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Why would cats choose to drink dirty water instead of fresh water out of a clean bowl?

Ohhh you mean like this?(Image sourced from Google search)It is frustrating isn't it? You go to the trouble of putting down water for them and they are like meh, that puddle or toliet water is just so much better!A couple of things to tick off your checklist.Change the water daily and if warm weather, add a couple of ice cubes.Some cats don't like drinking from plastic bowls. Try stainless steel or ceramic.Clean the water bowl regularly but make sure the bowl is rinsed thoroughly from any detergents. They can leave a smell.A vet told me with town / reticulated water supply, chemicals added like fluoride and chlorine, can give off a smell cats don't like. So if you don't have a filter system to let the water sit for 15 minutes before putting it down.Lastly, just because they can…..

What are the restrooms like on a nuclear submarine?

There are no restrooms on a submarine. Submarines have heads, where there are a few small stainless steel sinks, 1 or 2 very small showers and 2 to 3 toilet bowls. To flush a submarine toilet you manually open a seawater flushing valve and then open a large ball valve at the base of the toilet bowel to let it all drain down into a holding tank, flush for 3 to 5 seconds, shut the ball valve, let the bowl fill with 4 inches of seawater and shut the flushing valve.courtesy of:The Basics about U.S. Nuclear Powered SubmarinesInside the Submarine - The Heads (Bathrooms)Bathrooms aboard navy ships are called "heads", earning their name from sailing days, when they were located at the bow, or head of the ship.- There are 2 main differences between household bathrooms and heads aboard submarines. The 1st is the scarcity of water. Submarines have to distill water they need for drinking, cooking, and bathing from seawater and have a limited supply, so the crew takes "submarine showers" - turn the water on and wet down, turn the water off and soap up. Turn the water on and rinse off. Repeat until done. You can't ever leave the water running anywhere. Not even while brushing your teeth.- The 2nd important difference is that the submarine has to discharge its sanitary tanks every so often. On the older classes (i.e. pre-688), they pressurize the sanitary tanks and blow them overboard. This is critical, in that you don't want to flush a toilet while a tank is being blown overboard. VERY critical. The toilets are flushed by opening a ball valve that lets the toilet contents flow down into the tank, but if you open the ball valve while the tank is pressurized - see the right side photo for what happens. And yes, it DOES happen. At least once a patrol, it seems a new crew member forgets, despite the sign hanging on the commode door, and he tries to flush the toilet while the tank is being blown overboard. VERY MESSY.addendum 1: I hated the outboard shower in the middle level head, there was a particularly sharp corner guaranteed to draw blood. I always tried to get a bunk in the lower level in the 21 man berthing.

What is something you keep in your "go bag" that most people wouldn't think of?

I don’t know if it is something nobody else ever thinks of or not, but I keep some regular ‘ol household bleach (Clorox) in my bug-out bag.Not a lot. Just a tiny bottle of it.The purpose is for disinfecting water and making it good to drink. Just two drops per liter, wait thirty minutes, and voila! Safe drinking water.I’m not a hand model, so excuse the extreme close up of my glorious thumb. This is a repurposed hotel shampoo bottle in which I carry a small amount of bleach.So imagine I have had to flee my home, War of the Worlds style, and I want to scoop up some water from a stagnant mud puddle into my canteen to carry along for drinking. The water may not be pretty to look at, but I don’t care about pretty, or even about taste so much, if it comes down to the simple matter of having something to drink versus not having something to drink.So no reason to buy any fancy, speciality-purpose tablets. They do the same thing, and expire after you open the bottles once, so they really are a foolish investment. Incidentally, such tablets generally come in pairs with two distinct purposes. The first tablet is for disinfecting, the second is for neutralizing the taste of the bleach. By using my method, if you don’t overdo it with the bleach, the taste will not be noticeable, anyway.More tantalizingly sexy shots of my thumb.As a second option, I always carry a stainless-steel mug which I can use to disinfect water over any fire.For fire, I carry three different options: a ferocerium rod, weather-proof matches in a weather-proof container, and a generic Bic lighter. I also carry a sealed baggie of cotton balls as easy fire tinder (no Vaseline necessary).For lighting I carry two options: A Petzyl Tikka headlamp of 200 lumens, and a small LED handheld flashlight of about 300 lumens. (I’m not certain about the handheld because I found it in the woods on a backpacking trip, and identifying markings were already worn off when I found it. But it has more throw than the headlamp. I’ve had it for about eight years now and it has become my lucky flashlight.)Of course, I make sure that anything requiring batteries all requires the same type of batteries, and only batteries which are the overwhelming standard. No exotic batteries! The last thing I need in an emergency is trouble finding specific, specialized batteries. So I only buy things that use AAA batteries, and I keep a healthy supply on hand in my pack. I never get careless by using the batteries from this supply, they are for emergencies only, and have a storage life of about eight years.

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