Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you live in an old DC rowhouse, you should wrap in TP and throw in the garbage. DO NOT FLUSH.
Our line from the house down to the main sewer line under the street got clogged. We had our plumbers do an emergency snaking, since water was backing up in all our basement drains.
The plumber pulled out a tangle of tampons and sanitary pads the size of a softball. IT WAS DISGUSTING and had caused a total blockage.
Who would EVER flush pads!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no, you are not supposed to flush tampons. not sure why you'd need a "ton" of toilet paper, just wrap it in a normal amount and then... put it in the bathroom trash....not sure why this is weird?? obviously you would have a trash bag/liner in the trash can and should empty it regularly.
Why would you not flush it if you have modern plumbing?
Anonymous wrote:If you live in an old DC rowhouse, you should wrap in TP and throw in the garbage. DO NOT FLUSH.
Our line from the house down to the main sewer line under the street got clogged. We had our plumbers do an emergency snaking, since water was backing up in all our basement drains.
The plumber pulled out a tangle of tampons and sanitary pads the size of a softball. IT WAS DISGUSTING and had caused a total blockage.
Anonymous wrote:I tried putting them in the trash. My dog likes to get them out of the trash and chew/spread them around the house. That’s far more gross than a clog in the toilet (which in 25 years of having a period hasn’t happened). I risk the clogged toilet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I stopped using them over 10 years ago. I had a diva cup, but I prefer Softcups by Instead now. Empty and rinse it in the shower twice a day. Throw it out after your period is done. Use a fresh one next period. 1 box is like $8 and lasts over a year.
Isn’t a cup messy? Are you in the shower to rinse off when changing it?
Anonymous wrote:Put a (clean) tampon in a glass of water and wait to see how long it takes to "biodegrade."
That photo on page 3 of this thread looks a little like what they dug out of my front yard (Cap Hill) when our basement drains backlogged a year after we bought the house. The guys said they do similar work every other week in DC. It takes one tampon to get stuck in the pipes, and then every one after that gets stuck and before long you have a massive tampon clog.
Thank God we didn't have to pay for the work.