More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

Last post 07-26-2008 3:13 PM by JenniHusker. 11 replies.
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  • 07-13-2008 5:20 AM

    More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    I got these from a website I frequent - Homesteader Blogger. Hope they give you ideas and help save!!

    Jul. 8, 2008
    Green Cleaning Tips

    Posted in Going Green

     

    Green Cleaning Tips

    In an effort to discover greener cleaning products, I have found that they don’t work as well on the toughest of dirt and grime. Not to mention that green cleaning product often times have a steep price tag comparatively to their caustic counter parts. This has had me on a mission to discover green cleaning methods that are effective and inexpensive.

    Two ingredients I have found to be the most consistently effective are hydrogen peroxide and white vinegar. Both are inexpensive, but I will warn that the smell of vinegar has taken some getting used to for me.

    As a little aside, I have been asked about cleaning products that claim they have oxygen based “bleaching”  action. The fact is that these products contain natural ingredients that when mixed with water produce hydrogen peroxide. For this reason those products ARE safe and green, but demonstrates the effectiveness of hydrogen peroxide. One of the best assets of hydrogen peroxide as a cleaning agent is that it is not dangerous. The reason that it comes in brown bottles, is because when touched by light it changes into regular water. What could be safer than that?

    Here are a list of some of the methods I have found to be effective and the cost is PENNIES!

    ·         For the Bathtub & Shower stall: To remove soap scum use hydrogen peroxide and the netting from citrus fruit. Pour on the HP and allow to work for a few seconds before using the netting to scrub away the soap scum! Need to disinfect your bathtub or shower? Simply use a vinegar rinse before rinsing with water.

    ·         Toilet: Add 2 cups white vinegar to toilet with ½ cup baking soda. This will bubble and foam. Once the bubbling stops, scrub with brush as usual. Have stubborn hard water stains? Plunge as much water out of your toilet as possible. Pour 1 gallon of white vinegar into the toilet, scrub with brush, close lid, and allow to sit for 2 hours or overnight. Scrub once more and flush.

    ·         Sink: Sprinkle baking soda around sink. Pour or spray white vinegar. Allow to bubble for a few seconds. Use scrub brush or citrus netting to scrub clean.

    ·         Faucet: Soak a cleaning rag in white vinegar. Ring out. Wrap rag around faucet and secure with rubber bands. Leave on for 3-4 hours. Remove rag, and scrub the crannies with an old toothbrush. Then wipe clean with a clean dry rag.

    ·         Countertops: Mix hydrogen peroxide (about 1 cup) and white vinegar (about ½ cup) in spray bottle to clean and disinfect countertops or any surface.

    These are my thoughts.

    Leslie Valeska

    ~Contributing Writer

    Leslie Valeska is the lucky wife of Thomas.  With children ranging in ages from 4-16, she has had a lot of time to learn and experience much of the fine art of homemaking.   Simple Journey Ministries was established to encourage, support, and inspire women, from all walks of life, to engage and continue on a path of Godly Womanhood. You can visit her at her blog Journey to Simplicity (www.leslievaleska.com/blog), Simple Journey Ministries (www.leslievaleska.com), and Simple Journey Bookstore (www.leslievaleska.com/bookstore)


  • 07-13-2008 5:32 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    Great Tips and recipes!  Don't forget the old one about using toothpaste to shine your faucets and other crome in the bathroom and beyond!  Just dab a little toothpaste on a cloth or sponge and wipe it on then wipe it off and polish.  Also works on silver but you must be sure there is not too much abrasive in the paste and you have to scrub harder.

    Sue
  • 07-18-2008 10:49 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    I use vinegar and baking soda for most of my cleaning around our home. If the smell of the vinegar gets to you, you can add some essential oil to it-usually a drop or two is enough to drown out a bit of that pickle factory smell-lol! I use it to clean our floors. counter tops, sinks, tubs, showers, etc...I also use it in the rinse aid compartment of the dishwasher. I know one ay the cost of vinegar is going to go way up when they learn just how much we all use it for-lol!

    Im going to try this recipe for my dishwasher when the detergent I have runs out (got this from TipNut.com)

    Liquid Dishwasher Detergent Recipe

    1 part baking soda
    1 part borax
    1 part water
    1 drop lemon or orange essential oil per cup of detergent


    Mix the ingredients thoroughly and store in a sealable jug.
    Use 2 to 3 TBS per load.

    The poster said you could use less per load if you see a film on your dishes, but also to be sure to use vinegar for the rinse aid.

  • 07-18-2008 11:02 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    It sounds like washing soda is a good green cleaner for laundry and other uses.  I haven't been able to find it yet, but will keep looking. Especially, for laundry.

     http://www.thelaundrybasket.com/Our_Products/Our_Products_Super_Washing_Soda/our_products_super_washing_sod.html

     

  • 07-20-2008 11:20 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    For Cutting Boards-  Half of a lemon and salt.  Use the lemon to rub the salt on the cutting board.  It cleans and kills Bacteria!!!  I did this on mine and it made it look beautful.

    Jenn

    Character is the basis of happiness and happiness the sanction of character. --George Santayana

  • 07-25-2008 4:15 PM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    I guess I'm confused- why would one use hydrogen peroxide (a disinfectant- topical, and in some oral washes) with fruit netting to remove soap scum and then use vinegar to "disinfect" the bathtub? Doesn't the HP do that?

    Always seek the Truth.

    I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it!

    Don't take life too seriously; No one gets out alive.

    I don't like talking to "unarmed" people. Reminds me of trying to teach a mule- a total waste of time, and succeeds only in frustrating the teacher.

    whateverfood
  • 07-25-2008 4:40 PM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    BTW, Borax (you know, 20 Mule Team) has been a laundry additive for decades for overcoming dingy looking laundry- whites or colors. "Oxygen- powered" (Oxydol, Oxy-Clean) work a little faster, but do the same thing. Something not as well known is, borax also deters/kills many creepy-crawlies. They either won't "cross the line," or they eat it and die.

    For bugs, the best organic thing I've found to kill any invading crawling insect is diatomatious earth- fossilized plankton.  The bug goes through it and meets it's demise.  I get mine thru Garden's Alive, but some nurseries carry the stuff.

    One last tip- I know a lot of people dislike Daddy Long- Leg Spiders.  Try to refrain from mashing them.  They may be one of the most lethal spiders on the planet, but it is impossible for them to bite a human or pet- Their mandibles are too small to "get a grip." They eat just about anything, including black widow spiders and brown recluse spiders.

    Always seek the Truth.

    I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it!

    Don't take life too seriously; No one gets out alive.

    I don't like talking to "unarmed" people. Reminds me of trying to teach a mule- a total waste of time, and succeeds only in frustrating the teacher.

    whateverfood
  • 07-25-2008 5:18 PM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    whateverfood:
    "disinfect" the bathtub? Doesn't the HP do that?

    Nope.  HP is NOT a disinfectant or sanitizer.  Vinegar, however, does have disinfecting properties; which I am sure you know.

     

    If the kids are still alive at the end of the day, then I've done my job.
  • 07-26-2008 8:02 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    Yup, you're right- it's a "first aid antiseptic" and not a disinfectant or sanitizer. Sorry- I guess I had a senior moment...

    Always seek the Truth.

    I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it!

    Don't take life too seriously; No one gets out alive.

    I don't like talking to "unarmed" people. Reminds me of trying to teach a mule- a total waste of time, and succeeds only in frustrating the teacher.

    whateverfood
  • 07-26-2008 8:57 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

     

    whateverfood:
    Sorry- I guess I had a senior moment...

    No worries.  I have senior moments all the time and I'm only 41!!  It took me years to remember this and accept it.  DH and I had an argument about it (dumb thing to argue about) and I actually asked a doctor (even dumber I know). 

    If the kids are still alive at the end of the day, then I've done my job.
  • 07-26-2008 10:30 AM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

    I use white vinegar in my dishwasher's little rinse agent reservoir instead of Jet Dry and the like. It works great for spots and film on glassware!

     

    arabella

  • 07-26-2008 3:13 PM In reply to

    Re: More green and frugal cleaning tips - please add yours

     My recipe for glass cleaner...

    In a 32oz bottle

    1 cup water 

    1 cup alcohol

    1 tbsp vinegar

    _____________________________

    Daily shower spray

    In 32 oz bottle

    2 cups vinegar

    2 tbsp generic rinse aid for dishwashers

    Fill the rest of the bottle with water

    This works great!

    _______________________________

    Jewelry Cleaner

    1/4 cup water 

    1/4 cup ammonia

    1 tsp dish washing liquid 

    Soak hard stones and jewelry in this solution for a few minutes and then brush with an old toothbrush. Rinse thoroughly. Do not use on opals or other soft stones.

     ________________________________________

    Furniture Polish 

    1/4 cup olive oil (or any vegetable oil)

    2 tbsp lemon juice

    This will mold quickly. Only make as much as you can use in one day.

    ________________________________________

    I complimented the SC Johnson Company on an e-zine they sent me. I received in the mail a coupon for a free box of Windex Clean & Shine Dry Microfiber Cloths.There are 12 in the box and I've only used two. They clean up great if you toss them in with your whites on laundry day. Reuse!!!

     

     

     

     

     

     



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