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424 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 624
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Title: HPR0624: Urban Camping ep 3
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0624/hpr0624.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 00:03:17
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---
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Hi everyone, this is Clot 2 and this is the How To Be an Urban Camper mini series.
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This was the third episode of the series.
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So today we're going to, well, first of all, last episode, if you want to call, we talked
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about shelter, how to find it, and where to stay, where not to stay, things like that.
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And got a little bit of listener feedback from on that one.
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One from a friend of mine who I'm not too clear on whether I'm permitted to say their
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name, so I will just say a friend.
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And they mentioned stairwells.
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Stairwells of buildings are actually really quite often, really great places to sleep, actually.
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Those typically speaking they're not well patrolled, they're quite frequently not well monitored,
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and they're inside, and it's kind of a good place to kind of crash for a night.
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So if you find your way into a stairwell and find that the building closes down around
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you, that might be a perfect place to get a little bit of sleep overnight.
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So keep that in mind.
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Some listener feedback source reminded me of motion detectors inside of buildings.
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These are good to be aware of.
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If you find yourself going into places that are closed down, you know, whether it's like
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a hotel or a college or whatever, you can usually find places that kind of shut down overnight.
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Like I said, last time kitchens are frequently a pretty good place, and a lot of times
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don't, people don't really patrol these areas.
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So if you find your way into those places, sometimes you can sleep there, but you do need
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to be mindful of motion detectors.
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If you hear a sound, go off, then definitely clear out of the area, but also be aware that
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you might not always hear the motion detector, they might not be set up that way.
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So be mindful of that.
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That's something that's fun to kind of experiment around with.
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Wander around buildings more often when you don't actually need to use them as a place
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to stay.
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You know, it's all part of scouting out.
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Certainly anytime I find myself in a hotel or in an office building or whatever, I typically
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see where I can get into, like what areas of that building I can actually make my way
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into.
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And it's always a coin toss as to whether people are going to actually ask you what you're
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doing there and whether you can actually pass yourself off as a messenger or just someone
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who's lost.
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The whole lost story frequently, it kind of gets you out of getting into trouble, but
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it doesn't really usually give you a very good reception I've found.
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Passing myself off as a messenger or something like that, that's a lot more successful
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usually.
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Sometimes that gets me further into an office than, well, I really need to be, but I mean,
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you know, sometimes you find a stairwell or something like that that you maybe didn't
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expect to find.
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Again, that's just kind of, I don't know, something to experiment around with.
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Your listener feedback from my friend Skirlit says, she says that I didn't mention a, for
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a shelter, a thing called a yurt, why you are tea.
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Now this is something that Skirlit had told me about some time ago, and actually a listener
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of the Good New World Order, Ron, he emailed me about some of these as well.
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And what these yurts are, well, they're, they're a little bit like if you could imagine
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like a teepee or even an igloo, but, but it would just be made out of wood.
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They're kind of, they're fairly small, but they're, they're actually pretty spacious,
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but it would be a one room little house.
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And Skirlit's friend is actually building himself a yurt on some land in Northern California.
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And that's going to be his home, and it's pretty cool.
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It's a little bit like camping, you know, and you can obviously make it as elaborate as
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you want to with septic tanks and all that and running water and stuff like that.
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Or you can do it more like camping and just use it as a home base, stay there a couple
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of months, be out on the road another couple of months playing music or whatever you do,
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go back, back and forth, that kind of set up.
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So it just depends, they're relatively cheap to, to make and you usually buy them as a
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kit from what I understand.
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So it's not dirt cheap, but it's, it's a lot cheaper, for instance, than buying a house,
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something like that.
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So that's a yurt.
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I don't know how that falls in our very loose definition of urban camping, because on
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one hand it's owning a home, so you're very much not homeless, but it is certainly an alternative
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way of living.
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So that's kind of, kind of interesting.
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The resources used for it are a lot lower than for an apartment.
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It's usually a very small place, and it is usually something that doesn't necessarily
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have, it's not on the grid, you know, you can set up solar power and stuff like that into
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it, but it's not something that you necessarily are hooked up into the city's grid or whatever
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with local counties grid.
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So that's kind of really kind of cool.
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And Skrillett also reminded me that van living and, and yurt living and all these other kinds
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of living, you can really harness solar power, fairly cheap.
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If you go onto the internet and just kind of shop around for solar panels and batteries
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and things like that, you can actually power quite a bit just from having a solar panel
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say bolted to the top of your van.
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One note is not to bolt it or, or rather, I think Skrillett's friend had super glued it
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or something like that or bolted and super glued solar panels to the top of his van.
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Now that he's building himself a yurt, he's kind of regretting that decision because
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the solar panels that he could use for his little self-made house are super glued to
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the top of his van.
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So don't super glue them, you may bolt them or whatever.
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But there's all kinds of cool solar gadgets coming out now, little solar powered iPod
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chargers and all kinds of interesting things that help people have that, that reduced ecological
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footprint, but still get their fun technological toys.
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That was feedback.
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Thanks a lot for the feedback, both people who sent me feedback.
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And with the topic of today's episode, which is the fun, fun, fun topic of hygiene,
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personal hygiene.
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Yes, never really thought I'd be doing an HPR episode about personal hygiene, but specifically,
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obviously, this is personal hygiene as an urban camper.
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If you think about most of the stuff that you would learn in a, I don't know if it would
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be a survivalist class or just kind of from going out into the woods and camping, it basically
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all applies to urban camping, except that you actually have typically a few more resources
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open to you as an urban camper, but the same general rules apply, obviously.
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I mean, showers are strangely a highly controversial subject.
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Some people love them, some people do them because they're necessary.
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Some people think that people shower too much, some people think that people don't shower
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enough.
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So explaining each of those points, some people love to take showers, and they take
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hour-long showers, and it gets kind of ridiculous and wasteful and all that other good stuff.
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Other people might have grown up in a military family or maybe we're in the military, and
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a shower means a two-minute activity to wash off sweat and oil, and that's it.
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I tend to be more of a two-minute shower kind of person, so showers aren't that big of
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a deal for me, and they come in unexpected places, actually.
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And we should also talk briefly about the weather two-shower or not-to-shower question,
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and you'll meet people who think that showers really are not as healthy as they're made
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out to be, versus people who think that people should shower twice daily.
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Between those two extremes, I'm sure there's a good solution, and probably a dermatologist
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would know for sure, but you kind of have to mitigate your own feelings on showers and
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how frequently they should be taken and how long they should be, and how luxurious you
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feel they should be.
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So if you're one of the people who really requires luxurious, long, hot showers all the
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time, you may find that urban camping affords this only with either membership to a gym or
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making very good friends with showers.
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If you join a gym, it's usually very reasonable compared to, for instance, rent on an apartment
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for 12 months.
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You can get a gym membership, certainly, probably, honestly, less than you would pay for
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the apartment for one month.
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Relatively speaking, it's dirt cheap.
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On the other hand, if you're broke, that doesn't really help you a whole lot.
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But let's talk about if you're not broke first.
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So gyms are great.
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If there's a gym in your area, or if you can arrange it so that you are near-age gym as
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a place that you're going to sleep or whatever, then that would be fantastic.
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You can go in as much as you want and take as long of showers as you please.
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There you have that.
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You also might be able to get a locker with your gym membership.
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And that's kind of nice because then you can actually store quite a bit in the locker.
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And if your aim is to be mobile and not to have to carry around three backpacks all the
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time, that's a really nice luxury right there.
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You can just stash your clothes in your locker and never have to think about it.
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That's actually what I did for a while this past year.
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I had a gym membership.
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I had a locker and my clothes got to be stored right there in the locker.
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I didn't have to carry that particular backpack around with me to the cafe and to the job
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and stuff like that.
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That's quite handy.
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The disadvantage of the gym, I guess, would be that you're kind of limited to their hours.
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But most gyms that I've seen have pretty good hours.
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They try to be open really, really early and frequently fairly late.
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The edited advantage would be that you, well, go to a gym a lot.
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You know, if you're not the type of person to get a lot of exercise, you might find that
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going to a gym to shower in the first place might entice you to actually work out a little
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bit.
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So that could be another good thing.
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And again, gyms are communal places.
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They're kind of places that are operating at full power, no matter what.
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So if it's more of a community center, you might even find that it's a pretty good place
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to hang out and get stuff done.
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The gym that I was a member of had little rooms off to the side for social events and things
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like that and classes, all kinds of things.
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So it turned out to be a really good resource, just if the library wasn't open or if I felt
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like I was overstaying my welcome at the library or cafe, I could go to the gym and work there
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as well.
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The other option, of course, would be making friends.
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So if you have friends and you're staying over at their house or whatever for a night
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or two nights every week or every month, whatever, then capitalize on the fact that they have
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a shower and utilize their shower facilities.
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Those would be the two easiest options of finding a shower.
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A little bit more rare would be, or I guess it's rare, would be, well, looking around and
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finding showers in unexpected places.
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And here are a couple of places that I've found showers that I would simply not have
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really thought about if I wasn't a urban camper.
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So I think one, two, not the past three jobs I've had, but the past two of the past three
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jobs that I've had had shower facilities in them, I kid you not.
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One out in California had a shower downstairs in this little room off of the men's restroom.
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It was like this shower and it was intended, I think, for bicyclists because it was a
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quote, bicycle-friendly workplace, meaning that you could bicycle in and then if you wanted
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to shower, you could.
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Or if you bicycled over at lunch, your lunch break, which a lot of people did, then when
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you got back from bicycling around town in the middle of the day, you could take a shower.
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They literally had a shower right there on premises.
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I was living in my office.
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I, it was so simple, it made it really, really nice.
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The most recent place that I worked also had a shower and they had a shower again.
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It was in a room off the men's restroom and I'm not sure what it's for.
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No clue, but it's there.
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It exists.
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It is there.
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Another score and completely unexpected.
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So those are workplaces.
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Again, I don't really think that every workplace is going to have a shower, but I think it's worth
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looking into.
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These were all sort of the downstairs areas and kind of far in the back.
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You know, they weren't really, they weren't necessarily the places that people went to often
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I don't think.
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So if that helps you get an idea of where to look for showers, then maybe, but yeah, they
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just, you have to look around.
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You have to really poke around a building and you just never know what you'll find.
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Hotels, I've found showers in hotels, obviously in hotel rooms, but I also mean in either,
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and again, like kind of back the sort of recessed restrooms that I kind of always had the
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feeling that maybe they were supposed to be staff restrooms, but they weren't, you know,
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they weren't back in the staff areas.
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So you could access them.
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Obviously not every hotel I've ever been in has that.
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It's more like when you can find it, then it's a score.
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Another place that actually I've found to be fairly common are churches.
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And I will tell you that the churches that I've found to be more likely to have showers
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than others have been Baptist and Mormon.
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Those are the two church types that I've found seem to have showers more often than other
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ones.
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And again, it's still very rare, but I have definitely found them.
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And this is on both coasts, actually.
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So I think they're there for, because these are very sort of community activity oriented
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churches.
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They're really big.
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And so I think they have like basketball courts and things like that.
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So I'm gathering that maybe, again, just kind of as an option after getting a lot of
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exercise, then you can take a shower.
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That's kind of my guess, I'm not really sure.
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But they do exist.
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The problem there, of course, and a lot of other places, is that you can't just walk
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in unless you either work or go to church or work at the hotel or whatever.
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You can't really just walk in and say, hey, I'm going to use your shower really quick.
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They exist, but they aren't necessarily readily available.
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And certainly it's not something that you would want to count on every other day.
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Or however often you think you need to take a shower.
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So you've got various places to look.
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If you absolutely cannot find a shower and really need to take a shower, truck stops.
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So the bigger truck stops, again, these are on the highway typically, maybe not the easiest
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place to get to under certain circumstances that kind of depends.
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But truck stops do have showers a lot of times.
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You have to pay outrageous prices for them, though, and comparatively.
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So if you can swing a gym membership, heck, even if you can ask a family member for a
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gym membership for Christmas or something, then that might work to your advantage.
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But those are the places to define showers.
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By far, the easiest one is a gym.
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The gym membership, you just swipe your card, you go in, you work out, take your shower,
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hang around, work on whatever you want, and then leave.
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It's no one bothers you, no one asks you why you're coming in to use the showers.
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You know, it's just, it's really simple.
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So if you can swing that, it makes it really, really convenient.
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That's the biggest, that's like the top, the top question that I've ever get when
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I, when someone finds out that I'm an urban camper.
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That's the first question that they kind of awkwardly ask.
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Other questions tend to be things like, how do you find a bathroom?
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And those are amazingly easy to find, that's, I'm not even sure why people are confused
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about that.
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Bathrooms tend to be in every restaurant that you go into.
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It's obviously, if you're going to be urban camping, you want to kind of get familiar
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with the area.
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Find out what restaurants there are, what restaurants are 24 hours, and what restaurants
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tend to be really easy and friendly to go back and use their bathroom without like explaining
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why you need to use their bathroom and stuff like that.
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So that's really simple.
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Public libraries tend to have bathrooms readily available.
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What else?
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I don't know.
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It's almost so simple to me that I can't even think how to explain it.
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So that's, I don't know, that doesn't really puzzle me very much.
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There are, there is a question of like brushing your teeth and flossing and just kind of
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doing your hair or whatever people do.
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I tend to be very low maintenance.
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And I think a lot of urban campers either are or fall into being low maintenance.
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So I think that you're, if you perceive that you would need a long time in a bathroom
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to dress yourself up and stuff, I think you'll find that urban camping minimizes that a
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lot more.
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And I think that's a good thing, frankly, I really like that.
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Some people might not like that, but I think that you find that you, you'll get a feel
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for which bathrooms you can go into and kind of have your toothbrush out and your floss
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and your deodorant and everything and kind of like sort yourself out.
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Obviously, the little coffee shops that tend to have private restrooms, those are really
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good because you can take your backpack in there, unpack a little bit, brush your teeth,
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just kind of get yourself straightened out for that day.
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Otherwise, if you get to places early enough, you can usually capitalize on their bathroom
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before traffic really starts to get in there.
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Shaving, if you shave, I don't really shave that often, but if you need to shave, again,
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just getting to bathrooms early and or locating the ones that actually have private, private
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bathrooms will work out pretty nicely for you.
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Clothes and laundry are, again, really, really obvious, really simple.
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There are laundromats all over the place.
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They tend to be open 24 hours, so you can do your laundry and maybe catch some z's while
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you're at it.
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That's pretty simple.
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I've never had a problem with that and in some jobs, once again, depending on what kind
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of job you've got, sometimes you'll find that there are laundry facilities and if you're
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working a graveyard shift, you might be able to take advantage of that.
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That's there, that's a possibility.
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One thing that I tend to go through amazingly quickly when urban camping are shoes and
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socks.
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I guess it's because you've got them on all the time and I tend to walk a lot just for
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whatever reason I go through shoes and socks really, really quickly.
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You also need to be mindful, I guess, that you have your shoes and socks on a lot when
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you're urban camping.
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Probably too much.
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They're always on your feet, they're getting worn out, possibly smelly, it's just something
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you want to be aware of.
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For some reason that was one thing that really struck me the first time that I was urban
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camping at how frequently I had my shoes on.
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The time that I was urban camping and I was able to sleep in my office, that was a whole
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different ballgame.
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I could take my shoes off and I was quite comfortable and I didn't have to ever really be afraid
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of someone discovering me and me having to leave or at least to have the appearance that
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I wasn't actually living in that spot or sleeping in that spot or whatever.
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But if you're more out in places that are kind of touch and go, you might need to keep
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your shoes on and so you're talking about shoes and socks being on your feet all day
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and then all night and then all day and then all night and that just gets bad.
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So change of socks, good idea, keeping updated on your shoes is a good idea and by updated
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I mean, if you need to get a new pair of shoes, try to swing that if you can because they'll
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get worn out really, really fast and possibly really, really smelly, really, really fast.
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So just keep that in mind.
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It's like one of those things that you don't really think about until you suddenly start
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living in your shoes for like days at a time.
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Doing your hair and things like that, I tend to not be very, again, I'm not very high
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maintenance in terms of hair styling and things like that.
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Actually, I just get up and go but in terms of hair cuts and things like that, I've found
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that not just while urban camping but just in general, cutting my own hair is much more
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efficient, both cost wise and time wise and everything else.
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So I tend to just cut my own hair and I tend to do that in whatever random private bathroom
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I find and I guess a lot of urban camping can be kind of summarized by taking advantage
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of things when they present themselves to you.
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So it means that you have to kind of keep your eyes open and be ready to discover little
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things that you can use while urban camping, whether it's a shower that you discover out
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of the blue or a bathroom that affords a lot of privacy and you can just unpack and straighten
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out your gear, shave, cut your hair.
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So there really is a lot of opportunism involved, I think.
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And I don't think that's a bad thing.
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I actually think it's a great thing and I actually think it's good training almost.
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And the way I think that we tend to live when we believe we have control over stuff and
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we own stuff, I think that we become very demanding and we expect there to be exactly what
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we want when we want it.
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And then when that doesn't happen, we get very upset and it throws us off in ruins our
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day.
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Urban camping, you don't tend to think that way.
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You tend to think to look at things as more sort of a natural flow and you kind of discover
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that, that you don't really need as much as you thought you need, you don't need that
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kind of regular scheduled, everything must be where you want it to be at the exact time
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and you start taking advantage of things that present themselves to you.
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I just feel like that's a much more somehow organic or natural way of really living in
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a way.
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It works better actually because you find that, yeah, you didn't actually expect to find
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that bathroom where you could shave and cut your hair and cut your fingernails and stuff,
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but there it is right there.
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So why not take this opportunity to do those things?
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Now, well, you're not really planning your life around, oh, when am I going to go get
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that haircut or you're not wasting your morning, you just, you get started.
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You go do the stuff that you want to do and then suddenly you stumble across a bathroom
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that is perfect for what you need and so you go in, you shave, cut your hair, organize
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your gear, change t-shirts, change socks, whatever you want to do, and then you leave.
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And it works out.
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It works out beautifully.
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It's a very sort of natural flow and you don't have to force it.
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You don't have to structure your day around it, you don't have to hunt it down.
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It just kind of is there.
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It just presents itself and you use it.
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It's kind of neat and it's a rhythm that you can get into.
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So those are really, I think my notes on personal hygiene, obviously it's pretty self-explanatory
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except that I guess it isn't necessarily so just kind of keep in mind that there is
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that angle to being an urban camper there.
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You do have to think about it a little bit more.
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So you do have to kind of think, okay, what do I look like right now or how do I smell
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right now and just kind of make sure that you're not forgetting that as strangely as that
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sounds.
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I mean, obviously some people would never forget any of that.
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Other people I think are more prone to kind of let that fall by the wayside.
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You probably don't want to let that fall too far to the wayside.
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You probably want to kind of keep that in mind.
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I think even more so as an urban camper, because if you are homeless and I mean, you know,
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without a home, and then you start to smell homeless and this time I mean the bad kind
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of homeless and you start to look homeless and again, I mean the bad kind of homeless.
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Then you start to look and sound and smell a lot like a real homeless person.
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And that's not what we're going for.
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We're going for the whole urban camping thing, the mentally stable homeless by choice kind
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of homeless, not the other kind of homeless.
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So keep that stuff in mind, be hygienic, be safe.
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So there you go.
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That's as much as I can possibly think to say about the wonderful subject of hygiene.
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Next episode we will talk about organization, how to organize all that wonderful stuff
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that you have as an urban camper.
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Talk to you then.
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All the river rinds things by the linden tree.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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It's calling me.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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Melody.
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There's a street happening for me day by day.
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So far away.
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I can't believe it's straight.
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I long to hear the church belled between the chimes.
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How love will rhyme.
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And come the time.
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Right moonbeam fiver on the rippling,
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Right river and my tree,
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Heart waiting by the vine.
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Love deemed remind me,
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I left my heart behind me
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By the hero river ride.
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Right moon, right moon,
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Right moonbeam fiver on the rippling,
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Right river and my tree,
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Heart waiting by the vine.
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Right moonbeam fiver on the rippling,
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Right moonbeam fiver on the rippling,
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Right river and my tree.
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Right moonbeam fiver on the rippling,
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Right moonbeam fiver on the rippling,
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Right river and my tree.
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All river ride.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm answered in part by carrow.net.
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So head on over to caro.net for all your hosting news.
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