
A cheapskate's guide to drying your washing in winter
Enough staring at the clothes horse, wishing things were dry.
It's with the best intentions that we wash and hang up our clothes in June (and July and August). But intentions are not enough to make it work. For weeks now, everyone without a dryer or a nice big dry home has been smelling funny because our washing never quite dried, got rained on and then never quite dried again. It's time to enlist more strategies in our laundry routines. Here are my top tips.
Does it really need to get wet?
Don't come at me with labels like stinky malinki, but it needs to be said. Apart from undies, you don't need to wash your clothes every time you wear them – especially the ones that don't touch your skin. Levi's recommends washing jeans every 10 wears, and I think other clothes only need to be washed if you spill food on them or if they smell. I'd venture to say woollen jumpers almost never need to be washed, especially if they are actually wool. Sheep make an excrement called lanolin, which coats wool and is anti-microbial.
There's huge power in simply airing clothes out. If there's a day you're 100% sure it's not going to rain, you could put them outside, but usually I prefer to drape them artfully over every piece of furniture in my lounge.
Vodka babyyyyyyy
My T-shirt fucking stinks, you might say – maybe you had a meeting with your boss and that anxiety super-stench came pouring out of your pores. Well, might I suggest vodka. The Russian ballet costume department's secret does not need to stay in the ballet world. Simply fill up a spray bottle of vodka and spray the stink away. It really works, and on shoes too.
Whip out the synthetics
Now I would never suggest buying clothes made out of plastic – it is bad for the number of microplastics in your home and therefore you, bad for the environment, bad bad bad. But let's be real, we don't need to buy them, they're already in the drawers. Synthetic clothing dries WAY faster than some natural fabrics like cotton, due to the fact you might crudely describe it as plastic, a non-absorbent material. Now is the time to wear all your polyester, polar fleece and polyprops.
Spin out
OK you've worn your synthetics until they've acquired a little patina of life on them, perhaps you've oversprayed the vodka and friends are worried about your drinking habits. It is time to wash now. Let the machine do its thing, and then make it do another thing. Pop on an extra spin cycle. Centrifugal force really does separate liquid from solid, water from clothes.
Spread out
Like a man on the subway, your washing needs air inbetween its bits. Spread it out over the rack and try to minimise any fabric doubling up. You might even consider doing small loads or buying an extra rack so that there's plenty of space.
Forget the outside world
Perhaps you have been extremely diligent and checked not only the weather forecast for the day you put your washing out, but also the two following days. The weather app may have shown a sun, or just a little cloud so you think you're safe. This is not so. Rain will come. Or even if rain does not come, the washing will not dry because it's too cold. In my experience you should only leave washing outside for the first drying day. When the sun is about to set, that's as much as you're going to get out there. Sacrifice your interior design, bring the rack in.
The sauna
Put your washing in the smallest room of the house – ideally this will be a bathroom with an extraction fan – and lock it in there with a dehumidifier on a warming high setting. Then set aside 40-50% of your paycheck to pay for the power bill. If you need to relax you could hang out in there too.
Utilise hour of power, power shout and off-peak rates
If you're with Electric Kiwi or Genesis Energy, you get one free off-peak hour of power each day. Other providers usually have lower rates at off-peak times (overnight). Obviously this is the time you will be turning on your washing machine, dishwasher and heated towel rack. It is also the time that your heat pump can turn whatever room it's in into a dryer. Ramp up the heat and put your rack of washing underneath. If you don't have a heat pump, a hairdryer or fan heater will work about 20% as well.
Make sure you set an alarm on your phone for the END of the free hour of power because boy oh boy, we do not want to be paying for the 30-degree breeze.
The impossibles
For bedding, towels and hoodies there's no alternative in winter. You need a dryer. The best thing to do is wash a few loads of the impossibles at home, gather them all up and head to the giant dryers at the local self-service laundromat. It might cost you $10, but it will be worth it.
Some things I do not endorse
To finish, a series of warnings. Firstly, wrapping your washing in a dry towel (if you have one) results in your towel getting wet. Secondly, yes laundromats can be good. But if you can wash at home and only dry there you will save yourself time and money. Good luck, friends.

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The Spinoff
4 days ago
- The Spinoff
A cheapskate's guide to drying your washing in winter
Enough staring at the clothes horse, wishing things were dry. It's with the best intentions that we wash and hang up our clothes in June (and July and August). But intentions are not enough to make it work. For weeks now, everyone without a dryer or a nice big dry home has been smelling funny because our washing never quite dried, got rained on and then never quite dried again. It's time to enlist more strategies in our laundry routines. Here are my top tips. Does it really need to get wet? Don't come at me with labels like stinky malinki, but it needs to be said. Apart from undies, you don't need to wash your clothes every time you wear them – especially the ones that don't touch your skin. Levi's recommends washing jeans every 10 wears, and I think other clothes only need to be washed if you spill food on them or if they smell. I'd venture to say woollen jumpers almost never need to be washed, especially if they are actually wool. Sheep make an excrement called lanolin, which coats wool and is anti-microbial. There's huge power in simply airing clothes out. If there's a day you're 100% sure it's not going to rain, you could put them outside, but usually I prefer to drape them artfully over every piece of furniture in my lounge. Vodka babyyyyyyy My T-shirt fucking stinks, you might say – maybe you had a meeting with your boss and that anxiety super-stench came pouring out of your pores. Well, might I suggest vodka. The Russian ballet costume department's secret does not need to stay in the ballet world. Simply fill up a spray bottle of vodka and spray the stink away. It really works, and on shoes too. Whip out the synthetics Now I would never suggest buying clothes made out of plastic – it is bad for the number of microplastics in your home and therefore you, bad for the environment, bad bad bad. But let's be real, we don't need to buy them, they're already in the drawers. Synthetic clothing dries WAY faster than some natural fabrics like cotton, due to the fact you might crudely describe it as plastic, a non-absorbent material. Now is the time to wear all your polyester, polar fleece and polyprops. Spin out OK you've worn your synthetics until they've acquired a little patina of life on them, perhaps you've oversprayed the vodka and friends are worried about your drinking habits. It is time to wash now. Let the machine do its thing, and then make it do another thing. Pop on an extra spin cycle. Centrifugal force really does separate liquid from solid, water from clothes. Spread out Like a man on the subway, your washing needs air inbetween its bits. Spread it out over the rack and try to minimise any fabric doubling up. You might even consider doing small loads or buying an extra rack so that there's plenty of space. Forget the outside world Perhaps you have been extremely diligent and checked not only the weather forecast for the day you put your washing out, but also the two following days. The weather app may have shown a sun, or just a little cloud so you think you're safe. This is not so. Rain will come. Or even if rain does not come, the washing will not dry because it's too cold. In my experience you should only leave washing outside for the first drying day. When the sun is about to set, that's as much as you're going to get out there. Sacrifice your interior design, bring the rack in. The sauna Put your washing in the smallest room of the house – ideally this will be a bathroom with an extraction fan – and lock it in there with a dehumidifier on a warming high setting. Then set aside 40-50% of your paycheck to pay for the power bill. If you need to relax you could hang out in there too. Utilise hour of power, power shout and off-peak rates If you're with Electric Kiwi or Genesis Energy, you get one free off-peak hour of power each day. Other providers usually have lower rates at off-peak times (overnight). Obviously this is the time you will be turning on your washing machine, dishwasher and heated towel rack. It is also the time that your heat pump can turn whatever room it's in into a dryer. Ramp up the heat and put your rack of washing underneath. If you don't have a heat pump, a hairdryer or fan heater will work about 20% as well. Make sure you set an alarm on your phone for the END of the free hour of power because boy oh boy, we do not want to be paying for the 30-degree breeze. The impossibles For bedding, towels and hoodies there's no alternative in winter. You need a dryer. The best thing to do is wash a few loads of the impossibles at home, gather them all up and head to the giant dryers at the local self-service laundromat. It might cost you $10, but it will be worth it. Some things I do not endorse To finish, a series of warnings. Firstly, wrapping your washing in a dry towel (if you have one) results in your towel getting wet. Secondly, yes laundromats can be good. But if you can wash at home and only dry there you will save yourself time and money. Good luck, friends.


Otago Daily Times
12-06-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Call for speed solution
Claremont Rd resident Barry Crossman has been trying to get speeds reduced on the busy narrow road for several years. PHOTO: CONNOR HALEY A group of residents feel they have hit a dead end in an effort to get speeds for Claremont Rd reduced. The narrow rural road runs from the Gleniti end of Wai-Iti Rd to the Whalebones Corner connection of Taiko Rd and Fairview Rd and much of its 7km length is in an open-road speed zone. Resident Barry Crossman, who has lived in Claremont Rd for the last five years, said he had spent much of that time rallying for a change. "For the last four years, I've been ringing the road safety people in the council. They responded back 12 months ago and said 'yes, we're looking at all of these scenarios, new speed limits and that'. "Since then they've changed Old North Rd, Beaconsfield Rd, Divans [Rd], Rockdale [Rd], Washdyke Flat Rd, and Claremont Rd's been forgotten. "At that stage I thought 'dammit'. So I made a point to see the mayor [Nigel Bowen] and went and got a petition going and got 40 individual letters from the residents here and took them to the mayor. He invited me to meet and speak with the council in May." Mr Crossman he said he was told the council would come back to him in a fortnight but a month later he had still heard nothing. "I'm a bit peeved because all the residents that signed the petition are saying to me 'well, what's happening?'. It's getting to a point where it's like, how much further can we sort of go?". He said one of the biggest reasons for wanting the reduction was that the road was used by four school buses a day. An overgrown section of council-owned land near Barton Rd has also been causing issues for motorists navigating the corner. PHOTO: BARRY CROSSMAN "The Barton Rd school bus picks up all the little fellas. At my gate, there's two families with children picked up there. The traffic is supposed to go past at 20kmh, but nah. "I've followed this bus two or three times now from up Claremont Hall, coming down, sitting way back from it, watching them drop off the kiddies and cars just come past no brake lights, no nothing. "A lot of the kids get off on the left-hand side, but then they've got to cross the road to their home. Cars come past at 100kmh and they are travelling at 27.2 metres a second. In two seconds you've got half a football field, so the kids are playing Russian roulette really. "Fair enough their parents should be there, but a lot of them aren't there all the time." Ultimately, 100kmh was just too fast, Mr Crossman said. "There are 60 residents or houses now from the 80 sign to Brockley Rd. This is the area we are looking at. It's getting to be quite a built-up area. "There is one house on Washdyke Flat Rd and that was dropped back to 80[kmh], I just don't know where we go next. We just want it put down to the safest speed, whether that is 80 like down the side of the reservoir but it could even come back to 60 really. "You feel like hitting your head against a brick wall with it. We feel like the forgotten road." Timaru District Council land transport manager Susannah Ratahi said council officers agreed an 80kmh speed limit was appropriate for many of the region's rural roads, including Claremont Rd. "However, under the new Speed Limit Setting Rule 2024, we are currently required to reverse previous speed limit reductions on specified roads as the first step. "Only once that process is complete can road controlling authorities lawfully develop a new speed management plan that aligns with the updated national direction. "While technically a temporary speed limit could be installed, doing so outside the mandated process would not result in a legally enforceable limit, which impacts driver compliance. "It would also be inconsistent with other nearby roads with similar characteristics, such as Taiko Rd, Fairview Rd, and most unsealed [shingle] and sealed rural roads in the district." She said a July 2024 request by Mr Crossman was received after the Interim Speed Management Plan's formal consultation period had closed but the request was logged for future assessment. "We also engaged with police, who hold enforcement powers for speed compliance, to raise the community's concerns. "There have been two serious crashes on Claremont Rd since records began in 1980, one in 1995 and one in 2019. Across our district, around one-third of all fatal and serious crashes on local roads occur on bends," she said. "We acknowledge the community's concerns and appreciate the petition. These requests help inform future decisions, and Claremont Rd will be considered as part of the next round of speed limit reviews under the legal framework."


Otago Daily Times
12-05-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Lower speed limits wanted
Hampden's location on State Highway 1 makes it an ideal stop-off for truckies and tired motorists but the busy road cutting the township in half is a safety worry for residents. The situation with double-stop trucks, low visibility and speeding vehicles (across three speed limits) was getting so bad it made him "cringe" regularly, Constable Neil Rushton, of Hampden, said. "It's like Russian roulette," he said. Motorists travelling south on SH 1 through Hampden township experience three different speed limits; 80kmh for about 450m at the northern end of the town; then 60kmh for about 1km in the township itself; then 70kmh for about 450m at the southern end of the town. "Motorists travelling north through Hampden experience these speed limits, but in the reverse order," resident and Waihemo Community Board member Kerry Stevens said. "For motorists travelling through Hampden on a regular basis and who forget to pay close attention to the speed limit signs each time, the changing speed limits are unnecessarily confusing." Residents also have safety concerns around pedestrians emerging from between parked vehicles on to the road and the safety of children walking to school each day. A group of about a dozen residents and local business owners met Waitaki MP Miles Anderson yesterday to present a letter asking for speed limits to be reduced from 80kmh to 70kmh at the northern end of the town; and from 60kmh to 50kmh within the main part of Hampden township. The main part of the township sits on the crest of a hill, and is home to the township's library, several shops and cafes. It is also the site, outside the township's police station, where a woman was knocked over and killed in 1999. Resident Jennifer Black said the community had tried several times to push for the changes but had been met with too much bureaucracy. "We've got this section at the top of the hill here where there's nil visibility. "It's become a much more active business area with the very busy cafe. The hall is regularly used. The library is used most days of the week. We've got this very important police station here and, of course, the takeaways." Waihemo Community Board chairwoman Heather McGregor also agreed it was time for action. "Road safety concerns in Hampden have been a concern for many years, particularly with the three different speed limits through the township. Mr Anderson said he was supportive of the suggestion and would take up the issue with NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi in the first instance and then the transport minister. "More often than not, when I come through here, there's two trucks at least parked along here and then there's traffic shoot past people trying to dash across the road — that sort of thing. No zebra crossing or anything like that." He said he was also supporting similar efforts around Duntroon and Glenavy.