Airtight
By LanaStidolph - 02/12/2017 06:00
By LanaStidolph - 02/12/2017 06:00
By fallsdownplenty45 - 02/06/2009 11:08 - Taiwan
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By Anonymous - 06/04/2023 06:00 - Australia
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By person - 26/12/2010 17:59 - Jordan
By UptoHERE - 04/02/2010 03:18 - Canada
By cathugger - 13/07/2019 16:30
By soapgirl - 13/08/2009 16:07 - Philippines
By IndianAngel96 - 29/10/2012 22:39 - United States - Houston
And here you thought you had a clean ride home, but guess it turned out to be a pretty suddy one instead!
I think the ride turned out much cleaner than OP had anticipated.
Were you transporting the shampoo on your head?
So you shampooped your pants?
I call Shenanigans!!! Not only should the backpack kept the majority of the rain off of the products, but the shampoo and household chemicals were most likely in bottles or other type containers that could handle a little rain water. So you would have had to open the containers/ remove the caps, stuffed the containers into your backpack to ensure some spillage, and then left the backpack open during a torrential downpour in order for this story to have actually happened. So, you get nothing! You lose!!! Good day, sir!!!
If they’re poor enough to ride their bike to the store, then I imagine that their backpack may have holes in it and therefore not be completely repelling water. Also if the bottles are heavy enough, one of them could have broken the cheap plastic lid off another bottle. Poor backpack + broken lid on bottle = plausibility. Think outside the box, life is full of endless possibilities.
Have you never bought cheap cleaning products? The tops break all the time!
I'm not buying this. were there no tops on theses bottles? not to mention it would have to be a violent rain and a very thin back pack for there to be suds.
... is it really that hard to understand that the bottles came open and that the water from the rain just made it possible for the products to foam more?
Bottles do not just "come open". They are designed specifically to prevent such an occurrence.
Riding a bicycle and carrying groceries is the pits. I know, been there done that more than once. I got me a grocery cart, much better.
Keywords
I call Shenanigans!!! Not only should the backpack kept the majority of the rain off of the products, but the shampoo and household chemicals were most likely in bottles or other type containers that could handle a little rain water. So you would have had to open the containers/ remove the caps, stuffed the containers into your backpack to ensure some spillage, and then left the backpack open during a torrential downpour in order for this story to have actually happened. So, you get nothing! You lose!!! Good day, sir!!!
I'm not buying this. were there no tops on theses bottles? not to mention it would have to be a violent rain and a very thin back pack for there to be suds.