Is it dry?
At this time of year, washing generally cannot be hung out to dry. If it is, it freezes on the line, drips all day, or achieves a measure of dryness only to be rained on – something we call ‘an extra rinse.’ Thus, we resort to an airer and/or the tumble dryer.
Laundry in the tumble dryer is warm and can give the impression of dryness. When it cools it sometimes becomes apparent that it is still damp.
The dryness, or otherwise, of laundry has become, if not a bone of contention, at least a subject for discussion. Barry has resorted to using a ‘wood dampness’ monitor. The washing thereafter passed ‘satisfactory’ is presented to me for sorting and folding. All too often it is still, to my senses, damp. It is then returned to the tumble dryer or draped around the fireguard in front of the stove.
Occasionally, I decide to ignore my adjudication, reasoning that ‘it must surely be dry by now’ only to regret that decision when the mustiness of a garment proves that I was right all along and it has to be washed again.
I really should not be feeling guilty because I don’t agree with the dampness monitor!








