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-   -   Paris needs more Pissoirs (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/paris-needs-more-pissoirs-536306/)

SailFree Jun 13th, 2005 07:18 AM

Paris needs more Pissoirs
 
The thread laments the tendency of French men to stop wherever they are to pee. I have noticed the same in Germany, and indeed, in the Philippines, where a severe lack of restrooms exists, both men and women will stop a vehicle and get out and pee along the roadside. The customs of the USA are not universal. But it would seem disease might spread easier where good lavatories are scarce.

PalQ Jun 13th, 2005 07:29 AM

An indelible memory - coming down the escalator of the Bon Marche department store and on the ground floor there was a picture window where the escalator met the floor and two clochards were urinating against the window, oblivious to all who had to be watching them - the French did not seem to bat an eyelash. I was struck last summer when arriving in Paris once again of the stench of dried urine everywhere on the sidewalks - look everywhere as you'll see dark colored rivulets in the typically asphalt sidewalks - the remnants of urine - the walls of manyu buildings are cake up with dried urine. And this in one of the culture capitals of the world. Perhaps one reason is that there are not more pissoirs is because men wouldn't bother to use them!

cocofromdijon Jun 13th, 2005 07:35 AM

it is disgusting and if they get caught they'll have a fine(if they can pay)
we don't say pissoir but pissotière (old fashioned) or urinoir, toilettes or sanizette (the one person cabin you go inside and you're afraid to be unable to get out! :'( )

Intrepid1 Jun 13th, 2005 07:55 AM

The Parisians hated the "Tower" when it was being built and the City has, miraculously survived that, Hitler, the Plague, capri pants, and people pissing in the streets.

Somehow I doubt we need worry much about the spread of diease.

PalQ Jun 13th, 2005 07:57 AM

Cocofromdijon:
If it's illegal why do so many men do it so openly, not just in Paris but all over France. Why does the public not demand a crackdown? Fancy pay toilets aren't the answer for clochards and wine bags who spend every sous they have on wine. Why can men pee partout in France? Is this something cultural? Why not put up a lot of free urinoirs - i've seen lots of new style urinoirs in places like festivals - three sided ones of plastic set up in the open? I say either enforce the law or accommodate folks natural needs - the clochards, of which there seem to be many everywhere, cannot go into a cafe or pay 50 euro cents for the new-fangled public WCs that France seems to have invented about 20 years ago.

SuzieC Jun 13th, 2005 07:58 AM

cause they can

clevelandbrown Jun 13th, 2005 08:00 AM

Spread disease? I seem to recall that urine is sterile. In extremis, it can be used to clean wounds.

If the police catch them, where do they slap on the cuffs?

rex Jun 13th, 2005 08:03 AM

Disgusting is in the eye of the beholder.

Urine IS sterile, for what it's worth, and although it will support the growth of bacteria and other microorganisms, the same can be said for all those fertilizer-enriched flowerboxes we "ooh" and "aah" over - - throughout all the prettiest places in Europe.

Bacteria, fungi and protozoa are on the ground everywhere in the world, and when it rains, they get washed into the collection side of water supplies. The distribution of "safe" (and drinking) water (not always one in the same) is based on a recognition of this fact.

The water that gets washed by rain into the gutters, and the effluent from the <i>urinoirs</i> ends up in the same places.

Best wishes,

Rex

PalQ Jun 13th, 2005 08:12 AM

I've always wondered how sexist this trait seems - why can men relieve themselves in public and not women? Never seen even one - except once in Denmark's Christiana where a lady just pulled up her skirt and let go over a sewer grate? Aren't urinoirs sexist - why not make the same convenience for ladies, who i take it would be hard pressed to use typical urinoir which seems to be hard for ladies to use?

kenderina Jun 13th, 2005 08:21 AM

this message has make laugh a lot :) I've never seen a man pissing in the streets here in Spain , hahaha. I've seen some little children but never adults :) Anyway, it can happen, there are very few public WC so most people here goes inside a bar :)

PalQ Jun 13th, 2005 08:27 AM

I've traveled Europe annually since 1969, often for months and though you may see this occassionally in other countries, as in the US, it seems to be totally a French trait to do it so openly, often with little discretion. I'm not really complaining because in France i often find it convenient to in Paris do as the Parisians do but i just find it curious that this seems to be the only European country where it is apparently culuturally accepted. I do find the reeking odor on many streets to be revolting however.

cocofromdijon Jun 13th, 2005 09:12 AM

Disgusting is in the eye of the beholder.
Rex I was talking about the sight AND the odor! (like Pal said)
fortunately Dijon is rather clean but I'm sure there are some hidden parts :(

Suzanne2 Jun 13th, 2005 12:31 PM

Funny story. On our last trip to paris we were standing outside at CDG waiting for a cab. A nicely dressed French mom with three children was there also, the little boy (around 6 yrs old) said he needed to pee. The mom instructed him to use the tire of the cab. They then they got in and away they went. Apparently, it is something they learn to do at a young age and they just never stop. The smell in the Metro can be really bad. I don't think it would be too much to ask that they have restrooms in the Metro.

jody Jun 13th, 2005 02:26 PM

We’ve been traveling to France for over 40 years and I have never seen a public peeer in Paris! Though I have noticed that there is a lack of doors on mensroom!

But along the highways in the countryside We’ve seen a lot of relief stops…but no more than I’ve seen along the PA turnpike! Last trip I really thought the guy was watering the field with a hose! That man deserved a medal for long distance peeing!

I can still recall looking for “whiz bushes” after a college partying night…so don’t say that females don’t do it! After hearing about the NUN who was bitten on the butt by a rattlesnake outside of JAX , FL and died , my whiz bush days are over!

indytravel Jun 13th, 2005 06:24 PM

Depending upon your point of view I've been lucky/unlucky enough to see 3 women urinate in public in France.

1 near the bottom of the steps down from Sacre Couer in Paris.

1 near the Gare du Nord train station in Paris.

1 along a canal in Dole, France.

The first one forever scarred me. I've not been the same since. :-)

BTW: reading &quot;Culture Shock France&quot; or some such book the claim was made that French men pissing in the streets is an act against the &quot;establishment.&quot; It's done as a macho nose (?) thumbing at authority. If this is even partially true no amount of urinoirs will help.

cigalechanta Jun 13th, 2005 06:39 PM

I remember my first visit to Paris when they had these pissoirs that were also billboards. They had one open end where the men entered and as you passed one all you saw were the feet. After they were removed, I saw a picture of a stack of them lying somewhere. I tried googling to find that photo to post here but failed.

icithecat Jun 13th, 2005 06:40 PM

Driving along a meandering secondary road in Normandy, narry a building or bush in sight. A car is stopped up ahead with no where to pull over. Slow down to figure out why.
Woman with pants around ankles, bent over, head in car, ass high and wide, pissing straight out into the field.
Almost crashed from laughter.

Calamari Jun 13th, 2005 06:52 PM

Fortunately, I never saw this in France, but I saw it almost daily while living in Italy. I never understood why people did not rally against this indignity. I guess when you gotta go - do as the Romans do.

Patrick Jun 13th, 2005 06:54 PM

I think it's amazing that so many of you world travelers have apparently never been to New York, where the smell of urine is just as strong in subway stairwells, along quieter streets, in Central Park, and dozens of other places. Why do you think this is more common in France than elsewhere? I've certainly never thought so. Probably the worst I ever saw though was in Cork, Ireland, walking through the streets one night as the pubs closed. I bet we passed two or three dozen men peeing against building in about a five block walk to our hotel.

icithecat Jun 13th, 2005 07:11 PM

Patrick. In your first sentence, you answered your own question.

Patrick Jun 13th, 2005 07:31 PM

What? You mean that most of these people HAVEN'T been to New York?

crefloors Jun 13th, 2005 07:59 PM

icthecat: I'mstill trying to picture that..hmmm..bent over head in the car..as one who used to camp all the time and NOT in campgrounds and have used many a tree to &quot;go&quot; behind..I just can't figure out how that would work..hope she took her shoes off!!!!!!

icithecat Jun 13th, 2005 08:10 PM

We were laughing about that inevitable conclusion ourselves. Gravity will overcome, and the pants were ankle to ankle directly below.....
Any camper knows to squat well back.

tedgale Jun 17th, 2005 02:27 AM

When you're under 50 you do it because it makes you feel free and a bit of a rebel.

When you're over 50 you do it because if you don't attend to this NOW, there's worse to follow.

FainaAgain Dec 22nd, 2005 10:58 AM

Well, has the situation improved since this very important travel discussion?

oakglen Dec 22nd, 2005 11:25 AM

When a guest in a Parisian home, say for coctails and a lengthy dinner, it is considered bad form to use their bathroom. Thus the vision of a businessman etc reliving himself against an outside wall in a residential area can be somewhat understood, if not justified. And no, I don't know why this is a tradition...it is just one of those things you learn when doing business in France. BTW, the French do joke about the American lack of bladder control. They never, ever, leave a meeting for a &quot;break&quot;.

Suzanne2 Dec 23rd, 2005 01:40 PM

Another good reason for not wearing flip flops in Paris. Yuck! I was out for an early morning walk and saw a guy peeing in a flower box at a cafe. Really made mme want to eat there.

CatFancier Dec 25th, 2005 04:32 PM

I'm aghast! Can it really be true that in France it's considered bad form for a guest to use his host's bathroom?? You were kidding...right?? If so, don't believe I'd be accepting any French invitations to dinner.

Suzanne2 Dec 25th, 2005 06:56 PM

Me neither. It's better to pee in a flower bed beside a cafe than use the host's bathroom?? Please!

WillTravel Dec 25th, 2005 07:00 PM

Diane Johnson's novels about Americans in Paris allude to that same phenomenon of not using a host's bathroom. It really seems most uncomfortable and unpleasant.

AnthonyGA Dec 25th, 2005 07:25 PM

If I need to use the bathroom, I ask. If they have a problem with that, they need never invite me over again. Anyone who considers the toilet off-limits to guests should not be receiving guests.

I don't know why French men choose to urinate in public, but it is a widespread habit. However, the prevalence of urine in the streets and on the M&eacute;tro is very dramatically exaggerated in this thread; it's quite rare to come across it, actually. And judging by the overpowering smells of urine in some areas around tourist landmarks, people from other countries are just as prone to urinate outdoors as are French men.

As for disease, urine is sterile when it comes from a person in normal health, as previously pointed out by others. However, it contains organic compounds that make it a perfect growth medium for some microbes, and so it is not sterile for long once it leaves the body. The smell comes from the waste products of the microbes as they consume the organic ingredients of sterile urine and excrete compounds with vile smells (particularly ammonia).

French men not only urinate outdoors, but they rarely wash their hands after urinating, even in restrooms. And they love to shake hands at every opportunity. This is one reason why I carry hand disinfectant with me most of the time, and I try to avoid shaking hands, although the French are obsessed with it.

oakglen Dec 26th, 2005 06:24 AM

I hesitate to tell you this folks; it's their country. When there you play by their rules...period. Heaven forbid you run afoul of their criminal legal code which is based on the novel concept &quot;Guilty until proven Innocent&quot;. Now you can learn about all the unwritten rules like I did, the hard way, or check out Polly Platt's French or Foe or Savoir Flair. These books are humorous, a quick read, and will give the magical phrase that turns the average Frenchman into a helpful friend.

Suzanne2 Dec 26th, 2005 06:50 AM

Someone said public urination is illgal in Paris. Is that rule only enforced for the non Parisians? I really have seen alot of men peeing in Public. However, they did not appear to be average guys. They looked more like homeless guys. Why not build more free public facilities?

susanteach Dec 26th, 2005 07:59 AM

Yes, NYC has its subway and alley urine smells, but if you &quot;google&quot; public urination in paris, you will certainly find more hits. It's noted frequently in guide books and as a European history major, I even learned about it in college. It's not a slam on Paris to openly discuss it, and it does smell.
&quot;...Regulations were made against public urination and defecation, but historian Ann F. La Berge writes,

Nineteenth-century Parisians were in the habit of using any area of the city as a latrine. Urinating and defecating in gutters, on sidewalks, in streets, on buildings, and off bridges into canals and the river were common practice, to the chagrin of many hygienists. In fact, there was little practical alternative when one was away from home, for public conveniences were few. The only mention of public latrines in Paris dates from an 1817 health council report…&quot;

I don't understand you francophiles that get so sensitive about posters just mentioning the widely accepted quirks and notions about the country. Acknowleging the public pissing is kind of funny.

Michael Dec 26th, 2005 11:56 AM

Anthony,

An American. born and bred, told me this joke:

Two acquaintances were using the urinals at the same time. One washed his hands, the other did not. The one who did expressed his shock at the lack of hygiene of the other. The other asked him what college he attended. &quot;Harvard.&quot; &quot;At my state school, they taught me to keep my hands out of the way.&quot;

Suzanne2 Dec 26th, 2005 02:50 PM

Susanteach. Your are so right about some people getting in a snit if any type of perceived negatives are expressed about thier beloved city.

I too, love Paris, but I will acknowledge that not all is perfect there or anywhere else for that matter.

Now, shall we discuss the cat sized rats?

AnthonyGA Dec 26th, 2005 08:47 PM

It's important to keep things in perspective. French men do like to urinate in public, for some reason, but creating the impression that the entire city of Paris reeks of urine is hyperbole.

I recall once reading a long travel article on Paris that placed huge emphasis on dogs and their doings on the sidewalks, creating the impression that anyone walking in Paris would slip constantly on doggy do-do. This, too, was exaggeration, and it represented the skewed perspective of only one person.

I find that different people visiting a place will emphasize different things in their reports. One must read many different sources in order to get an unbiased feel for a destination.

Thus, comments like &quot;the stench of dried urine everywhere on the sidewalks,&quot; or &quot;dark colored rivulets [of urine],&quot; or &quot;the walls of many buildings are caked up with dried urine&quot; belong to the realm of fantasy, not reality. One might just as well say that people in New York City walk around with guns and that everyone is mugged every day. Or that one can expect to wave hello to the Queen when walking down any ordinary street in London.

I'm quite a hygiene freak and the first to complain when I see anything that endangers it, but I still must admit that it's relatively rare to see people urinating in public in Paris, although I suppose it's probably more common than in some other cities.

The real solution is to stop raising men to behave as if they were stray dogs, and teach them to use toilets like everyone else.

clairobscur Dec 26th, 2005 11:52 PM

Oakglen,

The idea that in France people are considered guilty until proven innocent is a legend. Widespread in the USA and to some extent in the UK but a legend nevertheless.

Like in any western country, accused people are deemed innocent until proven guilty, and it has been so since 1789, when the declaration of human and citizen rights made it a constitutionnal principle. So,it's not exactly a novelty, and I've no clue why americans and brits believe otherwise.

Someone merely presenting publically an accused as guilty before he has been found so in court and sentenced (say, in a newspaper) can be prosecuted according to the article of the civil code concerning the protection of the presumption of innocence.

So, such a thing would breach civil law, criminal law and constitutionnal rights. In case it wouldn't be enough, it wouldn't fly in the European Court of Human Rights, either and would also contradict the UDHR.

So, please, forget about this urban legend.


I don't think this concept even exist in any country, including tinpot dictartorships (now, tinpot dictartorship might not care much about respecting the law, but it's likely not in the books even there). Besides, such a concept doesn't make any sense. If it existed, you would just have to arrest random persons in the nearest street until you find one who can't prove he didn't commit whatever crime you're investigating. Actually, if you found one person who can't prove what he was doing on, say, december 25, you could sentence him for all the crimes commited on this day.

WillTravel Dec 27th, 2005 12:20 AM

Here's my mathematical formulation:

Time spent in Paris - 7 nights
Men observed publicly urinating - 2 (one right at the corner of the square where the Bastille monument is, and the other in a garden near St. Eustache church)

Time spent in the rest of the world - somewhat more than 10,000 nights
Men observed publicly urinating - 0

So I can see why people will think that such a practice is more widespread in Paris.

JeffreyJ Dec 27th, 2005 06:23 AM

This thread brings to mind an old joke some of you may not have heard...

A Frenchman, recently arrived in the UK, was taken aside by an English acquaintence and informed, gently, that asking an English hostess &quot;Where iz zee pissoir, madame?&quot; was not considered, under English rules of social etiquette, an acceptable way of finding one's way to a bathroom. He was told that asking &quot;Excuse me, where might I wash my hands?&quot; was far more en bonne forme.

The next time the Frenchman arrived by invitation to an English home, the hostess, aware that the man's attendance had required a long car journey, asked brightly &quot;Would you like to wash your hands?&quot; He replied &quot;Zank you, madame, but I 'ave just washed zem against zee tree in your front garden&quot;.


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