Spring Cleaning – So Close to Summer!

Spring cleaning is a week-long event at our house. Of course, as my son gets older, it becomes more and more eventful. All of those little nooks and crannies that we rarely get to during our day to day cleaning routine seem to be exactly the spots that hold the missing puzzle pieces that we’ve searched all over for, the Lego that we knew existed or the fruit snack that disappeared just after you opened the package. The cold return register often reveals long lost Matchbox cars, the plastic swords of plastic heroes and, I’m hoping, the helmet of an Imaginext character that we’ve been unable to find for the past two months.

Of course, Spring cleaning in our house doesn’t officially start until me and the hubby take down all of the mini blinds for their annual soak & scrub. That’s like our signal to the whole neighborhood that the madness has begun. We begin separating items; some go in the trash, while others are put into recycling bins or boxes marked “yard sale” on the sides. This is also the time that I take almost four hours to sort through my giant box of coupons. Because I do keep them organized by date and jot down the last date that coupons within the inserts expire, I can easily go in and pull out the inserts that no longer contain valid coupons. If there is an older insert in there that still has good coupons, I’ll generally go in and cut out the one or two coupons that are still good in those inserts.

This is also the time that we re-evaluate our music, movie and game collections. If we have CDs that we no longer listen to, we set them aside. The same is true with our DVDs and games. We don’t put these in the yard sale though. Instead, I choose to sell our CDs, DVDs and games online. Why? Because I can often get a lot more for them online than at the yard sale and I don’t have to deal with all of the haggling or waste time and money on price tags.

We also drag out the totes so that we can pull out the summer clothes and wash them. We then use those same totes to pack away the majority of our winter clothing. Of course, living in the Midwest, you always have to have a few cool weather outfits that you leave out because the weather can change in the blink of an eye.

On top of it all, we clean out the cabinets. Yes, we take all of the products and dishes out of the cabinets and wipe down the insides of each and every cabinet. Because we have so many cabinets in our kitchen, it takes almost a whole day to do just that, but I also wash all of the dishes that haven’t been taken out of the cabinets for a while.

The one thing I’m really not looking forward to? Washing the windows. My arms always feel like jello after doing the inside and outside of all of our windows – and I only do half because he does the outsides!

What do you most dread about Spring cleaning?

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Tuesday’s Tip: Getting Tough Stains Out of Clothing

If you have kids or are just prone to spilling things like I am you have dealt with tough stains on your clothing. The good news is that
For all Clothes

The most important thing to remember about stains is that the earlier that you catch it the better. There are some great products such as shout wipes that you can carry in your purse to blot stains with as soon as they happen. If you do not happen to have a Tide pen or Shout wipe on you, take an ice cube from your drink and wet the spot.
When you wash a clothing item that has a stain make sure that you check the wet laundry to make sure that the stain is gone before throwing it in the dryer. Throwing it in the dryer will set the stain and often make it permanent. If the stain is still visible after washing, pretreat it and wash it again.

Dairy Stains

Ah, the dreaded dripping ice cream cone. If you are dealing with any type of dairy stain soak the item in agitated cold water if it is fresh. If the stain has dried use a brush to get all of the crusted matter off. Soak for several hours in cold water with a detergent. Wash the item in warm water.

Fruit Stains

If your clothing has been stained with fruit juice of any kind you will want to wash the item in the hottest water possible. Do not use soap as this could make the stain become permanent. Tough juice stains can be soaked in an quart of warm water with an enzyme presoak product.

Grass and Mud Stains

If you have boys like I do, these are the stains that you are going to be dealing with the most often. For grass stains you will want to soak the item in cool water with a pretreatment solution. Do not use hot water as it will make the stain harder to remove.

If your kids come in all muddy, let the mud dry and flake off as much as you can. You will then soak the item in a quart of warm water mixed with a teaspoon of liquid dish soap and a tablespoon of white vinegar for fifteen minutes. Rinse the item with water and let it stand for a few minutes. If the stain remains sponge it with rubbing alcohol.

Red Stains

The dreaded ketchup or tomato sauce stains can be dealt with by mixing a half of a teaspoon of liquid dish soap and a tablespoon of vinegar in a quart of cool water. Soak the clothing for 30 minutes. If the stain remains you can use a pretreatment stain remover product or liquid laundry detergent rubbed into the stain. Wash the item in warm water and let air dry. If the stain is still there you will want to soak the clothing in an enzyme product for an hour or more.

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Get Organized Mystery Sale! Hurry! Ends 11/7!

The holidays are here again and with them come more and more stuff. I know that with two boys, there are more toys coming into my house in just a month and I need a way to organize them and the rest of my house soon!

If you are having family over, getting your home organized for their arrival will be much less stressful with some of the great tools available on this site and right now is the perfect time to shop at Get Organized with this great offer,Shop the Mystery Sale and Get $10 Off Your Order of $50 or More at ShopGetOrganized.com. Use Promo Code AG110311, now through 11/7

You better hurry, because this deal only lasts through Monday and there are great savings to be had!

 

 

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Family Health: Preventing Lead Exposure

My parents built the house I was raised in; we had new windows, fresh paint, new pipes, and never once did I hear the term “lead poisoning” when I was growing up. Skip ahead a couple of decades; my husband and I live in a home built in 1925; we’re planning to move to an apartment built in the ’30s; and someday, when we buy a home, we’ll be just as happy with a charming old house as we would with a new one. The dangers of lead exposure have become real to us.

If you’ve new to living in old homes, the learning curve concerning lead can be pretty high. Did you know, for example, that lead is found not only in peeling paint but also in old pipes? Did you know that you need to clean lead-based paint areas in a very specific way? Did you know you should never drink or cook with hot water from the tap in your old home? Did you know soil can contain lead?

Here’s the skinny from the EPA (http://www.epa.gov/lead/):

  • Lead may cause a range of health effects, from behavioral problems and learning disabilities, to seizures and death.
  • Children six years old and under are most at risk because they put their hands in their mouths more than the rest of us.
  • The most common sources of lead are: deteriorating lead-based paint, lead contaminated dust, and lead contaminated residential soil.
  • Two ways to assess your risk for lead exposure are: (1) to have your home tested for lead by a certified inspector, and (2) to have a blood test done at your doctor’s office, especially for your young children.

The EPA has several links to documents which can answer all of your lead-based questions. Here are a few more tips for the family living in a charming (or not-so-charming) old home (http://www.leadfreekids.org/):

1. Keep your home clean. Cleaning surfaces, floors, and toys once a week greatly reduces your chance of lead exposure. Do not dry-dust; use wet rags instead.

2. Wipe up any paint chips with a wet sponge or rag. Never dry-dust or scrape surfaces that may contain lead paint; the dust is just as dangerous as the paint itself.


3. Ensure that your family members eat well-balanced meals. A diet that is low in fat and high in calcium and iron can help prevent lead absorption in the body. Fish, green vegetables, milk, and cheese are all recommended for this reason.

The dangers of lead exposure are real, but you do not have to be paralyzed by them. Educating yourself about the risks is the first step. Making prevention a priority in your home is the best way to protect everyone in your family from this invisible threat.

 

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Fall Cleaning

You’ve heard of spring cleaning. Why not try fall cleaning on for size? My family is moving in a few weeks, and the change of season has given me just the motivation and extra energy I need to sort everything before it’s time to pack.

For us, fall cleaning this year is comprised of going through every closet, drawer, and cabinet and considering: “When’s the last time we used this?” Or, “When’s the last time I wore this?” It’s an opportunity to clean out my daughter’s remaining 3T clothes and bring down all the fall and winter 4T’s from storage. It’s also just about time to pack up my summer clothes and bring down my fall and winter ones; I plan to sort them during the transition.

I’ve been doing “fall cleaning” for enough years now that I’ve actually condensed my wardrobe down to two large drawers, two small drawers, and a tiny closet-full. It’s a good discipline to ruthlessly eliminate clothes, shoes, and household items that are in good condition but are hardly used.

Fall cleaning provides a good teaching time for kids, too. Help them learn how to be generous; teach them not to be hoarders. Someone else can get a lot of good out of your gently used items. And, if you could use some extra cash, fall cleaning can be a good time to pack up the extra stuff and take it to a consignment store or have a yard-sale.

Fall cleaning doesn’t only mean sorting and eliminating either. Why not take advantage of the cool weather by conducting a deep house clean? I know I never feel up to that task in the summer—it’s just too hot around here! The fall, though, makes me want to throw open the windows, take an allergy pill, and clean every room in the house.

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Living Green: Making the Switch to Cloth

When I first got out of college, I knew that I wanted to be a more environmentally conscious person, but I felt overwhelmed to think of where I was versus where I wanted to be. My husband and I started taking baby steps, and while we still have big dreams for eco-friendly living in the future, I am proud of how far we have come.

One of the small steps along the way occurred to me about two years ago. I have always struggled with seasonal allergies. Over the course of my life, I have probably already consumed far more than my fair share of Kleenex. I’m also the kind of person who never has any on hand! I don’t know what caused the light bulb to come on for me, but a couple of years ago it suddenly occurred to me that I could become a person who used handkerchiefs. Truly, it was a revelation.

I became a hankie person immediately. I remembered that my husband had gotten some handkerchiefs in his stocking the previous Christmas which he never used. So that was my starting place. While I was on a trip visiting home, my Grandma noticed me using a handkerchief and said, “Oh! I’ve been waiting for years to find someone to give these to,” and off she went to her bedroom. She emerged with a whole pile of very old, very lovely hankies. I love them. Recently she bought me a whole new stash of bright, patterned ones. I try to have a hankie with me at all times now—which has come in handy in my first year of motherhood, let me assure you!

After I made the switch to hankies, I realized how easy it would be to make the switch in the kitchen, too. I had my mom make me a bunch of cloth napkins, which we have been using pretty exclusively ever since.

Replacing paper towels altogether takes a little more planning, but it can be done. I highly recommend stocking up on microfiber cloths. They are highly absorbent, which is not something of which every kitchen towel or cloth napkin can boast.


There is neither time nor space here to talk about cloth toilet paper, but let me give you the heads-up:  It’s out there and there are people who have made the switch. Once you have put your baby in cloth diapers, it’s not such a stretch.

Wherever you’re at on the eco-friendly journey, there is a place for you on the switching-to-cloth spectrum. It is yet another example of how living green and thrifty living can come together.

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Do It Yourself: Make Your Own Shampoo

Nearly a year and a half ago I jumped on the ‘poo-free bandwagon. Going shampoo-free is a movement that is growing in popularity, although it is not a new idea. The theory behind living without shampoo is that the soap in shampoo dries out your scalp’s natural oils. When that happens, your scalp responds by creating excess oil, which then causes you to want to wash your hair more often, and so on.

I had two main motivations for giving up shampoo (and conditioner): (1) to save money, and (2) to switch to more natural products. The longer I live, the less excited I am about rubbing substances into my skin that I cannot pronounce. Something in me says, “Warning! Lay off the unidentifiable substances, please!”

For those of us who have dispensed with shampoo and conditioner, our new cleansers and conditioners are made from baking soda and vinegar. The baking soda mixture replaces shampoo and the apple cider vinegar mixture replaces conditioner. Baking soda and vinegar go together like ice cream and apple pie; I don’t recommend one without the other. Baking soda alone will make your hair feel like straw.

If you are ready to try it out, here are a few tips before you get started. First locate two squeeze-bottle containers. I saved two agave containers after the agave was used up. They are the perfect size and have the necessary squeeze-able top. Honey, ketchup, mustard — any of these squeeze-able plastic bottles would work. Next, prepare yourself: It’s going to take your scalp a week to adjust to the new system. Your hair is going to be as greasy as it has ever been for at least five days. For this reason, I made the switch while we were on vacation; no one from my normal life had to experience the transitional phase!


After you have found some containers, make up your mixtures. Ratios of baking soda and water will vary according to your hair type. If you have “normal” hair (not oily and not dry), start out by trying a ratio of two tablespoons of baking soda to one cup of water. Shake your bottle vigorously before each use. For your conditioner, try mixing ¼ cup of apple cider vinegar with one cup of water.

Perfect recipes are not necessary for this to work! I heard about the system but never read up on the details and ended up using equal parts baking soda, vinegar, and water for over a year—and my hair still looked and felt fine! Experiment widely until you find ratios that work for you.

I haven’t used shampoo for a year and a half and my hair looks as good as it ever did. If anything, I have experienced a little more body, and my natural curl is slightly more prominent now. I recommend giving it a try. You’ve got very little to lose and lots of money to save in the process.

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Do It Yourself: Cleansing Your Face with Oil

Some folks will never make it past the title; cleansing your face with oil?! I know what you’re thinking. Some of you are cringing and protesting. The thought of lathering up your face with a dollop of olive oil makes you shiver. Nevertheless, there is a growing contingent of people who have taken the plunge and have found it quite refreshing.

The theory behind the switch to oil is that soap, aided by all of those ingredients you cannot pronounce in your regular facial products, actually makes your skin problems worse. When you dry out your face’s natural oils with soap, your face responds by creating an overabundance of oil, and so you use more soap, and so your face produces more excess oil, etc. All the while, all those big corporations are making big bucks off of this vicious cycle.

The trick, then, is to cleanse your skin of the bacteria that causes blemishes, not just to dry it out. After cleansing your skin with oil, you remove the oil with a hot wash cloth, and in just a few weeks your skin will be softer and clearer than ever.

Now, I’m not actually telling you to go to your kitchen and apply to your face whatever oil you happen to find there. That really would be pretty gross! Rather, I’m asking you to get the right ingredients and create a spa for yourself in your own home.

Your cleansing solution will require two ingredients: a cleansing oil and another oil to blend it with. Castor oil is recommended for your cleansing oil. The other oil can range from plain old olive oil to sunflower or safflower oil. Since this is a thrifty mom’s site, I won’t go into all the other expensive oils you could choose from.


The next thing you need to know is that in order for this to work, you’re going to have to keep your oil container really clean. I use a tiny glass vase. When I use up my solution, I put the vase in the dishwasher to sterilize it, and then I make a new batch. If you want a lid on your solution, save your vanilla container next time you go through one, and then use it for your oil cleanser.

Your solution will be unique to you. I recommend starting out with a mixture of 20% castor oil to 80% olive oil (or whichever oil you choose). The oilier your skin is, the higher percentage of castor oil you should use. No one would need equal parts, though. Too much castor oil can seriously dry out your skin. You’ll have to try this out over a number of weeks to tweak the solution to perfection. Only do an oil cleanse every other day or every three or four days, again, depending on your skin type.

When you are ready to cleanse, pull your hair back, run the water very hot, and pour about a nickel sized amount of your oil mixture on to your hand. Rub the oil in your hands and then begin spreading it generously on your face. I know it is counter-intuitive, but you will especially want to rub the oil vigorously on to the problem areas of your face, or if you have one of those painful bumps. Remember, the oil is cleansing your face.

After treating yourself to a little face massage, wet your wash cloth in water as warm as you can comfortably handle it. Wring it out, and then lay the cloth over your face. Don’t scrub your skin; gently wipe it with the hot cloth until the cloth has cooled. Repeat this process three to four times or until you think you have removed most of the oil.

Once you get used to the idea, cleansing your face in this way becomes a relaxing treat—a great way to calm your mind right before bed. And just wait and see: After you get hooked on oil, you’ll be saving tons of money and enjoying naturally beautiful skin all at the same time.

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Do It Yourself: Laundry Detergent

A couple of years ago, some friends introduced me to the idea of making my own laundry detergent. I’m up for anything that is a cheaper, more natural option, so I was on board right away. I’ve never looked back.

You can find many laundry detergent recipes online. I prefer doing a dry mix because it takes only a few minutes to prepare, as opposed to the liquid mix which involves boiling water and mixing in bulk.

The advantages of do it yourself laundry soap are many. Number one: it’s cheaper. A name-brand detergent at the grocery store costs $10 for 70 ounces. The ingredients I use for my homemade laundry detergent cost half that price, and I use less of my own stuff per load. The bottom line is that homemade laundry detergent can cut your laundry detergent bill in half.

Another great advantage of making it yourself is that the individual ingredients all have multiple uses. I love to have products around that can be inter-changed. Borax, washing soda, baking soda, and bar soap all have multiple uses in addition to being the ingredients for homemade laundry detergent.

For those of us with sensitive skin, homemade laundry detergent is a dream come true because it is fragrance-free and dye- free. If you so choose, it can be an entirely natural concoction. Because saving money is one of my goals, I don’t buy all-natural bar soaps for my concoction, however the Borax and Washing Soda are all natural.


One barrier to making your own laundry detergent is the idea that making it will consume a lot of time. I have not found that to be the case. When we start to get low, it takes me about five minutes to whip up a new batch, and it is easy as can be. Here is my recipe:

  • 1 cup Borax
  • 1 cup Washing Soda
  • 1 bar of soap
  • Finely grate the bar of soap into a container with a lid. Add one cup of Borax and one cup of Washing Soda; mix. For an extra boost, add a teaspoon of baking soda. Store for later use.

When you are ready to wash your clothes, you will need to start your water on a warm or hot setting in order to melt the soap. Add two teaspoons of your homemade detergent to the washing machine for a normal, large load; you can add slightly more for a very soiled load. After a few moments, turn it to your desired temperature, and then add the clothes. For a natural fabric softener, add some apple cider vinegar. You will have to remind yourself that suds do not equal “clean”; your natural detergent will not have suds. Nevertheless, it will be working!

My family and friends have really enjoyed the switch. My neighbor claims that this method has been much easier on her husband’s sensitive skin, and that it has also helped remove the ammonia smell from her child’s cloth diapers. As for my family, we enjoy the savings—especially with our new addition to the family! Each child seems to have an exponential effect on a family’s dirty laundry.

Whether your goal is living green or saving money, do it yourself laundry detergent will be right up your alley.

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Natural Cleansers to Help You Ditch the Chemicals When Cleaning

Ever wonder what makes you want to sneeze when you’re cleaning? It’s not always the dust. Cleansers have tons of nasty chemicals in them that can cause your body to react immediately, but those chemicals can also have long term effects on you and your family. This is why many moms are choosing to go back to the basics by using homemade cleansers that are made completely of non-toxic ingredients. The best part? They work and save you money! [Read more...]

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