Most websites encouraging people to clean green at home focus on eco-friendly cleaners. These cleaners fall into two categories: homemade natural cleaners, and eco-friendly commercial cleaners. Websites encouraging eco-friendly and frugal cleaners will focus on the homemade natural cleaners that we already have in the pantry. But what all these websites forget is to encourage people to keep their cleaning tools clean - using green methods!
Why is this important?
Because if you keep your cleaning tools clean, you can use them longer. That translates into less waste; you throw away your cleaning tools more slowly, filling landfills at a slower rate. You're also buying fewer cleaning tools over time, slowing your rate of consumption of natural resources.
Simple, right? But how can you keep your cleaning tools cleaner, longer, and do it in an eco-friendly and frugal way? It's a no-brainer: use simple baking soda and vinegar.
Although it has literally thousands of cleaning uses, some people avoid using vinegar to clean the house because of the smell. But when you're cleaning the cleaning tools, the smell of vinegar becomes much less important.
Take, for example, your toilet bowl brushes. Once weekly, try sprinkling a generous amount of baking soda into the container housing your toilet brush (with your brush in there). Then pour in enough vinegar to bubble up over the top of the brush. The smell of vinegar is probably going to be an odor improvement, in this case! Plus, there's a great added benefit - there's no need to rinse your toilet brush once you clean it. You can simply continue its use; the vinegar and baking soda will loosen from the brush the next time you clean your toilet, and will do nothing but add to your efforts!
Are your rags and sponges getting stained and smelly from use? Soak them overnight in vinegar and baking soda to prolong their use and eliminate those odors. You'll throw sponges and rags away less often if they're still looking and smelling nice. That means, again, that you'll be buying fewer new ones. Overconsumption isn't solved by consuming more eco-friendly products more often - it's solved by consuming everything more slowly.
And here's an ecologically unfriendly cleaning tool you can avoid: scouring pads. Instead, use baking soda and vinegar to loosen stuck-on or burnt-on food in your pots and pans. An overnight soak will allow you to easily wipe off the debris with little to no scrubbing.
Think green when you're cleaning your home, and when cleaning your tools - it'll save you money, time, elbow grease, and natural resources.
Stephanie Herman runs the Cleaning-Green website where she shares tips and recipes for natural homemade, eco-friendly cleaners.
Source: www.articledashboard.com