But without water....what good is soap?
Use it to stop squeky drawers!
**Heres how it works: The soap is collected, shredded, run through machines that get rid of any residual bacteria another guest may have left, and then get shaped into new bars and packaged up. People get soap to wash their hands and possibly prevent the spread of common infectious diseases, and everyone wins.**
Gross! Recycled soap!
Phew! Now I can sleep well tonight....the world has been saved.
They’re the perfect size for cleaning out your butt crack.
...and with all the black hairs they can knit hats to keep their heads warm.
Dont get the one with the pubic hair sticking out of it.
I always take the bars home... it never occurred to me to leave them behind to be thrown away. I figure I paid for that soap, I’m keeping it.
I do not have to buy much soap.
put the used hotel soap in the basement, and the mice will ea it and then they die. The field mice always get in the house so whenever I have to stay at a hotel I bring the soap bar back and lo and behold i get rid of the mice. This year i plan to fix the foundation so no more mice. Than I will just throw the hotel soap away in the trash
“But without water....what good is soap?”
Condition quilting needles. Also, run quilting thread over it to make it glide through fabric more smoothly.
I like the gel squirt containers in the showers. This solves the problem of leftover soap too.
In the interest of helpfulness -
http://www.curbly.com/users/diy-maven/posts/2056-top-10-uses-for-bar-soap-besides-the-obvious
But, I wonder how much is actually saved when you factor in the labor to collect the soap and get it ready, the machinery to shred and disinfect from previous users, the repackaging and prep for shipping...
I wonder if it wouldn't be cheaper to just buy hotel soaps and send them to impoverished people.
I save all my almost-used-up soap bars. It’s part of my SHTF supplies.