Yup, this is a silly, silly question. Nevertheless....
I add about two cans of tuna to a can of soup for a quick, easy meal almost every day. Every day, that is one dirty soup can and two dirty tuna cans to deal with. At "home" I rinse them out thoroughly and just put them in the trash (no recycling around here). But that is a lot of water. Plus, there is that juice that you squeeze out of the can before dumping out the tuna. You gotta squish it out into something.
Now, I know not to squish or dump this kind of stuff on the ground. Not only does that break all kinds of rules, but it will attract critters, start to stink pretty bad, and would just be an asinine thing to do.
Living in a minivan, I will not have a real sink, though I will have a large porta-potty. However, keeping one's food making stuff away from one's pooping stuff is usually a pretty good idea.
If I had a dog, I could just let said pupper lick the cans clean. However, as much as I really would like to have a dog, I am not in a position to be a responsible dog owner.
So, what do all y'all non-sink-havers do about this kind of messy stuff, without using up a lot of water?
Should I just find nearby vandwellers with handy-dandy, four-legged, can-licking machines that they can loan to me on a daily basis?
Should I just accept that I will need to make a trek to the dumpster almost every day? (I will not want dirty tuna cans sitting around in my minivan for a week.)
P.S. I know about the standard paper-towel & vinegar spray technique that folks use to clean their pots and plates. However, I don't really think that would be appropriate for this application, because it would be pretty hard to clean the corners of the cans, and that is a lot of extra paper towels going into the trash.
Thanks.
I add about two cans of tuna to a can of soup for a quick, easy meal almost every day. Every day, that is one dirty soup can and two dirty tuna cans to deal with. At "home" I rinse them out thoroughly and just put them in the trash (no recycling around here). But that is a lot of water. Plus, there is that juice that you squeeze out of the can before dumping out the tuna. You gotta squish it out into something.
Now, I know not to squish or dump this kind of stuff on the ground. Not only does that break all kinds of rules, but it will attract critters, start to stink pretty bad, and would just be an asinine thing to do.
Living in a minivan, I will not have a real sink, though I will have a large porta-potty. However, keeping one's food making stuff away from one's pooping stuff is usually a pretty good idea.
If I had a dog, I could just let said pupper lick the cans clean. However, as much as I really would like to have a dog, I am not in a position to be a responsible dog owner.
So, what do all y'all non-sink-havers do about this kind of messy stuff, without using up a lot of water?
Should I just find nearby vandwellers with handy-dandy, four-legged, can-licking machines that they can loan to me on a daily basis?
Should I just accept that I will need to make a trek to the dumpster almost every day? (I will not want dirty tuna cans sitting around in my minivan for a week.)
P.S. I know about the standard paper-towel & vinegar spray technique that folks use to clean their pots and plates. However, I don't really think that would be appropriate for this application, because it would be pretty hard to clean the corners of the cans, and that is a lot of extra paper towels going into the trash.
Thanks.