I have discovered that the hotel room toilet is blocked, but too late. What should I do?
Ok, I have used the toilet after holding myself for too long because of a long haul flight and I am not comfortable using the airplane's lavatory. The problem is, after releasing all the damn load, I have discovered that the bloody toilet is blocked, flushing makes things float! The hotel is a 5 stars hotel.
What to do now? I know I can call the house keeping/reception and let them handle this sh1# (literally), but I find this so humiliating to me and to whomever unlucky person who is assigned to handle this. Any advice?
Best Answer
Unless you feel like finding a local hardware store and buying a plunger, I don't think there's really much that you can do other than calling the front desk.
(If you'd like to reduce your embarrassment, you can call the front desk and simply ask them to send along maintenance because "there seems to be a problem with the plumbing" or some other similar euphemism. You're not the first, and you won't be the last.)
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What happens if a toilet is clogged for too long?
The longer you leave a clog, the more opportunities there are for the clog to get worse. The most water-soluble parts of the clog will dissolve, and the rest will fill in the gaps, making the clog worse. There is also the possibility that human error could come into play.Can I let a clogged toilet sit overnight?
Do nothing but wait, then flush. Toilets, like all plumbing drains, work by the force of gravity. A full bowl of water exerts its own pressure on the clog and, over time, often will clear the clog for you. So if you have more than one bathroom in the house, just wait it out overnight, or as long as you can.Have A Clogged Toilet? 5 Simple Steps YOU Can Do Before You Call A Plumber
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Answer 2
Jeremy Miles comment on your answer is best. Phone the front desk, tell them it's blocked. Go out for a few hours. Come back, no problem.
Also, know that it's probably not your fault, the toilet was probably already partially blocked from the previous occupant.
However, if you're desperate to fix this yourself there's one thing you can try which is to pour a kettle full of boiling (edit, see the comments below -- this might not be completely safe, try warm water instead) water into the toilet (hopefully there's enough spare room to do this). This is something like the manual flush method with the benefit that the boiling water will help break up the organics. That should be safe on most toilets and I've had it work for me before at home (sometimes it took two kettles).
On the other hand, if you cause damage or more mess then you're going to definitely need to let the hotel know and you'll be even more embarrassed. Trust me, hotel staff see much more embarrassing things than that all the time. Much more.
Many people I know would just strip down, cover their arms with a couple of plastic bags (you probably have laundry bags in the wardrobe) and stick their hand in there to fix it. Then jump in the shower. I wouldn't try, and it doesn't sound like you would either, but it does generally work.
Answer 3
To build on hippietrail's answer for a manual flush. Most rooms will have a trash can, a 5-star room certainly will. Most of those will be lined with a plastic trash bag. This becomes the bucket you need to manually flush the toilet. Fill it to a good level, you only need around a gallon to flush properly. Then follow his instructions for pouring (slowly to get aim & range, then raise bucket to increase the pressure against the plug.
An ice bucket may work in a pinch, but a trash can is a much better solution.
However, were it me, I'd just call the front desk & have them deal with it. As so many have said, you're not the first to plug a toilet, and certainly not the last.
Answer 4
- Take a towel
- make it be wet, really wet
- put it over the toliet bowl and under the lid
- put your knee over the lid, making some force over it
- flush it
If there is no tank or cistern, even better, because all the water from the pipes will make pressure and perhaps will push everything away.
If there is a tank, it´ll make less pressure, but can work anyway.
If your toilet is the high water kind, be careful, or the towel might get dirty.
edit if you have some big plastic, putting it under the towel is even more effective.
Answer 5
There’s one good solution: Tell the reception or house keeping, and they get a professional to fix it with a minimum of fuss, giving you a new room if needed.
Anything else carries the risk of turning a slightly embarrassing situation into a major disaster. The workman confronted with a job made three times harder and messier by an amateur interfering will curse you.
Answer 6
You can also try to use the toilet brush as a plunger. I fixed my blocked bowl at home like this. Depending on the type of toilet it could get messy :)
Answer 7
Get a stick*. Make sure it does not break easily.
Use the stick
to break up the excrement into smaller pieces
to pull stuff up to the front or to the side of the bowl and to hold it there while flushing
Flush in several smaller portions.
If you can't reach the blocking with the stick, use the toilet brush as a plunger.
Source: One of my own children tends to produce rather large excrement.
*In the countryside, it's easy to find dead wood. In the city, you might try the compost heap of a nearby cemetery, or just buy a bamboo stick or a wooden spoon. I often use some dead wood from my own garden, with a legth of about 50 cm and a diameter of 1-2 cm.
Answer 8
Another simple method to avoid or resolve a blocked Flush Toilet:
- take a soft, flexible plastic bottle (I use a orange juice bottle)
- where the bottom is about the width of the pipe
- the closest fit avoids anything coming up to 'greet you'
- where the bottom is about the width of the pipe
Cut off the bottom, retaining the cap.
Insert the cut off bottom of the bottle into the pipe entry.
Push the bottle in and out 4 or 5 times.
When pushing in, the bottle will fill and out it will empty
- exerting pressure on the remains.
This created pressure will force the remains through the pipe.
Flush and continue pushing the bottle in and out until the bottle is clean.
The whole process is over within minutes.
An existing plunger did not work for me (not enough pressure).
The orange juice bottle now hangs on the plunger stick, ready to use when needed
- and is now used as a part of the general bathroom cleaning process
Finding such a bottle is much easier than a plunger and the process is faster than waiting for a plumber (who mostly uses a machine to create the needed pressure to send the remains on its way).
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Max Vakhtbovych, Engin Akyurt, Max Vakhtbovych, Andrea Piacquadio