Talk of The Villages Florida

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-   -   Tubs (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/medical-health-discussion-94/tubs-357243/)

Bay Kid 03-14-2025 08:20 AM

I grew up with 1 bath. It had a claw foot tub. Never had more than 1 bath that for 35 years, I kept buying early 1900s homes. Since then you couldn't get me back into a tub. I do love a large shower w/non slip tile.

Nana2Teddy 03-14-2025 08:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by airstreamingypsy (Post 2416005)
I haven't been in a bathtub since the mid 80s. I don't get the attraction of sitting in dirty water. Nope, just showers for this girl.

Ditto! Our 3-bath home has one bathtub and 2 walk-in showers. Our adult daughter loves the bathtub in the guest suite when she visits even though it’s probably half the size of the large jacuzzi tub in her SoCal home. Also, it’s great for our 3 y/o grandson. We love though that we can offer a nice roomy shower in our 3rd bathroom for our guests who don’t like bathtubs.

Nana2Teddy 03-14-2025 08:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MandoMan (Post 2416026)
I love soaking in a hot bath (not too hot). However, I’m 6’3”, and standard bathtubs are not satisfying. I want the water to cover my shoulders completely and ideally up to my ears, and to get that in the standard Villages tub I have to lie on my back with my legs in the air. For 30 years I had bathtubs that were a full six feet long and extra deep. They were rectangular, not oval, because oval is a waste of space and water. They had to provide back support when reclining, rather than have the back wall at a 90° angle. I didn’t want whirlpool features, as they are too loud to allow relaxation. I got up early every morning and took a long bath while enjoying my coffee and reading, then went to work.

Walk-in tubs sound like a good idea, but they aren’t. They are wider than normal tubs, and they take a lot of water. One sits in them. The water only comes up to the lower chest level. I need my shoulders in the water. You have to drain all the water before getting out. They are hard to clean. They can leak.

My late mom loved baths and disliked showers, but in her 80s she found getting out of the tub difficult. One side of the tub provided a good hand hold, but the other didn’t. If she sank down to warm her shoulders, it could be hard to pull herself back up.

When houses are built, contractors should install 2x6” supports horizontally behind the tub walls and install sturdy ADA compliant grab bars. I’ve installed such bars in my own shower and bath here in the villages, but it isn’t easy to screw them into the vertical studs. (It works for vertical grab bars, but for horizontal bars, the length of the bar must allow screwing into studs. The same goes for towel bars outside the bath.) Putting in the horizontal 2x6” supports requires quite a bit of extra work, and the sturdy bars aren’t cheap.

While I have your attention, if you install a pool or hot tub, it is really important to install sturdy grab bars. Steps into a pool without a good railing well-anchored from outside the pool down to the bottom can be a death trap. I had a pool my first two years in The Villages. It seemed that most of the people who used it had some mobility issues and could not have gotten into or out of the pool without a railing. In hot tubs here, railings are rare, yet it is hard to get into or out of a hot tub. Often the seat one steps on getting into is slippery. There is also often a long drop from to rim of the tub to the floor. The steps can be hard to find in the day, much less the night, and if one misses the step? Last time I was in a hot tub, getting out, my foot slipped off the step and I fell to the ground. Fortunately, I didn’t break anything, but I had a sore back for a few days and a big bruise on my hip for three weeks. There are some sturdy hand rails for hot tubs that can be slid under the tub when it is empty, so the water weight can keep them in place, but they aren’t cheap. A lot cheaper than surgery, though.

Our neighbor across the street added a pool last year with no handrail at the steps, so at their first pool party for neighbors there were several who struggled to get out of the pool. I knew I wouldn’t be able to get out without the handrail because of my bad knees, so I didn’t swim. I guess for some pool owners the handrail isn’t esthetically pleasing.

Dotneko 03-14-2025 08:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by airstreamingypsy (Post 2416005)
I haven't been in a bathtub since the mid 80s. I don't get the attraction of sitting in dirty water. Nope, just showers for this girl.

lol - I feel that way about swimming pools. There isnt enough chlorine in the world to get me into one of those fecal stews. I see photos of people in pools on cruises and it is just *ick* to me. My own bathtub? I dont care.

richdell 03-14-2025 11:04 AM

I'm a little too tubby to sit in a tub. :wave:

Topspinmo 03-14-2025 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by asianthree (Post 2416035)
We built this house with 3 bathrooms and 3 showers. We also chose not to add a hot tub to the pool. Higher temp water can have serious effects on BP, per cardiologist, plus it destroys natural oils in skin, per dermatologist, for us.

While heat works well for muscles, uncontrolled BP and itching skin doesn’t make for relaxing evening.


Well, just about everything that feels good not good for you:oops:

EatthMama 03-15-2025 07:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Topspinmo (Post 2415885)
Ok, it been at least 10 years since I crawled down into tub. After my procedure hot soaking could help my recovery? What the …..:swear: I could hardly get down in and twice as hard to get back out. I am pretty fit for my age and verily 10 pound over weight. I found out my joints and back don’t bend like the use to. :confused: I have no use for tub. :oops:

I find that my sandbag heating pad it just as effective and it pits me to sleep as the muscles relax. A much less expensive option.

retiredguy123 03-15-2025 07:31 AM

I rarely use a tub, but I would never buy a house that didn't have one. As far as I know, the builder never builds a house without a tub, unless the owner makes a custom change. I think it can affect the resale value if the house doesn't have a tub.

Topspinmo 03-24-2025 05:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bay Kid (Post 2416037)
I grew up with 1 bath. It had a claw foot tub. Never had more than 1 bath that for 35 years, I kept buying early 1900s homes. Since then you couldn't get me back into a tub. I do love a large shower w/non slip tile.

I grew up poor outside small town in Midwest (the flyover states) (though I didn’t know i was poor at time) (yes, somebody always has it worse) had draw water in wash tub to take bath. Then, had to empty it. When I got out on my own use think I was in heaven with indoor bath tub and toilet. :MOJE_whot:

Ropnrose 03-25-2025 06:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Topspinmo (Post 2415885)
Ok, it been at least 10 years since I crawled down into tub. After my procedure hot soaking could help my recovery? What the …..:swear: I could hardly get down in and twice as hard to get back out. I am pretty fit for my age and verily 10 pound over weight. I found out my joints and back don’t bend like the use to. :confused: I have no use for tub. :oops:

A couple of months ago, I had both of my bathrooms re-done. New vanity tops, raised the vanities 4", floors, and solid surface showers installed. I had the tub removed from the guest bath. Some questioned my removing the tub, due to "resale value". I told them, that I live here now and don't have a need for a tub. I'm not planning on selling my house in the near future. When I do, the prospective buyers can decide if they want a tub.


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