Spring Cleaning Thoughts

Jennmommy5's picture
Submitted by Jennmommy5 on Fri, 03/16/2007 - 10:11am.

Spring cleaning is upon us once again and I have a few thoughts maybe my favorite ladies can help me with.
My first thing is, natural cleaning products. I used to use alot of home recipes for natural products, though never exclusively. I like the idea of using things that wont endanger my family and dont require a gas mask (j/k)
my delima is are they as effective and are they more of a strain on my time. Will I have to scrub more and use lots more elbow greese. I have five kids so I dont have an abundance of time. Will they leave my home with that clean fresh smell my aresenal of chemicals does. I have no doubt they are safer. I keep my cleaning products in a high cabinet and I keep it with a kid lock on it but, there is always a risk. Also is there things that just cant be done with natural products like dishwashing liquid and such?
My second thing is what is a reasonable amount of spring cleaning. I have no idea of the tradition behind it but I hear it everwhere. My grandma did it and most women I know do it too. What is a workable list that doesnt set the bar so high for the rest of the year that I end up "spring cleaning" all year long.
I like the idea of giving my house that extra working over but I never feel like I have done enough.
I welcome your thoughts on the matter as well as ideas for the above mentioned natural cleaning products so bring on the sage advice my friends beccause spring cleaning is out to get me.


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Anhata's picture

Cleaning products

Submitted by Anhata on Sat, 03/24/2007 - 10:09pm.

I've been using non-toxic cleaning products for about four years now. They clean just as well as the chemical cleaners with no more work. Some of them smell good, or, if you make it yourself, you can add essential oils to scent them if you like, for instance, Lynn's homemade dishwashing detergent/scouring powder.

If you like a fresh smell after you clean you can always make your own air freshener with some essential oils added to the water of a regular spray bottle. I have a lavender spritz like this that I use to freshen linens, carpets, and such. Be careful if you have cats, tho, essential oils can poison their livers if you use fairly often.

There's an article here on how to replace store bought cleaners with baking soda. There's also a bunch of articles in the Clean and Organized department here at TNH, too. Browsing through there may give you some good ideas.

You can substitute baking soda and vinegar for almost every cleaning product. That's what I and my mother used for everything when I was growing up. Keeping a small container of bleach on hand for serious disinfecting or removing stains has proven necessary but I use VERY sparingly, bleach is soooo bad for you.

What I Use Today:

Bi-O-Kleen products
--laundry powder
--Bac-Out--disinfectant and odor-neutralizer that smells fantastic, I use it a lot!

Homemade Dishwashing Powder with a little Ecover dishwashing powder mixed in

Crystal White dishwashing liquid--it's biodegradable, phosphate-free, available everywhere and super cheap. I use this also as hand soap. I have the foaming hand soap dispensers in every restroom so I fill the container 1/4 full of Crystal White and the rest of the way with water, gently mix and voila, handsoap for pennies.

For the floors I have a Mystic Mop that cleans the floor with just water, no floor cleaners needed. The microfiber invention also means you don't have to use window cleaner anymore, either, just a cloth and some water on your windows, rinse out the cloth when it looks dirty. Cool!

For the toilets I use either the homemade scouring powder or some "natural" stuff I got from the health food store. We don't have hard water or other things to stain our porcelain, so we get by with that.

We do have a mold problem in the bathrooms (we live in Oregon where it is Most Damp) and we do end up using the DuPont Scrubbing Bubbles on the shower once and a while. It's probably horrible for us and cancer-causing, but until I find something better...

So I'm about 90% natural with the cleaning products. It doesn't cost me any more in the long run because the homemade dishwasher/cleaning powder, the microfiber cloths/mop, and the multipurpose Bac-Out cleaner save me enough money that it evens out the little bit more I pay for the Bi-O-Clean laundry detergent, and so on.

Spring Cleaning:

Is what you decide it is.

When I was growing up, spring cleaning was washing the windows, laundering the curtains, moving the large pieces of furniture and cleaning underneath them, dusting above the door jams, and such. I also remember washing down the pantry shelves and the shelves and seals of the fridge. If you keep houseplants, once a year you need to wash the dust off their little leaves.

I now have a haphazard system where everything get deep cleaned about twice a year, and a little extra when company comes.

Spring cleaning can also be when you clean something that normally gets ignored the rest of the year, like our wrought iron security gates. They're painted white (why, oh, why?) so the dirt shows up on them. They're a pain to clean so I do it only once a year.

For a general idea on what could get deep-cleaned once a year or so, go to Good Housekeeping's interactive Spring Cleaning list. It's not half bad, though I disregard their advice for cleaning products and use what I want to.

And then there's the FlyLady system which is a whole other story...

Anhata
www.familynaturally.com
Your Family's General Store, Naturally

lgunnoe's picture

Some Spring Cleaning on the ToDo list, here

Submitted by lgunnoe on Fri, 04/06/2007 - 6:30am.

...for next week (DDs and I are on Spring Break) My public spaces got a new coat of paint just this winter so washing walls is off the books, but the closets and wardrobes are definitely on the list. The DDs will be doing a serious purge-and-giveaway, too, although they don't know about it just yet! Sticking out tongue It looks like I'll be housebound with the plumber for at least part of the week...we have a leak in the girls' bathroom which will require a hole cut in my kitchen ceiling! Evil

I'm not cleaning carpet, either since I'm getting new floors in May!

Kitchen and bathroom cupboards are on the list...including new liners.

I don't usually do a major "deep" cleaning but try to keep up with related tasks on a rotating basis. Here is a good article that really resonates with me. I have used a modified Grand Plan in the past and it also works well and eliminates the need for cleaning marathons.

These days, the girls are doing most of the daily/weekly housework and I'm just hitting whatever is making me crazy on any given evening...I realy need a better plan if I end up with a full-time contract for next school year (teaching part-time now.)

It's a tough day to plan anything "Spring,"...six inches of snow and still more falling! I'll think warm weather thoughts, though!

Happy Spring!
Lenora

CB Potts's picture

Spring Cleaning

Submitted by CB Potts on Fri, 04/06/2007 - 3:59pm.

Generally, I do one big per season cleaning: we sort of coast along in between, with me trying to keep things from approaching biohazard level. Then I'll get a wild hair up my butt (you can usually time these to Holidays or Impending Maternal Visits) and suddenly it really, really matters if there's dust underneath the bathroom sink.

Vinegar cleans almost everything you can imagine. Although it's good not to use too much, or your house will smell like pickles.

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