Monday, July 31, 2023

Everet's Farm Laundry Newsletter February 2023

 


For Farms:
Towel Washer or Dryer Not Working?

Buying Washers Over and Over?

Is the washer and dryer that you bought to clean the towels not working?Are you constantly buying new washers only to have to buy a new one 12 months later?

Bacteria counts too high?

Dryer leaving towels damp promoting bacteria growth?

Whether you use terry, microfiber, or cotton cloth

you have to do laundry at some point.

Homestyle top load or frontload washers are not built to last and run 20 loads a day.

Commercial large chassis washers and dryers are built to take the workload and will last years.

Towel costs have gone up.

Washing services raised their rates to triple what you used to pay. If you are interested in the option of having your own laundry equipment or upgrading what you currently have, please contact me.Everet KamikawaA Heck of A Nice Guy

I write a weekly article related to laundry equipment. Once per month I send out an email with links to some of these articles. If you are interested in reading them just click on the link

Featured Articles this Month

Dryers not heating? Check Sail Switch

dryers-not-heating-clean-sail-switch

Keep your laundry area safe.At a farm this is easier than an apartment building. Is the area well lit? Dry?Here are some more ideas:laundry-room-rule-3-keep-it-safe

Dryers not heating? Clean sensors

dryers-not-heating-clean-sensors

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Secret Sauce to Laundromat Success with Laundromat Author Jason Dodge

 






Jason Dodge is a successful laundromat owner, author of laundromat books, and a fantastic promoter.
Many of you that are reading this locally know Jason.
Here is a quick video of two tips he has on how to increase business at your laundromat.
For those of my readers in the sales or HR market, these same tips apply to your worlds as well.
Thanks Jason!
Ev



Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Clean Your Washer Doors

Have you noticed that musty smell coming from your front load washer?
Large chassis washers are not usually as prone to that smell as small chassis washers are, providing they are kept clean. If you notice that musty smell the first place I look is around the front door seal.


The door seal is always trapping some water and soap because the door is on its side holding all the water inside the washer.





The bottom of the door collects a lot of dirt and soap because the water is always splashing up against it and sitting there during the cycles.


Cleaning the door seal gets all the junk from around the door that smells and is an eye sore. Think about when customers load clothes. When they stand up to close the door the eyes naturally follow to the top of the door. If they see that there is no dirt there, they will have confidence that your washers are kept clean and therefore their clothes will get clean.
Use some soap and water, vinegar, or any favorite cleaner. Get a good plastic scraper and scrape all the big slime away. Then wet a cloth and wrap it around the edge of the scraper and run it all along the edges. Sometimes you can even get it underneath the lip of the door seal. 
If the door seal has a split top, get the cloth and scraper inside that area too.


Scraping the inside of the door seal might yield items like dimes stuck inside between the door glass and the seal, or junk inside the split top of a door seal that might not allow the door to close properly like in the picture above.


After cleaning the doors the musty smell should go away. You might find that the doors don't leak as much either because there is no dirt or debris blocking the door from closing properly, especially on the bottom of the door. When I clean the doors I also find it is a good time to rotate the door glass as that rotates the door seal and puts the wear spot in a different place and helps stop leaks too.

Now that you've cleaned your doors see if your customers notice the little extra sparkle. Even if they don't say anything or notice, I bet new customers will!

Ev
A Heck of A Nice Guy


Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Top 3 Disgusting Laundromat Stories


I’ve seen a lot of goofy things in my time running laundromats.
My guess is that you have too.
While it probably isn’t completely wise to back up old stereotypes of laundromat customers with these goofy tales, they are things that future laundromat owners need to know they might encounter, because I bet a six pack of ice cream cones that all these people out there that give advice on how to buy, set up, and run a laundromat don’t ever mention these goofy things. For the sake of anonymity for the locations I’m not going to name where these incidents took place, however they are all situations I saw first hand. So with that build up here is my list of the three most disgusting things I have seen in laundromats:

Honorable Mention:
High school age kids had vandalized the laundromat of this location.
They rolled their blunts in the bathroom and broke the toilet.
The bathroom was closed for repairs. I came into the laundromat to do some repairs and collections. I noticed the laundromat smelled like poo.
I looked around the washers and in the drain troughs and those seemed fine. I looked in the garbage can in the corner and there it was. Right on top of an empty box of laundry detergent, a bunch of poo logs. It was mushy slimy poo too, not the logs. Stunk up the whole place.
I was able to get the video feed from the owner.
An older lady stood up from the bench and said, and I heard her say it on camera; she had "to go #2 and go immediately and couldn’t make it to her car to go somewhere else to use the bathroom.” She grabbed a garbage can that had no cover on it, dragged it to a spot between two rows of washers that weren’t being used and anyone looking in the window couldn’t see behind, dropped trousers and dumped right into the can on top of the garbage!
I give her credit that she did that rather than poo on the floor or something worse.
Guess who had to change the garbage bag?




3. This takes place at the same laundromat as the honorable mention story.
As I stated above the bathroom had been closed due to vandalism. Before it was closed I caught several punks that were doing it. One was arrested. I thought the problem was over as for a few weeks nothing happened in the bathroom. One day I had to repair a washer at that laundromat. I used the bathroom and it was clean. I crawled into the drain trough to do my repairs. I was the only one in the laundromat when I heard the front door open and someone walk in and go to the bathroom and close the door. Various people like the mail carrier and bus drivers always used the bathroom at this time of the morning so I was curious because of the previous bathroom trouble but not too concerned. The bathroom door opened and I stuck my head out of the bulkhead to see who it was. It was the kid who was arrested. He looked at me laughing and held up his hands. They were wet and full of brown gunk. He walked out of the store, slapping one hand against a fiberglass sitting bench as he did so. I got out of the bulkhead and saw the brown splash from his hand on the bench. I immediately went to the bathroom. The little punk had wiped his own poo all over the bathroom walls and didn’t wash his hands afterwards. The toilet was full of diarrhea and no toilet paper or paper towels.
Poo all over the inside of the door, walls, and all around and on the toilet. Guess who had to clean that up and how many pairs of rubber gloves were needed?






2. Some regular customers to a store had told me there was a pervert coming to this location on some particular mornings. He was dropping trou and pleasuring himself in front of and while looking at them. I told them to call the cops next time they saw him. I changed my visiting time to this store to match the times that the ladies were there in the hopes that I could call the cops and keep the ladies safe. For several weeks nothing happened. I figured I would go one more time on the new day.
The ladies were there…and so were the cops!
The ladies had called and the cops got there on time and arrested the perv. Literally caught him with his pants down! The ladies were laughing at him (they were okay and even enjoying the fact they were the ones that caught him).
Turns out the perv was a known sex offender. The police were taking statements and collecting finger prints, which I thought was weird. I asked the cop if they were collecting finger prints because he touch something the ladies had. He said yes that the perv touched the bench the ladies sat on and they needed to establish that it was him at the laundromat at the time of this incident. The perv had “left evidence” in spots and I asked the officer in charge why if they needed evidence they weren’t taking obvious bio samples that clearly showed evidence of the crime and obviously belonged to him because there was no doubt it was his DNA.
The officer said “I don’t mess with that.” Guess who had to clean it up with a mop and a lot of bleach?



1. As bad as both of the previous examples are,
I still think this is my most disgusting.
I had to fix a toilet seat in a bathroom. Before doing that I always bleach the toilet and floor around so I can at least pretend I have a more sanitary place to work.
Next to the toilet was a bathroom sink in a vanity. The vanity had a large cabinet with a door and three small drawers next to the big door.
The drawers and door were all screwed shut by me years before because I would go in and find old blunts, dirty toilet paper, and other junk inside of them.
Since I had screwed them shut I never gave them a second thought. On this day since my head was next to the vanity and I was in the bathroom for longer than a few seconds I noticed a consistent strange odor that you didn’t really notice when standing up at the sink.
I put my nose next to the large door of the vanity, and after taking a deep inhale I was sure it was coming from there.
I thinking a mouse must have died inside the cabinet or some other such thing.
I got my drill and took out the screws and opened the door…and nearly puked.
I got an old broom from the cleaning closet and reached inside the vanity and swept out... 
56 used tampons and soiled panty liners!
Most of the tampons had congealed into a massive sticky mound that was stuck to the floor of the vanity. Some of the color on the items were bright as if they were new while others had darker colors indicating they were older. I had to knock the pile loose with the broom and it took three trips to the garbage cans outside in the laundromat with the dust pan to get them all cleaned up. You don’t have to guess who cleaned these up.
To this day I don’t know how they got in there. The screws on the cabinet didn’t look like they were messed with. When I pulled them out with the drill they were still tight inside the wood.
I can’t imagine several different ladies, or even the same lady, using the vanity as a disposal for a time long enough that so many items were left in the vanity. If someone collected them and left them all at once that is hard to imagine too.
After that incident every few months I would open up the cabinet but there was never anything in there after that.




In the laundry business you run into all kinds of good people…and goofy ones.
Can you top these disgusting stories?

Ev
A Heck of A Nice Guy

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

American Flag Retirement Ceremony






 On this 4th of July below is a brief video of an American Flag retirement ceremony. The whole service took an hour with all of the flags retired, however in the six minute video you get an idea of how it works. It was filmed at Menomonee Falls WWII Days in June 2023 and compiled together using video clips and iPhone live images.
Ev
A Heck of A Nice Guy


Good evening everyone.
My name is Everet Kamikawa.
I’m a committee member for Troop 260 based out of
St. Margaret Mary Church on 92nd and Capitol Drive.
Thank you very much for coming to our flag retirement ceremony this evening.
How many of you are seeing a flag retirement ceremony for the first time?
(people raise hands)
How many of you have never seen a flag retirement ceremony before? 
(same people raise hands)
I got a few of you raising your hands twice.
Before we begin I just want to say a quick thank you to Nancy and the organizers of WWII Days for giving us the opportunity to hold this ceremony today.
We also want to thank the leaders of Troop 260 including:
Dan Forgie
Ralph Frederick
Jeff Roemer
Toni Cranfield 
Gary Sisley
We also wanna say thank you very much to the Scouts from 260 and our special group of veterans who are participating in this event this evening as well as all of you.
Thank you all for coming.

I started off this evening with a little bit of a joke, however the ceremony you are about to see is not a joke.  
Nations and events in history are often represented by words and symbols. 
In fact the living history that we teach the crowds this weekend is about the triumph over one of those symbols and the evil words surrounding it. 
The American flag is more than just a symbol of our country.
It is the ideas and the people that are represents.
The freedoms that we enjoy.
The people that we are.

Think about all of the history that our flag has witnessed.
In our own hometown of Milwaukee, that flag will be leading the Juneteenth parade being carried by re-enactors representing Union troops of the 29th United States Colored Troops regiment from the Civil War.
It was being flown during father Groppi's march across the viaducts to protest city discriminatory housing laws.
It’s flying behind you over this event this weekend like it has flown over so many places and events over the years. 
Think  about all of the places that it has flown. 
Recently it has flown in places like: 
Shahi Kit Valley
Fallujah
Kandahar
For another generation it flew over places with names like:: 
Fort Amador 
Mogadishu 
Kuwait City 
St. George’s
For my family the flag flew over: 
Da Nang
Khe sahn
Sukchon-Sunchon
Nisan-ni
Bruyes 
PO Valley
It was carried by the grandfather of our reenactment unit captain from the time he hit the beach at Normandy on June 7 all the way through to Berlin in WWII. Then through Korea, Vietnam, and Panama, and now flies over our campsite here at this event.

The American flag has flown over places with famous names like: 
Bastogne
Iwo Jima
Anzio
Bella wood
Gettysburg 
Yorktown
And some not so famous names like:
Minidoka
Tule Lake
Hart Mountain

In all that time it has draped the coffins of every man and woman that has paid the ultimate sacrifice to defend this country and its people, including the 22 veterans a day that are currently becoming casualties of their wars,
only whose graves are located on the side of the ocean.

When you have a symbol that has seen so much and been sacrificed for by so many, you don’t get rid of it at the end of its life by simply throwing it away. 
In the ceremony that you were about to see, the flag is retired in a way befitting of it. 
It is a simple, dignified ceremony 
During the ceremony
you will hear the words of the flag as it speaks to you telling you what it sees. 
As you hear these powerful words I challenge you to three things: 
Number one:
I challenge you to not get welling of pride and patriotism for being part of this country. Maybe you get a lump in your throat or your heart bats a little louder.
Number two:
I challenge you to not develop a deeper appreciation of the sacrifices and duties that the veterans here at this event and everywhere have done to keep our country free.
Number three:
I challenge you to not get a tear in your eye thinking of a family member, loved one, or a friend that made the ultimate sacrifice in defense of this country
I will wager that everyone here tonight will fail on at least one of those challenges. I personally will fail on all three. And I am proud to admit so. 

After the main flag is fully retired, whomever in the audience that would like to dedicate a flag to be retired can do so. 
At this time to get the ceremony started, I’d like to turn things over to our Eagle scout candidate:  
Hiro Kamikawa 

Speech given by Everet Kamikawa before Hiro Kamikawa's Eagle Scout Project 
of American Flag retirement ceremony on June 18, 2023,
at WWII Days at Old Falls Village in Menomonee Falls, WI.