Hemi Joel wrote:
BrianSpafford wrote:
This is my first time in my life when I heard about the dry bath. I do not know how it works, but I still prefer a wet one. This is the best thing that can be in my life after a day with children. And when I found https://goodsreview.co/best-handheld-shower-headshttps://goodsreview.co/best-handheld-shower-heads life had become even better. After you put the children to bed, just stand under the pleasant streams of water and enjoy. BEST. THING. EVER!
Brian, a dry bath uses water just like a wet bath, and you cab use a hand held shower head. The difference is that a "wet bath" gets the whole bathroom wet. A "dry bath" has a separate area for the shower, so the rest of the bathroom stays dry.
My shower does not get the "whole bathroom wet". I use the handheld wand to wet down, then I soap all over and then rinse. I use a total of about 1 gallon of water. My pump is pretty low flow, low pressure and I keep the volume of water on low. When I am done the shower curtain and the shower wall and the floor are wet. Otherwise, there are only a few sprinkles of water on the toilet seat and back walls.
I am starting to think I see a major difference. Those who use city water hook ups might run the shower as they would at home. I never use a hook up, rarely even have hook ups available. I am almost always trying to conserve water. Much of the time I need to hand fill my water tank with a funnel and 5 gallon jug.