I think I might like to read the bathroom thread. It sounds interesting. Can you send me the link?
K
I think I might like to read the bathroom thread. It sounds interesting. Can you send me the link?
K
Emily
2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
2007 Trek Pilot 5.0 WSD "Gloria" - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
2004 Bike Friday Petite Pocket Crusoe - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
This is a bit more labor intensive, but you could hand wash the spin shorts.
Just a small amount of Woolite in the bathroom/kitchen sink does the trick.
Turn the shorts wrong side out, and give the chamois a scrub. Rinse out well, throw in the washing machine alone on just a spin out cycle, and viola... hang up to dry overnight for the next day's class.
I just leave mine turned wrong side out to dry. I think it helps the thicker part of the shorts, the chamois, to get dry quicker.
FWIW
Miranda
Rather than spin delicates, you can compress them in your hands (don't wring), then roll them up in a towel and squeeze the whole roll. That dries them as well as or better than the spin cycle.
I wash clothes by hand when traveling all the time... that trick pretty much ensures most things will dry overnight unless the hotel room has really poor ventilation or very high humidity. Cycling shorts do need some air circulation to dry though.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
After a brief outside ride I will re-use a chamois, and after “real” rides I will sometimes conserve some energy & wash with either handwashing detergent or soap before finally tossing them into the laundry after a second and even third ride (can’t take five pairs along on a week’s training camp, and have no washing machine there)
Even as a microbiologist I don't get all worked up about MRSA; however, the amount of perspiration in a spin class justifies washing shorts. But even then a quick rinse in soapy water might be ok for another go.
My laundry machine has a sportswear cycle that takes half as long as a regular cycle...
It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.
2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias
I wear work out shorts to spin class. It is only an hour long, and I don't feel the need to have a padded short for such a short amount of time. Saves the expensive chamois for the long important outdoor rides. Plain old work out shorts are very inexpensive compared to the cycling shorts.
Another laundry question though. I am now able to hang out clothes on the line to dry(YAY!!!) and I have found that the sun takes my SO's cycling jerseys arm pit stink away. I tried using vinegar, and baking soda, and odo ban(which he absolutely hated since he just puts apricots in the back pockets and they tasted like odoban...oops) and none of them worked. I started hanging clothes out, and voila! No smell, is it just me, or does the sun work wonders on sweat stench?!
I don't worry about MRSA... or sweat for that matter... or even the other secretions which can be pretty profuse.
It's the other bugs, the garden variety ones, that will migrate from one orifice to the other ones in close quarters, getting wiped around by that big chamois wiper and assisted by whatever lube I'm using. Even if I did take a shower immediately before riding (which most of the time I don't - a thorough @ss-wiping with a damp washcloth usually does it for me when I'm starting a ride in the early morning - sorry if that's TMI)
I'm not easily grossed out, and I am really relaxed about bacteria (if that video I linked to didn't already give you a clue). I think most of the hype about bacteria these days is just silly, and actually hurts people's health by (1) killing beneficial and balancing bacteria, (2) promoting resistance in "bad" bacteria, and (3) exposing us all to harsh and toxic cleaning chemicals.
But I do not re-use underwear without washing them. That just does gross me out.
ETA: PS, yes, sunlight (UV) is a powerful antimicrobial. Just turn your jerseys inside out so they don't fade too badly, and don't leave your things in the sun for hours after they're dry, as the UV will also degrade the chamois.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 10-03-2008 at 07:16 AM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.
2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias
You are right about wearing workout shorts. The trouble is that I have really bad vericose veins on my legs. The bike shorts compression on the veins makes my classes much more enjoyable. Actually I wear capris (knickers) most often because they compress to mid-calf. My doc wants me to have the more problematic veins removed, but I am not sure I want to.
I also seem to ge a very sore seat if I don't wear the padded shorts.
<<<pulls out her anti Woolite soapbox>>>
Woolite is overpriced. It's basically a detergent with fancy conditioners to soften thing back up from the harshness of the ingredients. Use a couple of drops of dish soap, or, if you are concerned about "being gentle" on your clothes, use baby shampoo. It's way cheaper anyway.
(WIN is just detergent with oxyclean already added to it. Again, save a few bucks and don't fall for the hype)
For super stink, try an overnight soak in Biz combined with Oxyclean. That should do the trick.
....puts soapbox ( sorry about the pun) away....
Ecover delicate wash http://www.ecover.com/us/en/Products...icate+Wash.htm
works great for getting out sweat smells, plus its all plant based and biodegradable - much better than woolite
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I was thinking (I do that sometime): I wash my heart rate monitor strap when I am in the shower. Why couldn't I take my bike shorts in the shower, wash them, put them in a plastic bag, and take them out to dry when I get home. I take the monitor strap and put it in the car to dry if I don't go home right away. Why not do the same with the bike shorts?
I take my bike shorts in the shower with me and simply use shampoo to wash them. Then roll them in a towel to remove most of the water and hang to dry. I will have to try the drying in the sun trick though. My shorts don't get that funky smell, but my jerseys do. Too bad I live in the NW and we don't have a lot of sun this time of year.