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Tip o’ the Day: The Solar Dryer - Free

Tuesday, April 17, 2007 | Comment?

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Green Options blog say, “Some call it a solar dryer. Our moms call it the clothesline. Nature’s way of drying clothes, and nobody seems to do it anymore. Some say it brings down property values. Others say that only those that “stay-at-home” can do it. We say, give it a shot.”

LOL! Solar drier, indeed. Like we need a new name for it.

We should do this. I’d love to, but oh, if only it were that simple here:

= Renting means that I cannot make holes in walls to put up an old-fashioned washing line, wherever I like and that would be suitable.

Bent Tree= Strong winds - I mean gale-force - buckled a whirly washing line within minutes of digging a hole into the incredibly hard, volcanic soil, filling it with cement and getting the thing fixed up. Well, if the wind can do that to trees in this valley, it’s hardly a surprise.

= Frequent rain and constant low-lying cloud and mist mean that several months can pass when nothing will dry outside here. This rain and fog (it’s really low cloud) used to be confined to the winter months, which was something, but in recent years, this has even occurred throughout the summer and now, in spring, it has become erratically changeable so that one day can be dry and sunny, the next misty or the morning can be warm, then cloud descends - by surprise - in the afternoon.

Yes, I know this is constantly warm Tenerife - Island of the Eternal Spring - but this is a fertile valley in the north, where “horizontal rain”, brought by the trade winds, condenses onto the mountains. That’s how we get our year round greenery and Spring flowers.

= And the house is unheated and so damp that you cannot dry clothes indoors. If you try to bring even mildly damp clothes inside, even just overnight, they get that horrible mouldy damp smell that you can never get out again and that requires you to simply throw the items away.

Oh, I kid you not. You should smell the perfectly dry stuff that I brought here when I moved in. The move was made on an incredibly hot day, direct from the desert south of the island. All I did was put things in the wardrobe: you know, where you expect to put clothes.

Thousands of pounds worth of quality clothes: classics, designer suits, leather and suede items, boots and shoes, all green, moldy and ruined.

Anyway, it means that to dry a towel, for instance, I have to be able to absolutely guarantee at least two consecutive days of dry sunny weather, before I dare to do the laundry, if I wanted to hang it outside.

Well, you can’t, so what options did I have?

None. I had to buy a tumble drier.

But, having been forced into this, there are other considerations:

One, having a dog and four cats, is that the drier sucks all their hair off of clothes, bed linen, etc. Pharmaceutical companies would get richer and use more energy to treat my allergies without the drier - not to mention that it is healthier for me not to be “on drugs.”

The electrical supply in this house is so weak that I can’t run any other appliances at the same time or it all “trips” off, so I’m not using extra and would hardly call this a “convenience”. Running the drier is costing less and must be using less energy than constantly replacing clothes.

Another is that I haven’t used an iron in over decade. That must have saved energy (mine and electrical), so it’s “swings and roundabouts.”

Now, if only I could run the drier off solar energy …

That, surely would be the greenest option, but, of course, renting, it’s not something that I could have installed, unless the landlords wanted to do it. No, they won’t even repair leaking roofs, so there is no friggin’ chance. Yep, minor rant, but do you know anyone else putting up with conditions like this, anywhere else in the so-called “civilized world”?

Written by Pamela Heywood - Visit Website | Leave a tip | Buy me something

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