Either meth or dude really wanted to get out of the house and away from whoever was in it without actually having to drive away.
Global-Ad-7172 on
Nah, this is smart. He has no access to running water and doesn’t have the money for a car wash. Using the rain to help form the lather is a great, cost-effective idea.
Flamel110 on
I can low-key get this, you just gotta apply soap and hope the rain is strong enough to wash it away. Takes the whole rinsing step out of the equation.
mjmac85 on
I’m wondering if I can explain to my HOA that I was only soaping my car. I was not washing it which is against the rules I know. It’s not my fault it’s raining. Nothing says I can’t soap my car whenever I want.
NORBy9k on
Is this Seattle? I think that was King County Metro I saw go by. If so this is so on point for Seattle, and OP must be a transplant. 🙂
Outlaw11091 on
The facepalm is that someone posted this to the internet for clout.
If you look at the soap bubbles on dudes passenger windows, you can tell that he’s just soaping up his car. The rain does the rinsing and you save many gallons of water.
rstymobil on
And? If I only waited for perfect weather and placement to wash my vehicles they’d never get washed.
Hell, I washed my work rig yesterday while it was drizzling and knowing full well a wind/rain storm was coming today.
Drunkm0nk1 on
I’ve done it!. We had a drought and we were not allowed to use water for washing cars and spraying our lawn.
On a hot humid day, a big storm came and I put on my board shorts and washed the car.
IrrelevantManatee on
That’s pretty brilliant, why would that be a facepalm?? Rain is going to wash the soap away. Less fresh water wasted is a good thing.
The tress doesn’t even have leaf, so the rain will reach the car. Or it will get rinsed when he drives away.
9 Comments
Either meth or dude really wanted to get out of the house and away from whoever was in it without actually having to drive away.
Nah, this is smart. He has no access to running water and doesn’t have the money for a car wash. Using the rain to help form the lather is a great, cost-effective idea.
I can low-key get this, you just gotta apply soap and hope the rain is strong enough to wash it away. Takes the whole rinsing step out of the equation.
I’m wondering if I can explain to my HOA that I was only soaping my car. I was not washing it which is against the rules I know. It’s not my fault it’s raining. Nothing says I can’t soap my car whenever I want.
Is this Seattle? I think that was King County Metro I saw go by. If so this is so on point for Seattle, and OP must be a transplant. 🙂
The facepalm is that someone posted this to the internet for clout.
If you look at the soap bubbles on dudes passenger windows, you can tell that he’s just soaping up his car. The rain does the rinsing and you save many gallons of water.
And? If I only waited for perfect weather and placement to wash my vehicles they’d never get washed.
Hell, I washed my work rig yesterday while it was drizzling and knowing full well a wind/rain storm was coming today.
I’ve done it!. We had a drought and we were not allowed to use water for washing cars and spraying our lawn.
On a hot humid day, a big storm came and I put on my board shorts and washed the car.
That’s pretty brilliant, why would that be a facepalm?? Rain is going to wash the soap away. Less fresh water wasted is a good thing.
The tress doesn’t even have leaf, so the rain will reach the car. Or it will get rinsed when he drives away.
That was a great idea, not a facepalm.