Jolinia said:If you have chewing gum on your clothes, put the piece of clothing into the freezer for a couple of hours, then the gum gets hard and you can remove it easily.
Never tried it with shoes but it's worth a try![]()
Jolinia said:If you have chewing gum on your clothes, put the piece of clothing into the freezer for a couple of hours, then the gum gets hard and you can remove it easily.
Never tried it with shoes but it's worth a try![]()
Ron Obvious said:But you can put your shoes in the freezer within a plastic bag...
Ron Obvious said:But you can put your shoes in the freezer within a plastic bag...
Agree with the foulness of chewing gum though. It's on the same level as getting your nose pierced...
AndrewS said:Ron Obvious said:But you can put your shoes in the freezer within a plastic bag...
Agree with the foulness of chewing gum though. It's on the same level as getting your nose pierced...
Stay off this thread Ron! I don't want it dead before it's a day old :evil: :evil: :evil:
AndrewS said:I won't let you kill this one Ron until someone has given me a good solution
irishgirl said:on another note, regarding putting shoes in the freezer, i used to (and must do it again) put my dance shoes in the freezer to kill the bacteria/smell off them, it kinda worked......i've kinda just accepted i have stinky dance feet but it does make them a bit better and you wont contaminate your food if you do it in a plastic bag.
irishgirl said:on another note, regarding putting shoes in the freezer, i used to (and must do it again) put my dance shoes in the freezer to kill the bacteria/smell off them, it kinda worked......i've kinda just accepted i have stinky dance feet but it does make them a bit better and you wont contaminate your food if you do it in a plastic bag.
Ron Obvious said:While respecting your preferences, putting something dirty in the freezer might make it dirty, but it won't contaminate the food. It's a freezer, very few bacteria survive in that temperature.
Having studied microbiology I'm aware of the fact that microbes are very adaptable and come in a multitude of forms (just like we people), but I doubt any operate in sub-zero temperatures.
noobster said:Ron Obvious said:While respecting your preferences, putting something dirty in the freezer might make it dirty, but it won't contaminate the food. It's a freezer, very few bacteria survive in that temperature.
Having studied microbiology I'm aware of the fact that microbes are very adaptable and come in a multitude of forms (just like we people), but I doubt any operate in sub-zero temperatures.
They don't operate, but lots of them don't die either. They just go into suspended animation and resume their daily activities whenever they thaw out. You can get up to 30% survival of E. coli after a week in the freezer.
noobster said:Ron Obvious said:While respecting your preferences, putting something dirty in the freezer might make it dirty, but it won't contaminate the food. It's a freezer, very few bacteria survive in that temperature.
Having studied microbiology I'm aware of the fact that microbes are very adaptable and come in a multitude of forms (just like we people), but I doubt any operate in sub-zero temperatures.
They don't operate, but lots of them don't die either. They just go into suspended animation and resume their daily activities whenever they thaw out. You can get up to 30% survival of E. coli after a week in the freezer.
irishgirl said:hmmmmm...i guess each to their own !!
and if it doesn't kill you it will only make you stronger![]()