I was cleaning dried mud off my shoes today after doing some yardwork and thought about how even that small amount of mud was still annoying to scrub off. Those thoughts led me to making this thread.
While this has been a fetish of mine to watch for many years, I haven't tried it for myself in years. I showered in clothes a few times, even once or twice with an ex girlfriend, but I've never gotten messy in clothes. One of the things that's always stopped me from even trying is knowing that there's cleanup to be done afterwards, not to mention messy clothing to deal with, and not wanting to ruin clothes I actually like wearing a lot. The one time I've lived alone I didn't have an in-unit washer and dryer, and so I wasn't going to be taking wet or messy clothes to the communal laundry room. At the moment I'm not living alone either, so I'm not planning to try it for myself any time soon.
But because I'm curious and finally brought myself to join the community for the first time, I'm looking to hear from others how you deal with the cleanup aspect of this fetish. These are just some random questions I've thought of that I've never known the answers to.
-If you're in the bathtub do you just wash stuff down the drain? Isn't clogging your pipes a potential problem? -If you're getting messy outdoors, like going to a mudpit at a river or something, how do you end up cleaning yourself there? What about your messy clothes? -Do you even bother washing your clothes or do you just accept that some messy sessions are just going to result in your clothes being totally ruined and unwashable? Does that mean you'll buy clothes just to trash them?
I've never had the opportunity to ask these questions I've wondered about for years, so hopefully some of you can shed some light on how you handle the aftermath of a fun, messy time. Thanks!
Most things will go down a bathtub drain if diluted with more water. Of course solids are a problem such as beans, etc. When choosing a substance, think of one that will dissolve with more water. Puddings, batter, slimes, etc. usually will do this, but be sure if you don't want to find out the hard way that they are plugging the system.
As for clothing, if it's man-made, it usually washes out. If it's a natural fiber, it probably will stain. That's not 100% accurate, but probably about 95% accurate.
Where there's mud, there is often water. Sometimes there is mud at one end of a drying lake or pond, with water at the other end, or a stream feeding it. If you find mud without nearby water, you can lug in large water bottles, but that's a pain. Usually, mud occurs near water anyways.
When getting messy in the house, always be aware of flying and splattering mess. It can get everywhere and be an added pain to clean up. If you plan for stuff flying, use bed sheets, and thumbtacks to protect your walls and if necessary, ceilings. Plastic drop cloths can go on the floor but tape them down well.
If you are worried that the mess won't wash out of the clothes, just rip and cut all the clothes off. That way, you don't have to deal with trying to get them clean again!
FPzero said: I was cleaning dried mud off my shoes today after doing some yardwork and thought about how even that small amount of mud was still annoying to scrub off. Those thoughts led me to making this thread.
While this has been a fetish of mine to watch for many years, I haven't tried it for myself in years. I showered in clothes a few times, even once or twice with an ex girlfriend, but I've never gotten messy in clothes. One of the things that's always stopped me from even trying is knowing that there's cleanup to be done afterwards, not to mention messy clothing to deal with, and not wanting to ruin clothes I actually like wearing a lot. The one time I've lived alone I didn't have an in-unit washer and dryer, and so I wasn't going to be taking wet or messy clothes to the communal laundry room. At the moment I'm not living alone either, so I'm not planning to try it for myself any time soon.
But because I'm curious and finally brought myself to join the community for the first time, I'm looking to hear from others how you deal with the cleanup aspect of this fetish. These are just some random questions I've thought of that I've never known the answers to.
-If you're in the bathtub do you just wash stuff down the drain? Isn't clogging your pipes a potential problem? -If you're getting messy outdoors, like going to a mudpit at a river or something, how do you end up cleaning yourself there? What about your messy clothes? -Do you even bother washing your clothes or do you just accept that some messy sessions are just going to result in your clothes being totally ruined and unwashable? Does that mean you'll buy clothes just to trash them?
I've never had the opportunity to ask these questions I've wondered about for years, so hopefully some of you can shed some light on how you handle the aftermath of a fun, messy time. Thanks!
For one I love that it's a male asking about cleanup
We tape up table cloths from dollar store to help keep shower walls from needing to be wiped down. And then tape some off the side of the tub so nothing gets on the ground. And we leave garbage bags there to toss most of sludge out. Then she or I see sing on who is messy fill up tub to wash clothes and bodies and then break up last bit of sludge to go down drain. Then shower off and wash hair And bodies once more. Dish soap helps break down oils if it's not coming off and we use laundry soap and vinegar and baking soda to clean her clothes off in laundry.
There are small mesh drain covers that you can get for your bathtub drain (it depends on the size etc.). These will prevent the big chunks (e.g. pie crust) from clogging up the drain.
-If you're in the bathtub do you just wash stuff down the drain? Isn't clogging your pipes a potential problem? -If you're getting messy outdoors, like going to a mudpit at a river or something, how do you end up cleaning yourself there? What about your messy clothes? -Do you even bother washing your clothes or do you just accept that some messy sessions are just going to result in your clothes being totally ruined and unwashable? Does that mean you'll buy clothes just to trash them?
- I usually use an inflatable pool with a tarp on the floor, but I used the bathtub when in my previous accommodation. Most substances will wash down the bathtub drain with plenty of water, just avoid lumpy substances like baked beans or peanut butter. One of the many advantages of using a pool is that the mess can be scooped out using a plastic jug and poured down the toilet which has a much wider waste pipe. Top tip: clean yourself before attempting to clean up the room. - outdoors, just go somewhere where there is a body of water to go clothed swimming in afterwards. After your swim, sometimes people use a bottle of tapwater for the final rinse (this is optional), then just change into clean dry clothes and put the messy clothes in a trash bag to take home. Top tip: always wear something on your feet in case you tread on something sharp! Basic plimsolls can be bought very cheaply. - most mess will wash out of most clothes. I do buy clothes just for getting messy in but usually wash them and end up wearing them as normal clothes. Hand wash messy clothes in cold water initially in a sink, then just wash in the washing machine as normal. If you don't have your own washing machine, do the hand wash at home then take them to the communal laundry room in a trash bag.
I just put a shower liner or tarp on the floor. Then when we're done, we pick up from the corners and fold it up and drop it into one of those industrial size trash bags.
That's for slime. Pies are harder because they splatter backwards more depending on how hard it was pushed or thrown. But same basic idea, just another tarp taped to the wall with painters tape.
Easy, I gunge her in the bath with the plug in, then bucket it all down the toilet (usually about 15 buckets full) . The last bit gets diluted and goes down the plug hole. I once forgot to put the plug in and that was a chore, I blocked the drain with a mixture of beans, mushy peas, thick gravy and all the rest of the gunk. Took me hours to unblock it. We didn't do that twice
Our situation is obviously a bit different to a casual wammer as we've permanent facilities, but on clothes cleaning, with muddy stuff we bring the tub full of muddy clothes into the dungeon, and fill it with cold water. Let everything soak for a few days, then rinse out under cold water, put in the washing machine, first a cold rinse, then two or three standard 40 degree washes with an imperial fuckton of detergent in the first two washes, and a standard amount in the final one. I also sometimes use the dungeon hoses to add extra water to the washing machine to reduce the chance of mud sedementing out and blocking the drain pump before the first pump-out in the cycle. I stick the hose end in the detergent tray, wait till the machine has done it's own fill, and then open the cold valve all the way and fill it till the water is half way up the door window - about four times as much water as it's designed to use.
With gunge or food mess, the clothes go straight in the machine from the shoot, as the hosedown will have already got a lot of the mess off, again, a cold rinse followed by two or three standard washes, with lots of detergent, and if something is still very messy, extra water added too.
When doing multiple washes I turn off the spin on all but the last one, which saves time, energy, and strain on the machine.
We get cheap out door tarps, and put that down as the base, the cover those with a painters cheaper thinner tarp and leave a bucket of water and a trail of towels leading to the shower. Once we're done We wash out hands and feet in the bucket and take a shower, while in the shower we rinse any clothes we want to try to keep (most do make it) and we wash out bowls and the small tubs are slime was in. We roll up the tarps including any syrup bottles, whip cream cans pie tins ect. Then we put the tarp into a contractor trash bag and outside it goes. And finally we wash the towels and clothes in the washing machine.
luvs2pie said: We tape up table cloths from dollar store to help keep shower walls from needing to be wiped down. And then tape some off the side of the tub so nothing gets on the ground. And we leave garbage bags there to toss most of sludge out. Then she or I see sing on who is messy fill up tub to wash clothes and bodies and then break up last bit of sludge to go down drain. Then shower off and wash hair And bodies once more. Dish soap helps break down oils if it's not coming off and we use laundry soap and vinegar and baking soda to clean her clothes off in laundry.
My process is almost exactly yours. Dollar store table clothes are amazing. I'm in a fortunate enough financial position that I can afford to err on the side of too many instead of too few. Most of my wamming (all pies) is done in the bathtub. One tarp each is taped to two walls of the shower (the one opposite the head and the wide wall). One tarp taped to the bottom of the tub. One tarp taped lengthwise along the floor of the bathroom. And often, one outside the bathroom to hold spare pies. I keep several trash bags in the bathroom, as well as a roll of paper towels. Once the WAMMing is done, first I help clean off the bottoms of her feet. (She doesn't gross out easily, but one of the few sensations she doesn't like is pie crust on the soles of her feet). From there, I pull down the tablecloths in a top-to-bottom, out-to-in manner. I roll them up into a ball, then *quickly* get them into the garbage bags. From there, I pick up the larger pieces of crust from the tub and chuck them. While she starts to shower off, I'll look around the room for any whipped cream splatter that hit the walls and attack it with water and paper towels. (I'll sometimes use spray cleaner like fantastic, though usually not until she's out of the shower.)
I'll try to have the bathroom fan on and the windows open for hte remainder of the day.
Within a day or so, I'll spend some time cleaning up in more detail. I'm primarily looking for any stray crust, and especially any whipped cream I missed. It starts to smell pretty unpleasant after a couple of days.
One thing I've learned: Each minute of prep can save about 15 minutes of cleanup at the end. It's worth it to go overboard on prepping, to save a LOT of cleanup afterward.
Thanks for all the replies so far! This fetish of ours certainly does require a bit more planning and logistics than some other ones, so it's interesting to hear how others handle it, and there's a lot of good advice in here that I can use should I ever reach a point where I can have a session for myself. If anyone else has something to share by all means feel free to keep doing so!