Graham Williams's Travel Writing

This blog is for my longer pieces of travel writing and travel hints, some of which will have been already posted on other travellers advice sites.

The Latin American Suicide Shower

ARGENTINA | Thursday, 7 September 2006 | Views [3234] | Comments [4]

A Latin American suicide shower.

A Latin American suicide shower.

Some areas of the world have particular things that define them, and although a good idea they are only found in one continent or region and nowhere else. This even applies to electrical appliances and for Central and South America one of the defining bathroom fixtures is the Suicide Shower. I was first told about them by some American friends in London who told me to watch out for a contraption that fits over the shower head and is plugged into the electric mains. Pretty scary until you get used to them, I was told.

The idea behind suicide showers is to provide hot water where the plumbing system does not run to a hot water boiler, which is the norm in most of tropical America. The water is heated inside the shower head and usually provides a constant and dependable stream of hot water. Getting the stream of water right is something of an art that comes with practice, if the water flow is low it will come out boiling hot, to high and it’s only lukewarm. Controlling the flow to the optimum level can take some time and in some hotels there are detailed instructions on the back of the bathroom door.

Of course the really scary thing about suicide showers is that they combine that lethal combination of water and electricity. They need a lot of power in order to work and so are wired straight into the mains; you know they are working because when you turn on the water all the lights go dim. Being South America you can buy one of these things in any hardware store and simply wire it up yourself using a few bits of insulation tape. Some of the bodge jobs I’ve seen have been truly terrifying, like you really feel you are taking your life in your hands. Do I really want to be clean that much? Sometimes when you turn the water up too quickly an electric blue flash of comes out of the side of the shower head and you really feel - this is it. One of the guide books says that they are perfectly safe as long as you don’t fiddle with them and I have only experience a mild shock off one, so this does seem to be true.

Of course some suicide showers are better than others, with most of the best made in Brazil. South of the tropic and the Rio/San Paulo area they are no longer found as its cold enough in winter here for hotels to install real heating and hot water systems. As I am leaving South America soon it is farewell to the suicide shower, a part of the Latin experience.

Tags: Travel Tips

  

Comments

1

Hi Graham,
Couldn't help telling you about my own experience of a suicide shower. This one was in a chalet in Khana Kisli, Madra Pradesh, India. (The place where Kipling wrote the Jungle Book). These were semi detached chalets, and the first thing my aunt and uncle saw as they entered the ajoining chalet was a huge rat or chichundry, it promptly disappeared into a cupboard. My aunt told me about this, but advised me not to tell Judith.

That night Judith woke me to ask what the scrambling noise was on the roof, knowing what it was, I told her it was a bird because any other answer would have meant no sleep for the rest of the night!

The 'electric' shower was en-suite, traditional Indian wet room with hole in the corner, shower head, taps and a bucket half the size of a dustbin. Stripped off and standing on a wet concrete floor I grasped the tap and was aware of a sensation of 50Hz buzzing through my body. However, having been in the scouts, I improvised with a poly bag to turn the tap on and combined it with standing in the 20 gallon plastic bucket, managed to shower in relative safty! You can't beat an invigorating shower at the end of an adventuring day.
Regards,
John

  John Sep 8, 2006 6:22 AM

2

haha yeah, im brazilian and these electric showers are really normal here. i admit, when i have to use one of them i stay afraid. but i dont know anyone who died taking a shower, they are pretty safe. the problem to use them is if u have a salty water, good conductor of eletricity otherwise it is safe. bye!

  fee Apr 27, 2008 7:04 AM

3

I am loaded with $$$$ cash and my Brazilian girlfriend lives in a really nice apartment but she forces me to use a "suicide shower" and leave my credit cards with her...

  Jules. Aug 30, 2009 10:16 PM

4

I used to live in paraguay. Had these showers. We had no salt water. But dont touch the water head when its on. You fill a little sap. Beeing 6'4" you learn that pretty quick. Other then that, these showers are not bad at all.

  Toby Oct 2, 2009 1:07 AM

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