Published on July 22, 2008 By Texas Wahine In Blogging

It all started with an episode of How Clean is Your House. 


The mean, fat old lady in too much make up cleaned a toilet with LEMONADE!!  It worked.  The toilet got cleaned and sanitized, and a kid can get into the pantry and drink as much lemonade as s/he wants and NOT DIE! 


I have become interested in natural cleaning...cleaning using a lot of normal, non-toxic household products and essential oils.  It's less expensive, works great, and is so much safer for around the kids.  There "recipes" for natural cleaning are only limited by your imagination. 


Things like lemon juice, baking soda, olive oil, vinegar, tea tree oil, eucalyptus oil, lemon oil, and borax (among other things) make great cleaning aids. 


Borax is "natural" but not non-toxic, so it's not something you want to let the baby eat, LOL, but it is a little less worrisome cleaner.  Since I am pregnant, I like using things that are a little safer to handle (I still use gloves with a lot of cleaning items because skin irritation can occur). 

Olive oil and lemon juice are great for dusting and polishing wood surfaces, and completely safe.

Lemon halves and baking soda make great scrubbers for bathtubs. 

A multi-purpose cleaner can be made so many different ways, but my favorite that I've tried is a water, vinegar, and eucalyptus oil solution.  The eucalyptus is a natural disinfectant and gives a clean, fresh scent that overrides the vinegar (that evaporates).

I also use water, vinegar, and cinnamon oil.  The vinegar smell evaporates and leaves a lovely cinnamon scent, but until it evaporates, the smell is strong.

Borax, dishwashing soap, hot water, and a little ammonia (I use windex because I don't have straight ammonia) work wonders on floors.  I had some discoloraton that *never* came up with the swiffer, but the borax solution got it right out.  It works great on baseboards, too. 

Lemon juice is good for windows, too and baking soda is a good cleaner/deodorizer for carpet (sprinkle it on and then vacuum it up). 

Essential oils can work well for different ailments or as aromatherapy as well.  Tea tree oil (in a carrier oil, applying directly to the skin can cause irritation) is great relief for bug bites. 

Unrelated to cleaning, I am wanting to learn to make my own candles.  I *love* Yankee Candles, but at $20 for a medium-sized jar, it's really an extravagance.  Candles can be made at home using a double boiler (or make-shift one), parafin wax or old candles broken into pieces, crayons for coloring the candle, a string wick, and essential oils or perfumes for scent.  I don't have all the materials I need to try it yet, but if I can make a candle that is satisfactory to me, I will probably start making most of my candles at home. 


Does anyone else use natural products for cleaning and home care?  I would love to hear your recipes!


Comments (Page 1)
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on Jul 22, 2008

The only problem I can think of is that unless you use an acid-based cleaner anyways, that lemonade could be causing unknown acidic damage to the plumbing. Bleach and whatnot is a strong base, but lemon juice is an acid.

on Jul 22, 2008
I can't confirm that anywhere.

I actually use borax and baking soda to scrub the toilet, but the lemonade trick is good for bad stains on the porcelain. Pumice can also be used to scrub out the stains.

on Jul 22, 2008

A new idea I found was to use shampoo to clean the tub.  It works great.  So I use either cheap shampoo or stuff I figured out I don't like after I buy it so no waste. 

I use baking soda for alot of things.  It works great as a non-abrasive cleaner on tough stains.  I use that and white vinegar to clean out my disposal.  I use vinegar to clean out the coffeepot as well. 

I gave up candles in the house because of that smoke damage I told you about before.  It swore me off burning candles inside although I do use them out on the lanai where it's well ventilated. 

So instead I use the candle warmers inside.  I've got one on now.  So I can still use my candles inside but just not burn them.   I believe the fragrance is actually stronger this way and you can have it on all day and they last forever.  

I think I have a great link saved somewhere that has lots of ideas.  If I find it, I'll send it along. 

 

 

on Jul 22, 2008
The shampoo idea is great. There are always little bits of shampoo left at the bottom of the bottle and I hate to throw it away.

I had no idea how incredible baking soda was until I started researching this a few weeks ago. Amazing! And safe for little ones to be around (which is good because Isabella is my little helper and like to pretend to clean right next to me!).

Adrian *hates* the vinegar smell, but it is just such a wonderful, safe, all-purpose cleaner. And soooo cheap! The coffee pot trick is great too!

I would consider doing candle warmers (although I really love the ambiance of candles burning!).
on Jul 22, 2008

Have you ever heard of "Scentsy"?  A few ladies at my school sell it, and it's really cool!  You have kind of a vase with a low wattage bulb, and on top is a little bowl.  You order these blocks of smelly wax, and you melt it in the warmer.  The only issue that I could see with you and your little ones is the hot wax.  Our idiot cat tipped it over and we almost had to shave him.

It's not as expensive as the candles, and *I* think there's some really good stinks.

I'm so going to try baking soda.  We have to hose this nasty house down.  I'm sick of it.

Anyone have any good natural ideas for carpet stains?  I spill all the time.

on Jul 22, 2008

Hey TW, 

To clean coffee pots I use ice and lemon wedges: swirl them around inside the carafe.

We make our own fire starters out of parafin, saw dust, and cardboard egg crates (for the mountain house where we have a wood cookstove). I melt GulfWax in a large metal coffee can on a warm stove. The cans work also for candles and soaps, as well. Then close the cans with the plastic lids that come with them for storage.

I use a capful of bleach in a spray water bottle to disinfect kitchen surfaces. I also use Windex on tile floors and have found it to be a useful carpet cleaner...sorta like out of that movie, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" where the father used Windex for all sorts of things!

 

Thanks for that lemonade tip!

Be well.

on Jul 22, 2008

It's not a cleaning tip but it works wonders...

Roundup is like $20 a bottle and works ok with several applications but a gallon of vinegar with a cup of salt disolved and a tblspoon of dish washing soap works in one shot. It takes about two weeks to kill off weeds but I took out some very hearty poison ivy for under $3.

on Jul 22, 2008

I can't confirm that anywhere.

I actually use borax and baking soda to scrub the toilet, but the lemonade trick is good for bad stains on the porcelain. Pumice can also be used to scrub out the stains.

I'd doubt lemon juice would be any more corrosive than any type of cleaning project, but after years (think decades or centuries) it could add up.

on Jul 22, 2008

Lemonade to clean the toilet? I would have never thought of that. Gonna hafta try it! Heh, and to think all this time I've been filtering it through my kidneys before putting it in the pot!

on Jul 22, 2008

I forgot to add baking soda.  Its a great natural cleanser, tooth cleaner, and works great to eat up household oders.  Sprinkle on carpets and vacuum.  Also, put a little in a paper cup in your refrigerator to keep it fresh.

 

See ya!

 

on Jul 22, 2008

Fantastic ideas Tex!  I hate the smell of chemicals myslef butI didn't go looking for natural ways on my own the way you do, good job!  I instead have begun to buy 'green' liquids, they don't smell as strongly,  and are as effective.  I also did the trick of a small amount of bleach in water and have it handy for quick spritsing every that needs a touch up, like the bathtub, toilet bowl, sink, etc.  I have been using shampoos for ages to cleam my bathroom and it does work for me too! I also love the smell!

on Jul 22, 2008

Great article.

Is the cinnamon essential oil? 

About the candles, I used to make candles out of beeswax.  They come in sheets and you use  a hairdryer to make the wax soft then roll the wax around the wick.  Very safe and they make nice candles.  You just trim the wax before you roll to get the height you like.  Want a thick candle?  Just roll more wax.  A thick candle really requires two wicks.  Smells like honey when you burn them.

on Jul 22, 2008
The acid in tomatoes works good for cleaning skillets and especially copper bottoms on Revere Ware. The diluted bleach spray works good on that old Texas mildew in showers and other damp places. I can't imagine lemonade being harmful to porcelin...I have deposited urine samples in porcelin that were much more toxic than lemonade and didn''t damage the fixtures! heheheee. WD-40 works really well as a solvent, it removes grease and tar from hard surfaces. Works real good on M-14s, too.  
on Jul 23, 2008

Toothpaste - the paste, not the gel kind - is great for cleaning scuff and finger marks off doors and walls.

I've made my own dusting spray: weak tea with a few drops of lavender and eucalyptus oil in it.  I spray it around the room in between dustings, and it really helps, plus it smells great.

Borax is my favorite cleaning aid, it's good for everything.

on Jul 23, 2008

I use a half and half water/vinegar solution to dissinfect counters and it can kill odors in upholstery and carpets, kinda like febreeze.   Citrus rinds will freshen up a garbage disposal. 

just john- will your weed killer damage grass, or is it just for edges and walks?

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