Anyone else catch this one?
Anyone else catch this one?
An interesting article from the scotsman - but certainly not by a Scot.
http://news.scotsman.com/opinion.cfm?id=1482942007
He's been wearing a kilt for 5 years - and yet he doesn't appear to be a member of skirtcafe yet? Perhaps we should take him up on the offer of a meeting in London.
http://news.scotsman.com/opinion.cfm?id=1482942007
He's been wearing a kilt for 5 years - and yet he doesn't appear to be a member of skirtcafe yet? Perhaps we should take him up on the offer of a meeting in London.
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Nice find, Miket. The author puts forth such a simple and compelling argument for kilts.
Quiet Mouse
The article had me laughing over language differences though. I was going to ask what a bogroll was when I realized it wasn't something to eat akin to a sushi swamp roll or cinnamon glaze smothered sticky bun I might have for a Sunday morning treat."Not only do I think men look great in a kilt, I feel great wearing one."
Quiet Mouse
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bog roll
yes Bog Roll is loo paper, toilet roll, toilet tissue or whatever.
The Bog is a slang term for the lavatory, toilet, cloakroom or whatever you wish to call the smallest room.
The Bog is a slang term for the lavatory, toilet, cloakroom or whatever you wish to call the smallest room.
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A skirted friend from the US visited my home a few years ago to take part in a cycle race (Hi Reuben!) and he asked if he could visit my "rest room". I thought he was probably tired after his journey! Then it occurred to me that "rest room" is an American euphemism for the loo.or whatever you wish to call the smallest room.
Silly me.
Stu
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An easy suggestion
Why don't we all get together on the name. How about the "Pee and Poo" room? This would work as long as there's no sink or tub. If there is, then it could be the "Pee, Poo, Brush and Soak" room.. :):):):)8)
I had to remove this signature as it was being used on Twitter. This is my OPINION, you NEEDN'T AGREE.
Story of Life, Perspire, Expire, Funeral Pyre!I've been skirted part time since 1972 and full time since 2005. http://skirts4men.myfreeforum.org/
Story of Life, Perspire, Expire, Funeral Pyre!I've been skirted part time since 1972 and full time since 2005. http://skirts4men.myfreeforum.org/
- Since1982
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Water Closet?
Are there rods and hangers in a water closet? Where you could hang your clothes while bathing after a mistake, perhaps? I've heard that term "water closet" before. I don't see the relevance of calling a place to relieve yourself any kind of water closet unless it's filled with water and you hop in and bathe after relief instead of using paper.
I had to remove this signature as it was being used on Twitter. This is my OPINION, you NEEDN'T AGREE.
Story of Life, Perspire, Expire, Funeral Pyre!I've been skirted part time since 1972 and full time since 2005. http://skirts4men.myfreeforum.org/
Story of Life, Perspire, Expire, Funeral Pyre!I've been skirted part time since 1972 and full time since 2005. http://skirts4men.myfreeforum.org/
Think it came about after folks stopped using (sand-filled?) buckets, Skip!
It was 'dead posh' to have toilets that were flushed by water! Some were actually indoors - not at the end of the garden! In a closet, so as to speak. They had hooks to hang yer coat on, too! (Many don't nowadays, for some reason).
It was 'dead posh' to have toilets that were flushed by water! Some were actually indoors - not at the end of the garden! In a closet, so as to speak. They had hooks to hang yer coat on, too! (Many don't nowadays, for some reason).
In my distant past childhood, I remember the toilet being out the backyard and the "san. man" coming weekly to pick up the full can and replace it with an empty one! Some country dunnies are still known as the "long drop" for the hole under the toilet.
Also, water closet may be an environmental mistake, we have a few friends with composting toilets, so we're not wasting a precious resource.
Also, water closet may be an environmental mistake, we have a few friends with composting toilets, so we're not wasting a precious resource.
When 'en-suite' toilet/bathroom facilities became 'in vogue', many of the older (usu. Victorian/Edwardian) hotels utilised the very extensive wardrobe accomodation (provided for the voluminous dresses/skirts/coats of the day) to provide a rather 'basic' (but highly marketable) facility. Some places converted smaller bedrooms (betw. two larger) instead.SkirtDude wrote:I'm sure Merlin and the other UK types can further clarify, but I believe that when indoor plumbing first came into being the toilet was often installed in a former closet. I certainly ran into a number of very small bathrooms in older hotels in my UK travels.
Our own (terraced) house, built around the same time, despite having room for a servant/house maid, had only a toilet at the end of the (fortunately!) small garden and the bath would have been a 'tin' one! One of the bedrooms was eventually 'sacrificed' to provide a decent sized bathroom with toilet & airing cupboard.
There is a game called "Chinese Whispers" in which a message is passed down a line from child to child along a row of children. At some point, the original message is compared with the message given to the final child.
As the originator of the thread, I have been mildly amused by the organic growth of the thread , originating as an article about a SIKH JOURNALIST who happens to a) hail from Glasgow and b) enjoy wearing kilts - along with a turban, and who is positive about the need to spread the message of kilt wearing.
That this semi-serious article became usurped by a lavatorial theme, discussing WC's, restrooms and the outside privy - along with the benefits ofthe use of hulled corn in such places defies belief!
Where shall we take the theme now? How about the size of the plunger needed to clear any blockages, or perhaps the relative merits of wooden seats compared with plastic seats on the toilet!
As the originator of the thread, I have been mildly amused by the organic growth of the thread , originating as an article about a SIKH JOURNALIST who happens to a) hail from Glasgow and b) enjoy wearing kilts - along with a turban, and who is positive about the need to spread the message of kilt wearing.
That this semi-serious article became usurped by a lavatorial theme, discussing WC's, restrooms and the outside privy - along with the benefits ofthe use of hulled corn in such places defies belief!
Where shall we take the theme now? How about the size of the plunger needed to clear any blockages, or perhaps the relative merits of wooden seats compared with plastic seats on the toilet!
You are right, just shows how men think, sometimes.Miket wrote:There is a game called "Chinese Whispers" in which a message is passed down a line from child to child along a row of children. At some point, the original message is compared with the message given to the final child.
As the originator of the thread, I have been mildly amused by the organic growth of the thread , originating as an article about a SIKH JOURNALIST who happens to a) hail from Glasgow and b) enjoy wearing kilts - along with a turban, and who is positive about the need to spread the message of kilt wearing.
That this semi-serious article became usurped by a lavatorial theme, discussing WC's, restrooms and the outside privy - along with the benefits ofthe use of hulled corn in such places defies belief!
Where shall we take the theme now? How about the size of the plunger needed to clear any blockages, or perhaps the relative merits of wooden seats compared with plastic seats on the toilet!
Peter v.
By the way, I know all about Ausie dunnies, the VERY big and very small deadly spiders that housed there as well, and was very relieved when we moved to a house with a real inside toilet.
A man is the same man in a pair of pants or a skirt. It is only the way people look at him that makes the difference.