In the tub have a gallon bag and so easy to fill and much faster... waiting is so hard when I want an enema.. like now
I use a 3 quart stainless steel pitcher and fill it in the bathroom sink, mixing the soap until I have a nice milky solution with a good head of suds. then I pour the solution into my 4quart red fountain syringe and hang it from the towel rack for a good old-fashioned enema.
If I'm doing an Enema in the bathroom, I fill the 4qt. bag from the tub faucet. However,most of my equipment is in the basement play area, which also contains the laundry sink.The large sink is ideal for filling bags, pitchers, etc., and is wonderful for washing the equipment after use.Dan
The way my house is, I pretty much have to use the bathtub to fill the bag. I usually use a closed-top, Hot Water bottle style bag. I DO own a 4-qt open top, but I haven't used it much lately.My house has the full bathroom on one floor, and the kitchen and water closet on the other floor.I fill the bag at the bathtub, and then carry it to the bedroom, hang it over the bed, use it there, and make the run to the bathroom when the time comes.
I fill my enema bag with a 2 quart plastic pitcher. I slowly pour in the enema solution and watch the bag expand. If the solution is sudsy then I need a few pauses to allow the suds to spill over the bag and drip down the shiny rubber. I do this till the bag is bulging.
At our place, we have to go outside to the water supply crank, at the well head...Ya might think that that is bad, or uncomfortable, butt it taint. Justa part of life in a small community, on an older property where ya live life like it was in the early first half of the last century.Ah! Yes; after the enema; ya do have ta run out to the johnny, hoping ya make it without an incident or two. And, yet, it's not like you are goin to water the carpet, or mess on the kitchen floor, here or there. The ground and grass are very forgiving, and might even appreciate a little human manure.Ssssoooo, there ya have it. Tis okay in the country with all of the ole accoutrements of the past, even if we are a livin in the present.Now ~ yall go out and make it a gr8 Saturday evening, and experience a nice weekend.Hermann
Most of the time in the kitchen sink since it has a long neck faucet. Sometime I use the bathtub faucet.
Generally at the kitchen sink, because the faucet is much higher, and of course the kitchen sink is deeper than the bathroom vanity. Besides, I generally mix the solution in a pitcher first, then poor it into the bag or the 1 gal container, whichever I decide to use.
I installed an independent moen water filter faucet with american plumberunder sink canister filter with a domestic water temperature control mixing valve. which keeps the temperature between 100 and 103 degrees with the mixing valve you can control the temperature of the water. this little project worked out so well in my 3 bathrooms and kitchen
Usually the sink, sometimes the shower. I have a mini-pitcher from bar in Ohio, that is now the perfect enema pouring vessel.
I fill mine in the bathroom sink. It is hard to fill the bag full but thee can always be things to help that. My bag holds only 1 1/2 quarts whenn filled with a faucet or cup so I usually fill it by siphonSuck the hose full of water then attach it. place the bag on the floor and hold the nozzel unter the water of the filled sink. That way I can get a full 2 quarts into the bag and I like sht sight of a bulging bag.
Generally I use the bathtub tap. Don't feel like carrying it up the stairs from the kitchen. When I build my dream house, it'll have bathroom sink taps high enough to fill it.
I mostly use the bathtub spout. Takes much less time for the water to get warm. If I'm doing an enema on the deck outside, I fill a gallon bottle and then empty into the bag outside. If I'm doing an enema in the shower, I just fill from the shower head.
I use the bathroom sink to fill a two-quart glass measure that is then carried into the bedroom where my open-top bag is set up by the bed.With the glass measure, I can mix and prepare the desired solution, whether it be of soap, Epsom salt, or whatever. If coffee is used, I fill it with a quart of freshly brewed double strength coffee in the kitchen and carry that to the bathroom tap to top off with an added quart for the perfect temperature.
The kitchen sink has the taller faucet. Sometimes the bag get filled directly, sometimes a gallon pitcher gets filled and taken into the bedroom (or where ever I need to fill the bag). When the kids walked in while I was filling the bag at the faucet (this was a couple of years back) I started using the pitcher. They don't ask as many questions when I fill that.
I fill mine in the showertub , it is alot higher and easer to fill . My bag always hangs in the shower anyways .
We've been filling ours from the bathroom faucet. Since its so far away from the water heater we decided to start filling a 2 qt pitcher & microwave it for 3.5 minutes.
I hang the bag on a towel rack in the tub enclosure, so I use a large drink cup to fill it. The cup is easily filled with the long neck faucet on the bathroom sink and I can mix up the desired solution as the cup is filling. Two cup fulls generally fills the bag but I have the option of adding more during my 'fill up' - this is especially convenient on second and third enemas since I can take more after that first clean out.
I use a two quart plastic pitcher and fill it in the kitchen sink. I can adjust the temperature and mix Ivory soap to just the right concentration then add the mixture to the bag. Also, using warm water allows me to disolve Epsom salt in the water before making it cloudy with Ivory.
I fill a one gallon pitcher in the bath tub because it will fill the pitcher faster than the kitchen sink.