http://metro.co.uk/2017/10/26/the-e...ers-hoarders-and-noro-outbreaks-7029862/#mv-a please log in to view this image Police officers and paramedics obviously have a difficult job, first to arrive at scenes most of us never have to see. But we rarely stop to think about the unpleasant work that comes after the crime scene has been analysed, DNA swabs taken and forensics finished. That’s where extreme cleaners come in: people who scrub away the blood, pick up the dirty needles and do whatever necessary to make the place spotless again. Julie McHugh, 52, her partner Martha Brady, 58, and Julie’s daughter Debyn, 19, will do the job. They tackle anything from a murder scene, a bad case of hoarding, cleaning drug-taking mong's jeans, or even an outbreak of norovirus where there might be vomit and faeces around the place. They often deal with hoarders, or with homes where someone has died and not been found for several months. ‘You find dead cats, rats, mice and old pizza boxes, especially in squats. They’ll say, ‘My cat disappeared a couple of years ago I don’t know where it got to,’ she said of clients who hoard. ‘But it’s very rewarding to give someone back a clean bed to sleep in. To see their face when they walk back in is fantastic.’ Takes me back to the good old days of Social Housing. The bath full of sh*t is extreme but not unheard of. The hoarders were fascinating, it was like something from Time Team as you worked down through the layers of stuff they'd accumulated over the years.
I must admit I was kinda expecting a massive dick and a set of hairy balls to appear at some stage. Happy that they didn't.
Viki Odintcova, I'm all over her insta and Snapchat, really just want to share a bowl of soup with her.
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