What do you do with your sweaty stuff
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What do you do with your sweaty stuff
Hello all,
I'm looking at commuting (I know I can, I know I can). But the distances and current temperatures require a shower and change of clothes at work, which isn't a problem in itself, the question is what to do with the sweaty clothes.
I don't want to scrunch them up in a ball and hide away in a locker or drawer because they won't dry and will smell pretty bad, not to mention being unsanitary. And I would probably want to wear them on the ride back home.
But then again I don't want to hang them out somewhere for all the office world to see. And I do work in a shared office, and my sweaty chamois probably isn't the sort of thing worthy of sharing.
Any ideas?
I'm looking at commuting (I know I can, I know I can). But the distances and current temperatures require a shower and change of clothes at work, which isn't a problem in itself, the question is what to do with the sweaty clothes.
I don't want to scrunch them up in a ball and hide away in a locker or drawer because they won't dry and will smell pretty bad, not to mention being unsanitary. And I would probably want to wear them on the ride back home.
But then again I don't want to hang them out somewhere for all the office world to see. And I do work in a shared office, and my sweaty chamois probably isn't the sort of thing worthy of sharing.
Any ideas?
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When I hang my stuff I put my jersey in front of the shorts so they are not out for all to see. I also used to put everything on top of my bag as daven1986 said. Both work well for me.
#5
aka Phil Jungels
Another alternative ---- carry an extra set for the ride home, clean.
What I do with my dirty cycle clothes, until I get enuf to wash, is throw them in a cat litter bucket - one of them square plastic thingys, with a cover that snaps tight. Works well, and I never know they are there.
But, then again, I just hate to put dirty cycle clothes on a second time..... I'd rather buy more cheap cycle shorts, and cheap wicking shirts. Then, save the good clothes for longer weekend rides.
What I do with my dirty cycle clothes, until I get enuf to wash, is throw them in a cat litter bucket - one of them square plastic thingys, with a cover that snaps tight. Works well, and I never know they are there.
But, then again, I just hate to put dirty cycle clothes on a second time..... I'd rather buy more cheap cycle shorts, and cheap wicking shirts. Then, save the good clothes for longer weekend rides.
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Another alternative ---- carry an extra set for the ride home, clean.
What I do with my dirty cycle clothes, until I get enuf to wash, is throw them in a cat litter bucket - one of them square plastic thingys, with a cover that snaps tight. Works well, and I never know they are there.
But, then again, I just hate to put dirty cycle clothes on a second time..... I'd rather buy more cheap cycle shorts, and cheap wicking shirts. Then, save the good clothes for longer weekend rides.
What I do with my dirty cycle clothes, until I get enuf to wash, is throw them in a cat litter bucket - one of them square plastic thingys, with a cover that snaps tight. Works well, and I never know they are there.
But, then again, I just hate to put dirty cycle clothes on a second time..... I'd rather buy more cheap cycle shorts, and cheap wicking shirts. Then, save the good clothes for longer weekend rides.
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I put it in a plastic bag, then put it in my bag. When I get home, I throw it in the dirty clothes basket.
Last edited by augustao; 02-06-10 at 10:40 AM.
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I hang the shorts and shirt on hangers in a locker. The pants and booties get wiped dry and tossed into the bottom of the locker. The jacket goes down to my desk with me and hangs on a hanger.
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I hang them under my desk -- made a drying rack out of old stainless spokes in a size I don't need any more (extra long spokes for 4x 27" touring wheels). Keep a small fan under the desk circulating air, everything gets dry before lunch, even in the rainiest Seattle weather.
#12
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I have a rack that fits over the top of my office door. I hang the wet bike clothes on the rack and they're dry by the end of the day.
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Sometimes I hang by windblocker jacket over my bike. The nasty smell deters people to venture any closer. hahahahha. In terms of clothes.... well I think they are overrated.
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OP: we have lockers and I dump my stuff in there. I used to hang them up in my office to dry, but I ****REALLY**** got complaints then. Heck, it even gagged me sometimes.
I really need to buy some wool, I just need to get over the $$ PRICE $$. I've been wearing the same alertshirts for 4 years now, I paid $8 each for them and they're as new, but that poly does stink when sweaty. None of the thrift shops around here EVER have any wool when I go check. It's all cotton and acrylic. You guys who are finding merino wool in the thrift shops all the time must have rich folks living in your area to even have that stuff in the first place, let alone giving it to thrift shops.
When I get home, I seal my dirty stuff in an old cat litter bucket until I have a laundry load, then I don my breathing mask while I decant the smelly mass into the clothes washer. When I used to just put the clothes in the open in the bathroom it smelled like a troll's gym sock in there, and stunk up half the rest of the house.
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I shower at work and then hang my bibs and jersey, socks and helmet liner on hangers from the curtain rod. Even if I get rained on for all 15 miles of my incoming commute, I can have my stuff dry for the return trip (even if it's just going to get drenched in 2 minutes again.)
My gloves and shoe covers get draped over my bike to dry out.
My gloves and shoe covers get draped over my bike to dry out.
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#16
Not safe for work
When I wasn't working from home, my workplace had lockers and showers. I'd hang up my cycling clothes in my locked but anything really wet I'd put on a hanger and hang it off the locker door.
I also put my dirty, sweaty cyling clothes in a sealable bucket but I add water and a scoop of washing soda. That way the clothes can pre-soak before I do the laundry. It helps keep the sweat from completely stinking up my shorts and jerseys bit also means I don't have to open up what smells like a bucket full of biohazard. Really? An enclosed bucket full of grimy clothes marinating in sweat. YUCK! Try the washing soda and water. Please.
I also put my dirty, sweaty cyling clothes in a sealable bucket but I add water and a scoop of washing soda. That way the clothes can pre-soak before I do the laundry. It helps keep the sweat from completely stinking up my shorts and jerseys bit also means I don't have to open up what smells like a bucket full of biohazard. Really? An enclosed bucket full of grimy clothes marinating in sweat. YUCK! Try the washing soda and water. Please.
#17
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Luckily. I had a 12 hour shift. It was enough time to rinse out the stink.. Place them near a heat duct and they amazingly would be dry in time to go home.. It helped that downstairs away from the work area, I had a space to shower, rinse out my clothes and let them dry near a ventilation vent..
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#18
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+1. When in doubt, febreze!
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I've become a big believer in wool. I wear as much wool as possible and I'm gonna get thin merino wool shirts for summer too. I can hang them anywhere, behind a desk, or whenever and they don't smell and are dry by the end of the day. The cycling stuff stinks horribly after one drying, my wool stuff doesn't smell after 5 days if sweating and drying.
Think of closed, hidden places that have high airflow or are warm: boiler rooms, computer rooms, etc. Maybe you can let someone hang your stuff in there? You can hang your clothes on the back of a computer or monitor, back of fax machine, etc. so it's hidden but getting some airflow and heat.
Adam
Think of closed, hidden places that have high airflow or are warm: boiler rooms, computer rooms, etc. Maybe you can let someone hang your stuff in there? You can hang your clothes on the back of a computer or monitor, back of fax machine, etc. so it's hidden but getting some airflow and heat.
Adam
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Trust me. I know these things.
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It's not just the sweat, it's the plastered on dead bugs and dust mixed with sweat salt and road grit ...
Some of my office sites had no showers but I made do quite well with a bucket, liquid soap and washrags in a bathroom handicap stall. It takes no longer than a shower and while not as luxurious, you can get completely clean.
The clothes - I either hang them up to dry "as is" or sink-wash them and then hang to dry. Block the view of the shorts with the jersey and your microfiber towel if need be but make sure air can circulate. If you can point a small fan at them all the better. Often I wear a simple mesh T that dries faster than a bike jersey w/ pockets.
Some of my office sites had no showers but I made do quite well with a bucket, liquid soap and washrags in a bathroom handicap stall. It takes no longer than a shower and while not as luxurious, you can get completely clean.
The clothes - I either hang them up to dry "as is" or sink-wash them and then hang to dry. Block the view of the shorts with the jersey and your microfiber towel if need be but make sure air can circulate. If you can point a small fan at them all the better. Often I wear a simple mesh T that dries faster than a bike jersey w/ pockets.
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Over the shower rod. The way our shower is, there is a rod at the entrance to a little cubbyhole that has the shower. I hang my towel over that rod, and it hides the clothes hanging inside.
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The main issue I have run into with co-workers and odors come from the clothes themselves. Finding a secure place to let them hang where they don't offend someone's olfactory senses can be a challenge. Currently my only choice is to hang them on the back of my office door, which is why I keep a can of febreze handy.
I've often let them hang in the same men's room where I clean up and change too...security was never a problem for me, luckily, YMMV.
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Trust me, I know these things.
I can't speak for the clothing you wore on the ride tho...sometimes even Febreeze or a bonfire can't help.
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"Let us hope our weapons are never needed --but do not forget what the common people knew when they demanded the Bill of Rights: An armed citizenry is the first defense, the best defense, and the final defense against tyranny. If guns are outlawed, only the government will have guns. Only the police, the secret police, the military, the hired servants of our rulers. Only the government -- and a few outlaws. I intend to be among the outlaws" - Edward Abbey
"Let us hope our weapons are never needed --but do not forget what the common people knew when they demanded the Bill of Rights: An armed citizenry is the first defense, the best defense, and the final defense against tyranny. If guns are outlawed, only the government will have guns. Only the police, the secret police, the military, the hired servants of our rulers. Only the government -- and a few outlaws. I intend to be among the outlaws" - Edward Abbey