jj

"jloomis"

22/10/2013 6:23 AM

On my project-speaking of code rules

I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the electrician
install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
provide hot water to the shower.
The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not allow
hot water to the outdoor shower!"
I could not believe it.
What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in the
tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
and only cold.
I am really amazed at this ruling.
Is there any sense out there?
What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
john


This topic has 30 replies

Sk

Swingman

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 11:59 AM

On 10/22/2013 9:28 AM, Mike Duffy wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 09:12:43 -0500, Swingman wrote:
>
>> want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be using
>> it with something else than plain water during a shower.
>>
>> IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line,
>
> Eeouwwww! Are you talking about people peeing in the (outdoor) shower?
>
> I mean, would soap not be used for either hot or cold showers?

LOL.

We don't make the rules, Bubba ... just have to build to them.

--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://plus.google.com/114902129577517371552/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)

MD

Mike Duffy

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 10:28 AM

On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 09:12:43 -0500, Swingman wrote:

> want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be using
> it with something else than plain water during a shower.
>
> IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line,

Eeouwwww! Are you talking about people peeing in the (outdoor) shower?

I mean, would soap not be used for either hot or cold showers?

--
http://pages.videotron.com/duffym/index.htm

wn

woodchucker

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 6:37 PM

On 10/22/2013 9:23 AM, jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in
> the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
> john
Yea, sometimes code makes no sense.
Just like our congress.

--
Jeff

Sc

Sonny

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 7:16 AM

On Tuesday, October 22, 2013 8:23:07 AM UTC-5, jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif. =
The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower. Go figure=
. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the electrician install a c=
onduit for an instant hot water unit to provide hot water to the shower. Th=
e plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not allow ho=
t water to the outdoor shower!" I could not believe it. What the jell does =
a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in the tub no less)and n=
eeds a shower nearby..... and only cold. I am really amazed at this ruling.=
Is there any sense out there? What if I call it a "Doggy Wash" john

"Hot" is a relative term. Tell the plumber you're installing a tepid water=
supply, along with the not-so-tepid water supply.

Sonny

Sk

Swingman

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 9:12 AM

On 10/22/2013 8:23 AM, jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in
> the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"


IME, it has to do with drainage. Most outdoor cold water showers drain
in the flower bed, or on the ground somewhere. Add hot water and they
want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be using
it with something else than plain water during a shower.

IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line, you
will probably have no problems with local code.

Be worth checking in any event.

--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://plus.google.com/114902129577517371552/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)

wn

woodchucker

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 6:52 PM

On 10/22/2013 1:08 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
> jloomis wrote:
>> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern
>> Calif. The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
>> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
>> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
>> provide hot water to the shower.
>> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
>> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
>> I could not believe it.
>> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water
>> in the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
>> and only cold.
>> I am really amazed at this ruling.
>> Is there any sense out there?
>> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
>> john
>
> The answer lies in the first sentence - "in Northern California". No more
> need be said.
>

Ahhhh Californication.

--
Jeff

wn

woodchucker

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 6:53 PM

On 10/22/2013 1:28 PM, SonomaProducts.com wrote:
>> I am really amazed at this ruling.
>>
>> Is there any sense out there?
>>
>> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
>>
>> john
>
> I am sure this is another global warming issue where we have no liberty and a gov't "over" the people not "of, for and by". As others posted, finish the deck, close the permit, install whatever you want.
>
> I my area, when I pulled a permit for extensive remodel, they made me put fluorescent only fixtures or a dimmer switches in all bedrooms . I put in the fricking expensive dimmers. 2 of the 3 are already buzzing. I'll be pulling them now that I have my final. They told me after Jan 1 they will be require that for the whole house.
>
Ridiculous.




--
Jeff

Wc

"WW"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 5:26 PM



"Mike Marlow" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

WW wrote:

> I built a outdoor shower when in WWll on Okinawa when in the Sea
> Bees. Had it hang over a cliff for drainage. Used a oil fired water
> heater so hot and cold water available. That made my fellow CB's
> happy. No code s to follow there. WW

I think I used that shower in '73. Was that the one that said "Kilroy was
here..."

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

Gee is that still there. I built to last. WW

Sb

"SonomaProducts.com"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 10:28 AM

> I am really amazed at this ruling.
>=20
> Is there any sense out there?
>=20
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
>=20
> john

I am sure this is another global warming issue where we have no liberty and=
a gov't "over" the people not "of, for and by". As others posted, finish t=
he deck, close the permit, install whatever you want.

I my area, when I pulled a permit for extensive remodel, they made me put f=
luorescent only fixtures or a dimmer switches in all bedrooms . I put in th=
e fricking expensive dimmers. 2 of the 3 are already buzzing. I'll be pulli=
ng them now that I have my final. They told me after Jan 1 they will be req=
uire that for the whole house.

Wc

"WW"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 8:09 AM



"jloomis" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the electrician
install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
provide hot water to the shower.
The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not allow
hot water to the outdoor shower!"
I could not believe it.
What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in the
tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
and only cold.
I am really amazed at this ruling.
Is there any sense out there?
What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
john

I built a outdoor shower when in WWll on Okinawa when in the Sea Bees. Had
it hang over a cliff for drainage. Used a oil fired water heater so hot
and cold water available. That made my fellow CB's happy. No code s to
follow there. WW

c

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 12:48 PM

On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 10:31:56 -0400, "G. Ross" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>jloomis wrote:
>> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
>> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
>> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the electrician
>> install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
>> provide hot water to the shower.
>> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not allow
>> hot water to the outdoor shower!"
>> I could not believe it.
>> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in the
>> tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
>> and only cold.
>> I am really amazed at this ruling.
>> Is there any sense out there?
>> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
>> john
>>
>Run the water through a tank painted black and call it Solar Heat. I
>can remember filling a wash tub and leaving it out in the sun all day
>for a warm evening bath. That was before we had electricity or
>running water on the farm.
Just run the water through the hot tub with a "tempering coil" -
temperature is limited to the temp of the tub, no extra heater
required. Deadnuts simple. You can connect it temporarily to your
outside hose bib, so as far as code is concerned it doesn't exist.
Code MAY require a backflow preventer/anti-siphon to make sure no
water from the tub could get drawn into the water supply if the
tempering tube leaked.

GR

"G. Ross"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 10:31 AM

jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the electrician
> install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not allow
> hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in the
> tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
> john
>
Run the water through a tank painted black and call it Solar Heat. I
can remember filling a wash tub and leaving it out in the sun all day
for a warm evening bath. That was before we had electricity or
running water on the farm.

--
 GW Ross 

 Blessed are they that run around in 
 circles, for they shall be known as 
 wheels. 





EP

Ed Pawlowski

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 10:52 AM

On 10/22/2013 9:23 AM, jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in
> the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
> john


Install the heater after the deck is inspected, assuming you have a
permit and need inspection.

Shower does make sense though. The hot tub is for relaxing, not
bathing. If you shower first, the tub water will stay cleaner longer
with less chemicals.

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 1:08 PM

jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern
> Calif. The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water
> in the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
> john

The answer lies in the first sentence - "in Northern California". No more
need be said.

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 1:10 PM

WW wrote:

> I built a outdoor shower when in WWll on Okinawa when in the Sea
> Bees. Had it hang over a cliff for drainage. Used a oil fired water
> heater so hot and cold water available. That made my fellow CB's
> happy. No code s to follow there. WW

I think I used that shower in '73. Was that the one that said "Kilroy was
here..."

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 1:17 PM

Mike Duffy wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 09:12:43 -0500, Swingman wrote:
>
>> want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be
>> using it with something else than plain water during a shower.
>>
>> IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line,
>
> Eeouwwww! Are you talking about people peeing in the (outdoor) shower?

Oh please! Eeouwwww!? Ferchristssake - have you never pee'd in the shower
or out on the front lawn? And the problem with either of these proved to be
exactly... what?

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

jj

"jloomis"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 6:00 AM

We connected it to the septic.
???
john

"Swingman" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

On 10/22/2013 8:23 AM, jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in
> the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"


IME, it has to do with drainage. Most outdoor cold water showers drain
in the flower bed, or on the ground somewhere. Add hot water and they
want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be using
it with something else than plain water during a shower.

IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line, you
will probably have no problems with local code.

Be worth checking in any event.

--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://plus.google.com/114902129577517371552/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)

jj

"jloomis"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 6:03 AM

That is our contention.
I just cannot believe that the county local code would have such a ruling.
What if a person were to hook up a hose to a water heater and wash a dam
dog!
jeeeedsh.
john

"Ed Pawlowski" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

On 10/22/2013 9:23 AM, jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern Calif.
> The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water in
> the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
> john


Install the heater after the deck is inspected, assuming you have a
permit and need inspection.

Shower does make sense though. The hot tub is for relaxing, not
bathing. If you shower first, the tub water will stay cleaner longer
with less chemicals.

jj

"jloomis"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 6:04 AM

Got that right.
I always tell people if we had a the Building Inspection and Coastal
Development Dept. around in the time of
Egypt, we would not have any Pyramids.
john

"Mike Marlow" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

jloomis wrote:
> I have almost finished an extensive deck project here in Northern
> Calif. The Owners have a hot tub on the deck and want an outdoor shower.
> Go figure. We are making the outdoor shower pad, and had the
> electrician install a conduit for an instant hot water unit to
> provide hot water to the shower.
> The plumber came by to hook up the drain and said, "country does not
> allow hot water to the outdoor shower!"
> I could not believe it.
> What the jell does a person have a Hot Tub on a deck, (with hot water
> in the tub no less)and needs a shower nearby.....
> and only cold.
> I am really amazed at this ruling.
> Is there any sense out there?
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
> john

The answer lies in the first sentence - "in Northern California". No more
need be said.

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

jj

"jloomis"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 6:08 AM

I agree. I avoid permit application wherever possible.
It just leads to expensive construction.
I believe now, in new construction, fire sprinklers have to be in all rooms.
I know, fire prevention is important.
And, the cost of the fire sprinkler adds considerable cost to the new home.
Now in a rural area, you have to provide water for the
sprinklers........hummmmm-another storage tank no less.
And, when the power goes.....hummm- a generator-...hummmm, and gasoline
storage.....hummmm.
it goes on and on.
john

"SonomaProducts.com" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

> I am really amazed at this ruling.
>
> Is there any sense out there?
>
> What if I call it a "Doggy Wash"
>
> john

I am sure this is another global warming issue where we have no liberty and
a gov't "over" the people not "of, for and by". As others posted, finish the
deck, close the permit, install whatever you want.

I my area, when I pulled a permit for extensive remodel, they made me put
fluorescent only fixtures or a dimmer switches in all bedrooms . I put in
the fricking expensive dimmers. 2 of the 3 are already buzzing. I'll be
pulling them now that I have my final. They told me after Jan 1 they will be
require that for the whole house.

ww

willshak

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 2:03 PM

Mike Marlow wrote:
> Mike Duffy wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 09:12:43 -0500, Swingman wrote:
>>
>>> want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be
>>> using it with something else than plain water during a shower.
>>>
>>> IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line,
>> Eeouwwww! Are you talking about people peeing in the (outdoor) shower?
>
> Oh please! Eeouwwww!? Ferchristssake - have you never pee'd in the shower
> or out on the front lawn? And the problem with either of these proved to be
> exactly... what?
>

The grass grew faster requiring more frequent mowing. :-)

--
Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeros after @

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 10:46 PM

Swingman wrote:
> On 10/24/2013 8:03 AM, jloomis wrote:
>> That is our contention.
>> I just cannot believe that the county local code would have such a
>> ruling. What if a person were to hook up a hose to a water heater
>> and wash a dam dog!
>> jeeeedsh.
>> john
>
> "The general public had better start thinking long and hard about
> whether they want to live in a society that shares risks, or a society
> that attempts to eliminate all risks through the elimination of
> personal freedoms and individual discretion."

Preach it brother!

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 10:48 PM

jloomis wrote:

> Got that right.
> I always tell people if we had a the Building Inspection and Coastal
> Development Dept. around in the time of
> Egypt, we would not have any Pyramids.
> john
>

I just wish you guys would cut that stuff out. Don't you know the great
state of NY is prone to follow every hair-brained idea that originates out
there?

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 10:59 PM

jloomis wrote:

> I agree. I avoid permit application wherever possible.
> It just leads to expensive construction.
> I believe now, in new construction, fire sprinklers have to be in all
> rooms. I know, fire prevention is important.
> And, the cost of the fire sprinkler adds considerable cost to the new
> home. Now in a rural area, you have to provide water for the
> sprinklers........hummmmm-another storage tank no less.
> And, when the power goes.....hummm- a generator-...hummmm, and
> gasoline storage.....hummmm.
> it goes on and on.
> john
>

Not to mention the influence of the trades. I tell homeowners in the areas
where the IBEW has a stranglehold to indicate homeowner self-help for
electrical work. That eliminates the otherwise imposed requirement for a
Master Electrician's stamp which starts at $200 and goes up based on the
whim of the ME. For doing nothing more than stating that I did the work
properly without even having seen it. Once the permit is issued, I do my
work, get it inspected, collect my pocket change and move on. For most
work - I recommend they do not even pull a permit, but that's their call.
Since new construction is often what gets me there in the first place, most
homeowners go the route of the permit.

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 11:00 PM

willshak wrote:
> Mike Marlow wrote:
>> Mike Duffy wrote:
>>> On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 09:12:43 -0500, Swingman wrote:
>>>
>>>> want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be
>>>> using it with something else than plain water during a shower.
>>>>
>>>> IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line,
>>> Eeouwwww! Are you talking about people peeing in the (outdoor)
>>> shower?
>>
>> Oh please! Eeouwwww!? Ferchristssake - have you never pee'd in the
>> shower or out on the front lawn? And the problem with either of
>> these proved to be exactly... what?
>>
>
> The grass grew faster requiring more frequent mowing. :-)

Yeabut, only in small clumps...

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

jj

"jloomis"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

25/10/2013 7:02 AM

Hey, Not my idea.
I can safely say I still have an outhouse on my acreage, that has never
needed pumping, never leaked, cost less to build than 100.00 and still works
after 30 years.
Oh, yes, I have made it on skids and moved it once a few years to a new
locale.
It is a field unit......garden outdoor.....in the Redwoods.
Oh and easy to clean.....get a garden hose and aim......
john

"Mike Marlow" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

jloomis wrote:

> Got that right.
> I always tell people if we had a the Building Inspection and Coastal
> Development Dept. around in the time of
> Egypt, we would not have any Pyramids.
> john
>

I just wish you guys would cut that stuff out. Don't you know the great
state of NY is prone to follow every hair-brained idea that originates out
there?

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

MD

Mike Duffy

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 10:35 AM

On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 10:32:50 -0400, John Grossbohlin wrote:

> Maybe it's to discourage having sex in the shower... ?

Well, cold water does have a sort of "thermometer" effect.

k

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 1:46 PM

On Thu, 24 Oct 2013 09:14:55 -0500, Swingman <[email protected]> wrote:

>On 10/24/2013 8:03 AM, jloomis wrote:
>> That is our contention.
>> I just cannot believe that the county local code would have such a ruling.
>> What if a person were to hook up a hose to a water heater and wash a dam
>> dog!
>> jeeeedsh.
>> john
>
>"The general public had better start thinking long and hard about
>whether they want to live in a society that shares risks, or a society
>that attempts to eliminate all risks through the elimination of personal
>freedoms and individual discretion."

Where's my Obamaphone?!

JG

"John Grossbohlin"

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

22/10/2013 10:32 AM

"Mike Duffy" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

>On Tue, 22 Oct 2013 09:12:43 -0500, Swingman wrote:

>> want to protect the groundwater because someone will assuredly be using
>> it with something else than plain water during a shower.
>>
>> IOW, if the shower in question is connected to a sewer/septic line,

>Eeouwwww! Are you talking about people peeing in the (outdoor) shower?

>I mean, would soap not be used for either hot or cold showers?

Maybe it's to discourage having sex in the shower... ?

Sk

Swingman

in reply to "jloomis" on 22/10/2013 6:23 AM

24/10/2013 9:14 AM

On 10/24/2013 8:03 AM, jloomis wrote:
> That is our contention.
> I just cannot believe that the county local code would have such a ruling.
> What if a person were to hook up a hose to a water heater and wash a dam
> dog!
> jeeeedsh.
> john

"The general public had better start thinking long and hard about
whether they want to live in a society that shares risks, or a society
that attempts to eliminate all risks through the elimination of personal
freedoms and individual discretion."

--
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Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
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KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)


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