Don't ever
submit to your curiosity when it urges you to investigate the effects of half a bottle of
washing up liquid emptied into the
cistern of a
toilet; this is one situation where acting upon your primitive aggression is not such a great idea. Now, I know most of you would never
dream of doing something
so foolish, but nevertheless there is the possiblity that some of you may find yourselves gripped, as I was, by the need to experiment. To save you all a lot of
hassle, I'm going to tell you what happens.
First of all, you lift the lid from the cistern and discharge a
copious amount of washing up liquid into the
water therein. Then,
giggling with excitment (well, I was), you activate the
flushing mechanism and as one would expect the water in the bowl foams up a great deal and it's all very hilarious.
You laugh for a while and then, your thirst for entertainment
temporarily sated, you flush the toilet again to dispose of the foam. However, contrary to your intentions, the
foam not only remains exactly where it is,
it gets even foamier. You flush once more, and again the level of foamage grows yet more severe. At this point in the
procedure your
chuckles will begin to take on a mildly concerned tone. Another flush and the bubbles start to leak out from under the lid of the cistern; at this point you realise you may have done something a little
dumb.
Determining to diagnose the cause of this inconvenience, you lift the lid of the cistern again. To your
horror, you realise that the turbulence occuring in the water each time the cistern refills serves to
replenish the
bubbles. What's more, the foam will continue to expand, like some
B-movie monstrosity, invading the bathroom floor and
climbing up the wall behind the cistern. This
phenomenon is of course
pants-shittingly funny, but also
damned awkard to put a stop to, which is why I recommend you never try it.
If having read this, you simply
must try it out, I
promise you that you will find yourself in the situation
predicted here. If you're at a loss with regard to what to do about it, just
flush the toilet and once the cistern is empty use a
towel or something to jam the
ballcock valve (yes, that's what it's called) in place thus preventing the cistern from refilling; then clean up what foam you can and leave it for a day or so. Doesn't sound like such a huge deal, but when you live with five people all sharing one
bathroom, it is.
A
nasty sort of person might see this as an ideal
practical joke, but I wouldn't condone that sort of
malicious behaviour at all.
Maylith, a wiser soul than myself, has suggested a better way of cleaning up this mess - "Do NOT flush your toilet. Empty your kitchen garbage bin out, and fill it with a few gallons of water. Pouring said water (fairly strongly) into the bowl of the toilet will cause the toilet to gravity flush. Most toilets will not then refill themselves. Then you can clean the tank out at your leisure without worrying about jostling the ballcock dam while you are cleaning the cistern. (At least... I'm pretty sure the gravity flush also empties the cistern... I'll have to test that one of these days. ;-)"
karma debt provides a chemical solution to the problem - "yo, add vinegar, it'll get rid of the suds."