Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
She literally doesn't. There are more ecological alternatives to tampons. It's funny the poster above is talking about taking all this trash and packing it out like it helps the environment.
Would your daughter use the cup? If not - would she use period swim bottoms?
1) cups are way more difficult to use than tampons
2) she won’t have access to running water to wash her hands
3) the cup needs to be emptied and reinserted- how would that go, with dirty hands, in the woods, with no water to rinse the cup, or your hands?
That sounds way worse
Cups are supposed to last 12 hours, they hold way more than a tampon
On the other hand, if it fails it will be an embarrassing disaster
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
She literally doesn't. There are more ecological alternatives to tampons. It's funny the poster above is talking about taking all this trash and packing it out like it helps the environment.
Would your daughter use the cup? If not - would she use period swim bottoms?
1) cups are way more difficult to use than tampons
2) she won’t have access to running water to wash her hands
3) the cup needs to be emptied and reinserted- how would that go, with dirty hands, in the woods, with no water to rinse the cup, or your hands?
That sounds way worse
Cups are supposed to last 12 hours, they hold way more than a tampon
On the other hand, if it fails it will be an embarrassing disaster
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
She literally doesn't. There are more ecological alternatives to tampons. It's funny the poster above is talking about taking all this trash and packing it out like it helps the environment.
Would your daughter use the cup? If not - would she use period swim bottoms?
1) cups are way more difficult to use than tampons
2) she won’t have access to running water to wash her hands
3) the cup needs to be emptied and reinserted- how would that go, with dirty hands, in the woods, with no water to rinse the cup, or your hands?
That sounds way worse
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
She literally doesn't. There are more ecological alternatives to tampons. It's funny the poster above is talking about taking all this trash and packing it out like it helps the environment.
Would your daughter use the cup? If not - would she use period swim bottoms?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
Those women absolutely love the outdoors and camping. It’s ok to want access to the bathroom. Really it is.
Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
Anonymous wrote:She has to figure tampons out. Women go on long hikes and camp all the time, where bathroom and garbage access is limited. You take a bag and dispose of it in sealed bag and carry it with you until you can dispose of it. It isn’t a big deal- unless you make it one. In which case you shouldn’t go on trips where a standing bathroom isn’t available.
Anonymous wrote:How do you parent a kid, not have them ready for tampons but put them in a rafting camp. Like come on
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP-- surely the camp has faced this before. Frankly, I'm surprised it isn't on their FAQs or something. I would reach out to them and ask about the logistics of it.
Agree. Highly doubt they have zero access to bathrooms all day