Desperate Housewives of ILX

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preparation H can be used to clean stubborn decks!

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 14:58 (fifteen years ago)

Wha?!? Oh, wait, you said decks.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:32 (fifteen years ago)

you have to use allot - buy the "Emperor Size " tube

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:32 (fifteen years ago)

Oh, and baking soda and vinegar are great for keeping drains clear. As a bonus, the bubbling and crackling will keep any cats in the house entertained for some time.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:36 (fifteen years ago)

ho w can I clean my brown stained coffee thermos

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:36 (fifteen years ago)

xp And if your decks are still burning and itching after the treatment, use witch hazel.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:38 (fifteen years ago)

i just got that windex multi-surface with vinegar - i like it!

j lol (surm), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:40 (fifteen years ago)

also vinegar once helped me get a red wine stain out of a rug

j lol (surm), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:41 (fifteen years ago)

I take it you are impllying that I drink vinager and spit it into my thermos

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:43 (fifteen years ago)

Denture cleaning or natural descaling products work well on coffee and tea stains on Thermoses and mugs, FYI.

I use a couple of drops of thick bleach in very hot soapy water to ensure my dishes are clean - I noticed a bit of bleach in the mix when loading/unloading commercial dishwashers as a teenaged bus-person and extrapolated from there. Rinse with hot water, obviously.

chavatar (suzy), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:48 (fifteen years ago)

excellent observation Chavatar - I WAS THAT BUSBOY!
so put super poligrip in the thermos

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 16:50 (fifteen years ago)

Protip: a iron on medium to high heat applied through a cotton t-shirt will remove water and heat marks on a waxed wood finish. Just tried today and am chuffed that I won't have to refinish my sister's table after a drunken revelry.

美国有很多丰富的傻瓜 (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 19:41 (fifteen years ago)

thanks for that tip - how can I clean these - http://www.greatmats.com/products/home-sport-play.php

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 19:44 (fifteen years ago)

power washer.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 19:51 (fifteen years ago)

You can also get wax off carpet with an iron through a shirt/washcloth

tehresa, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 19:54 (fifteen years ago)

vinegar also works great to polish stainless steel stove-tops.

also makes a great (cheap) fabric softener...

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 19:59 (fifteen years ago)

It seem svinager is the answer to everything.
I know you can spray it on weeds to kill em.
I hope my new vaccum cleaner came today
http://img41.imageshack.us/img41/5161/g60018g6865.gif

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:05 (fifteen years ago)

Vinegar and ammonia are becoming my secret weapons of everything.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:06 (fifteen years ago)

And I don't care how corrosive/bad for the environment it is, but I am in love with the mighty BLEACH PEN.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:06 (fifteen years ago)

And I'm gonna need it for the mildew around the sink in my bathroom.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:06 (fifteen years ago)

sometimes I try just mashing an orange peel into the sink as supposedly orange oil can clean. Its also slightly explosive
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OLliGO9clI

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:18 (fifteen years ago)

Dried orange peels are excellent firelighters.

chavatar (suzy), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:28 (fifteen years ago)

you can kill weeds instantly with boiling water.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:36 (fifteen years ago)

Ooh that's a good one.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Wednesday, 8 June 2011 20:37 (fifteen years ago)

oh man last time i tried to buy a bleach pen i couldn't find one! sometimes i use toilet cleaner bleach gel to treat my grout since it's less risky than spraying cleaner and bleaching clothing.

tehresa, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 21:26 (fifteen years ago)

i can attest to the boiling water - but they always come back

Latham Green, Wednesday, 8 June 2011 22:57 (fifteen years ago)

vinegar, ammonia, baking soda...so much awesomeness

also re: wax on carpet, apply ice to it (bag of ice works well) then chip off the wax bits with a spoon or putty knife. That will get rid of the chunks.
Then take a piece of brown paper, set an iron on low/warm, and apply the iron to the paper over the wax spot...it will draw the wax residue into the paper. Move to a fresh spot on the paper and repeat a few times.
Works good on tablecloths and clothes too. And with clothes/tablecloth you can even just bung the item in a bag in the freezer, instead of applying ice.

Janet Snakehole (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 9 June 2011 02:05 (fifteen years ago)

my elderly italian neighbors mix (I think) bleach and salt and pour it in between the sidewalk cracks to kill weeds!

teeny, Thursday, 9 June 2011 02:08 (fifteen years ago)

my grandma used to leave flat beer out for snails, goddamn that works a treat...snails be boozin

Janet Snakehole (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 9 June 2011 02:11 (fifteen years ago)

When the weather gets warm and slugs start getting into the bowl of food for our outdoor cat, I put the bowl in the middle of a plate full of salt.

My wife used boiling salt water on weeds coming up in the brick walkway I laid down last year. I was curious how fast the weeds would come back from that 1-2 punch — one month and they're as thick as ever.

WmC, Thursday, 9 June 2011 02:17 (fifteen years ago)

pro-tip: Fruit Flys, pour some apple cider vinegar into a plastic/paper cup, cover with plastic wrap and poke toothpick size holes in it...next morning wonder at the amazement of your fruit fly trap.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:23 (fifteen years ago)

im also a lawn maniac, greenest on the block and done organically. i dont mess with the chemicals.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:24 (fifteen years ago)

My new apt seems plagued with little dull brown-grey house moths. I'm understandably concerned for my woolen goods. WHAT ATTRACTS/DESTROYS MOTHS?

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:31 (fifteen years ago)

We also have a palmetto bug living in the kitchen and coming out at night, so I have to get on a campaign of washing floor, screening window, and putting boric acid powder and sticky traps everywhere. My bedroom door leads off the kit and I don't want any unannounced visits.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:33 (fifteen years ago)

pro-tip: Fruit Flys, pour some apple cider vinegar into a plastic/paper cup, cover with plastic wrap and poke toothpick size holes in it...next morning wonder at the amazement of your fruit fly trap.

― Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, June 9, 2011 8:23 AM (10 minutes ago) Bookmark

I've done this and it totally works! It was like magic. Disgusting magic.

Garyln (La Lechera), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:35 (fifteen years ago)

laurel, try some lavender oil or cedar....

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:41 (fifteen years ago)

this morning my wife woke me to tell me that my sons room had all these strange insects around his window. they look like triangular shaped flies...weird things. and they hopped.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:42 (fifteen years ago)

Diatomaceous earth works wonders on insects too.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:43 (fifteen years ago)

I had a moth infestation once that I eventually tracked down to a package of bird seed in the back of a cabinet.

Brad C., Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:48 (fifteen years ago)

I once learned that boric acid kills roaches, so I bought some Borax like 10 years ago and I still have it. Same with my giant box of diatomaceous earth. (that is one of my favorite useful household item names of all time, i mean, seriously)

Garyln (La Lechera), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:51 (fifteen years ago)

UGH UGH UGH have just been behind the refrigerator with all the bleaches. For the first time in six months. MOUSE TURDS.

Excuse me while I go and pick up some glue traps. Yes, they are cruel but srsly NO SPHINCTER, NO ENTRY.

chavatar (suzy), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:55 (fifteen years ago)

I have a giant squeeze bottle of boric acid, but I haven't washed the kitchen floor yet and some recycling has piled up in inconvenient places, so I have to do a clean sweep and then put powders and poisons down.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:57 (fifteen years ago)

suzy, peppermint oil on cotton balls...put behind fridge.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:57 (fifteen years ago)

Also loving the idea of glue traps for the water bugs -- they get in by accident so it's not an infestation, really, just the isolated crawlies. Have bottle of eucalyptus oil left over from war on roaches at other place, might do the cotton ball trick w that too. (Thanks!)

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:58 (fifteen years ago)

Brad, I've been wondering if the moths are COMING FROM somewhere but I just moved in and I cleaned out all my spaces first! Could be hidden somewhere in the kitchen cupboards, I guess -- roommate not exactly circumspect with his cabinets.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Thursday, 9 June 2011 13:59 (fifteen years ago)

Noted, Chris, although my rage at discovering Turd Mountain demands a blood sacrifice to the Hygiene Goddess.

chavatar (suzy), Thursday, 9 June 2011 14:01 (fifteen years ago)

we tried the peppermint oil trick and it didn't work - suzy, can i suggest electro-shock traps as an alternative to glue traps? it's marginally more humane and easy to clean up.

just1n3, Thursday, 9 June 2011 14:31 (fifteen years ago)

those moths really love grains. make sure everything grain-related in the kitchen is sealed/in tupperware. we had pretty good success putting out fly paper and making sure everything was sealed up when the moths came in bk.

tehresa, Thursday, 9 June 2011 14:34 (fifteen years ago)

alternatively get a cat. yeah glue traps are cruel...although this is coming from someone who shoots his chipmunk infestation with a pellet gun. dont listen to me.

Bert Macklin, F.B.I. (thebingo), Thursday, 9 June 2011 14:37 (fifteen years ago)

My tip-off was moths flying out whenever I opened a particular kitchen cabinet ... it took a while to figure out the source. In addition to ditching the bird seed, I ended up trashing a lot of previously-opened containers of pasta, crackers, flour, etc. that had been compromised by moth larvae (ew).

xp Yes, sealed containers are a must.

Brad C., Thursday, 9 June 2011 14:41 (fifteen years ago)


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