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Csara
03-21-2005, 09:39 PM
It's time for Spring Cleaning and I've decided to try using nontoxic cleaning supplies this year to avoid the fumes.

While searching online, I found an article about the Five Basics. Here they are, courtesy of Annie Berthold-Bond, Care2.com Producer, Green Living Channels

Baking Soda
A commonly available mineral full of many cleaning attributes, baking soda is made from soda ash, and is slightly alkaline. It neutralizes acid-based odors in water, and adsorbs odors from the air. Sprinkled on a damp sponge or cloth, baking soda can be used as a gentle nonabrasive cleanser for kitchen counter tops, sinks, bathtubs, ovens, and fiberglass. It will eliminate perspiration odors and even neutralize the smell of many chemicals if you add up to a cup per load to the laundry. It is a useful air freshener, and a fine carpet deodorizer.


Washing Soda
A chemical neighbor of baking soda, washing soda (sodium carbonate) is much more strongly alkaline. It releases no harmful fumes and is far safer than a commercial solvent formula, but you should wear gloves when using it because it is caustic. Washing soda cuts grease, cleans petroleum oil, removes wax or lipstick, and neutralizes odors in the same way that baking soda does. Don’t use it on fiberglass, aluminum or waxed floors—unless you intend to remove the wax.

White Vinegar and Lemon Juice
White vinegar and lemon juice are acidic—they neutralize alkaline substances such as scale from hard water. Acids dissolve gummy buildup, eat away tarnish, and remove dirt from wood surfaces.

Liquid Soaps and Detergent Liquid soaps and detergents are necessary for cutting grease, and they are not the same thing. Soap is made from fats and lye. Detergents are synthetic materials discovered and synthesized early in this century. Unlike soap, detergents are designed specifically so that they don’t react with hard water minerals and cause soap scum. If you have hard water buy a biodegradable detergent without perfumes; if you have soft water you can use liquid soap (both are available in health food stores).

Mold Killers and Disinfectants For a substance to be registered by the EPA as a disinfectant it must go through extensive and expensive tests. EPA recommends simple soap to use as a disinfectant There are many essential oils, such as lavender, clove, and tea tree oil (an excellent natural fungicide), that are very antiseptic, as is grapefruit seed extract, even though they aren’t registered as such. Use one teaspoon of essential oil to 2 cups of water in a spray bottle (make sure to avoid eyes). A grapefruit seed extract spray can be made by adding 20 drops of extract to a quart of water.

Caution
Make sure to keep all home-made formulas well-labeled, and out of the reach of children.

Does anyone else have some other tips for natural cleaning??




stacyl
03-21-2005, 10:44 PM
I make my own cleaners (well, not the toilet bowl cleaner or Windex). I get the recipes from a book titled The Naturally Clean Home. I also use Simple Green diluted to the ratio suggested for various cleaning uses.

I switched because my son likes to help me clean and this way I felt much more comfortable letting him.

meliz
03-22-2005, 05:48 AM
I swear by baking soda... does a GREAT job on tubs...

Should you find yourself with creepy crawlies this spring (esp. ants) place a bowl of borax (a harmless, oldfashioned laundry-type soap) near where the critters are. This will kill the little buggies (and their families) AFTER they go back to their colony.

Csara
03-22-2005, 09:20 AM
ohh, the borax tip for ants is great! I use borax in my laundry and also to clean my stainless steel kitchen sink. I knew it had a lot of uses, but didn't realize it killed ants. That's awesome.

Margarita
03-22-2005, 01:02 PM
Would the borax work on spiders, you think? We seem to have a lot of spiders right now.

I just used baking soda to clean our tub this weekend, and it worked great!

I've heard awesome things about Simple Green and need to get some.

Stacy, do you know who wrote that book?

stacyl
03-22-2005, 01:26 PM
Margarita, it's written by Karyn Siegel-Maier

ParagonEos
04-03-2005, 01:51 AM
How do you clean with bacon soda? do you just sprinkle and scrub or do you have to make a paste out of it?

Margarita
04-11-2005, 06:20 PM
I just sprinkled it on and scrubbed. You can make a paste, though. I read that using it dry with a damp cloth/sponge makes it scrub more because the particles are bigger.

andrea
05-02-2005, 10:52 PM
Those are some very good ideas!!! i got to try some i hate the smell of bleach so i will not clean with it!!

Csara
05-02-2005, 11:05 PM
i hate the smell of bleach so i will not clean with it!!
LOL! That is so funny b/c lately I am obsessed with bleach. I clean EVERYTHING with it.

andrea
05-02-2005, 11:10 PM
no way, is that good for you ?

Csara
05-02-2005, 11:12 PM
Probably not - but the bleach is very diluted and when I was doing the floor, I used a face mask (like the ones surgeons use) and ofcourse I open all the windows so everything is well ventilated. :)

andrea
05-05-2005, 04:34 PM
woo hoo good!!! you take care of all that good stuff lol

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