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Clean Faster, Clean Better . . . house cleaning tips
How To Clean Your Oven
Spring-Cleaning-With-Nontoxic-Cleaners
By: Debra Lynn Dadd
Here are some tasks that are traditionally included in a major spring cleaning:
* Put away winter clothes and take out spring and summer clothing.
* Sweep and vacuum floors, walls, and corners.
* Wash floors and carpets…
* Clean window panes, sills, and frames. Replace thick winter curtains that keep heat in with light summer curtains that allow breezes through. Remove storm windows, hang up screens.
* Brush or vacuum stuffed furniture and remove spots.
* Wash every surface in every room that has accumulated dust or grime.
I like to finish a spring cleaning by bringing in loads of spring flowers and placing them
in vases in every room.
USE NONTOXIC & NATURAL CLEANERS
With so much cleaning going on, I always make sure to use cleaning products that
are simple, safe, and eco-friendly.
When choosing a cleaning product for a specific job, I use the least-toxic,
most-effective product, in the smallest effective amount.
Cleaning products are the only household products regulated by the Consumer
Product Safety Commission under the 1960 Federal Hazardous Substances Labeling Act,
which requires products that contain hazardous chemicals to carry warning labels.
In general, it is best to avoid using products that say "Danger," "Poison," or
"Warning," on the label. Many safer products carry the "Caution" label, even
though they are acceptable to use. Fortunately, the least toxic products
voluntarily disclose their complete ingredients on the label, so you can
determine for yourself the safety of the product. There are even cleaning
products now made with organically-grown ingredients.
Nontoxic cleaning actually requires very few specialized ingredients. I
do all of my cleaning with a squirt bottle of fifty-fifty distilled white
vinegar and water, liquid soap, and baking soda. For laundry I use a natural
soap powder and chlorine-free oxygen bleach. Other substances I have on
hand for occasional cleaning needs are salt, lemon juice, borax, and
chlorine-free Bon Ami scouring powder.
SIMPLIFY YOUR CLEANING
While scrubbing away at your spring cleaning, there are two things you can
resolve to do in the coming year that will make cleaning easier. These will
also reduce the amount of cleaning products you use, saving resources and
money. But the most important thing to me is that they save time and reduce
the amount of cleaning needed.
First, I incorporate preventive maintenance. I put a cookie sheet on the
rack under a casserole that is likely to spill over, for example, which
pre-empts the need to scour baked on food from the oven. If the casserole
spills, the cookie sheet can be effortlessly soaked clean in a few inches
of water in the kitchen sink.
I also keep in mind the adage "A stitch in time saves nine," which
means if you take that first stitch to fix the tear before it gets bigger,
you’ll save having to make nine stitches later. In cleaning, this translates
to wiping up the spill when it happens, cleaning surfaces before they are
caked with dust and grease, just cleaning as you go while there’s not
much to clean. It’s only when we don’t clean that we may need harsh
chemicals to tackle what would have been an easy job earlier.
"Clean your room well," say the Shakers, "for good spirits will not
live where there is dirt."
Find nontoxic, natural and earthwise cleaning products at http://www.debraslist.com/cleaning.