now all over this bottle. We let it be and if she likes chewing it. So be it. She should be old enough to handle these things. We were not going to fight her or around the lost and found or helicopter a snowflake like someone else spout will make you sick etc and force order something on her etc. she lost it, got it mixed up and she will learn to deal with it. The L&f was also probably all done with the bottles too and I know our school dumps them or send them to the thrift every Friday. My daughter, now 17, is still a water bottle biter and still has this bottle. Her other bottles (hydroflask included) have her tooth marks on them too and she claims she can always still recognize her own. She can also always tell if her sister is using her spout mistakenly too. They have the same color and the younger chews her bottle too but maybe not as much! My bottle has NO tooth marks and I can tell mine! So lost and found, stickers, names or not. She knows her chewed spout! She might even recognize if it was ever OPs scenario if she ever lost a lost bottle in the mall! Haha hope this keeps you guys entertained. |