Archive for the ‘daily cleaning’ Category

Cleaning up the mess left behind can be a daunting task

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

Though hurricane season typically doesn’t send Michigan residents into a weatherproofing frenzy, last weekend’s deluge proved that we’re not out of floodwater reach.

Since Hurricane Ike-driven storms soaked the metro Detroit area, water damage has taken its toll, and some homeowners are still desperately trying to dry out.

“We have had tremendous call volume since Sunday morning,” said Matt Downey of Harrison Township, owner of a Puroclean 24-hour franchise that services the metro area.

“Rochester Hills, Birmingham, Dearborn, Farmington Hills,” he said. “It’s kind of all over the map.”

Kim Berry, 41, of Clarkston was one of the lucky ones. She made it through the soggy week without damage to her home; her yard was another story.

“We live on a pond, so our yard was totally flooded,” she said this week. “Our boat started to float away and sink.”

Berry said she had to clean up large amounts of sand and branches that washed onto her lot, but she acknowledged, “We were lucky.”

Hurricane season officially runs from June 1 through Nov. 30, so the coastal storms — and subsequent deluges in Michigan — may not be over. Cleanup can be daunting and expensive, so keep in mind these tips for the next rainy day.
Ooh, that smell

First things first: Get the water and mud out with a wet-dry vacuum or broom. Then spray all surfaces with lukewarm water. Scrub the surfaces with hot water and a heavy-duty cleaner, then rinse using a brush moistened with a solution of 2 tablespoons of chlorine bleach per gallon of water. Repeat scrubbing and rinsing until the odor is gone. If it’s humid in the flooded space, do not open windows. Instead, run a dehumidifier, air-conditioning or fans to dry things out.
Disinfecting duties

If there is sewage in the water (or you just want to take precautions), clean with a solution of one part chlorine bleach to nine parts water. Use rock salt (1 cup per gallon of water) on plaster and painted drywall, but not on concrete floors, which the salt will damage.
Rug redemption

If a carpet has been soaked with water and sewage, ditch it. Wear rubber gloves and be careful not to scrape your skin, to avoid infection. For slight water damage, remove the carpet if possible, roll it up and take it outside. Drape it over a sawhorse or chairs so it will drain, but don’t let the rug dry this way — it might stretch out of shape. Once the water drains, lay the carpet on the ground. Be sure it’s dry before bringing it back inside — residual moisture can breed mildew and mold. Toss the carpet pad and wash the floors. Have the carpet cleaned professionally or rent a steam cleaner.

If the carpet must stay in place, use a wet-dry vac to remove mud and water.
Walls and floors

You may need to remove baseboards to ventilate wall cavities. Unless moisture there can dry, odors will linger. After you have removed the baseboards, drill holes a few inches above the floor between the studs to drain water. Insulation might have to be removed, dried and replaced — it’s useless when wet, can breed mold and mildew and will stink.

Plastered walls and washable vinyl wallpaper can be cleaned. Allow plaster to dry thoroughly before washing. Use a mild soap and water to clean painted walls. If you have to repaint, wait a couple of months for the walls to dry or new paint will blister.

Clean woodwork with a stiff brush and non-sudsing detergent while still wet. Wood floors will buckle, so leave them alone to dry. Open doors and windows on non-humid days and maintain an indoor temperature of about 55 degrees, or the wood will warp or shrink.
Inspect the furnace

Heating systems exposed to flooding should be checked by a pro. The chimney and smoke box could be clogged with dirt, and the furnace could explode. Check where the chimney meets the foundation, to ensure mortar hasn’t washed away.
Preserving papers and photos

Drain water by placing upright in a box, separated by wax paper. Stand books up on their spines. Place papers in plastic bags and store in the freezer until you are ready to deal with them. If photos are stuck together, don’t pull apart. Wet them again, then try separating, so emulsion isn’t damaged. Clean photos carefully in a photo tray, and place between clean blotters to absorb the water, changing blotters frequently.

Free Press staff writer Kelly Kozlowski and the Philadelphia Inquirer contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080920/NEWS05/809200356

For an immaculate house, use a rotating list of monthly housekeeping tasks

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

Although Martha Stewart says she truly enjoys cleaning house, I’m not sure there’s a lot of people who feel as enthusiastic as she. Good for her! For most of us, house cleaning isn’t on our short list of fun things to do. We do get a sense of satisfaction when our home is in good order and is clean. The trouble is, it doesn’t stay that way! Many of us aren’t nearly as organized as Martha, so sooner or later, the ‘junk drawer’ is a drawer used for items that seem to have no place. After many years, this drawer grows to humongous proportions, but never seems to get cleaned out. If you’re one of those that subscribes to the spring cleaning program, know that there’s a way to get around this backbreaking task altogether. Your solution? A rotating list of monthly housekeeping tasks keeps your house sparkling clean with very little extra effort.

Regular weekly cleaning usually includes vacuuming, dusting, mopping floors and doing laundry. However, we don’t typically wash our windows, clean out closets and sort the junk drawer. These types of tasks do need to be done, but we usually let these things go until it becomes an eyesore. Then it becomes a big job which you may never find the time to fit in to your schedule. Everyone’s home has different types of tasks like this. You might need to clean out your fireplace, straighten up the garage or defrost a freezer.

Compile a list of cleaning tasks you don’t do weekly. Believe me, when you start thinking about it, the list will be long! Divide your monthly housekeeping tasks in such a way that they’re distributed throughout the year, keeping the weather in mind. For example, you’ll probably do the fireplace each month during winter and windows throughout spring and summer. Cleaning closets and straightening up the garage are good fall tasks. Organizing your monthly housekeeping this way, cleaning chores never get out of hand. You’ll save time too. Cleaning up closets isn’t an all day affair when you do it every three months.

Eleanor Roosevelt was known to be a very organized and efficient housekeeper. Someone once queried her on how she managed to accomplish so much. Mrs. Roosevelt replied that she never left a room without picking up items that belonged elsewhere and putting them in their place. This simple trick was her secret. This is certainly one to share with your kids!

Speaking of kids, they can get in on the act too. Delegate some of these tasks to children, appropriate to their age. Teens can wash windows, while younger kids can pick up toys and sort the mess in the closet.

A monthly housekeeping task list can have your home looking great, at least most of the time. This approach works!

Source: http://tirpitzman.wordpress.com/2008/09/19/for-an-immaculate-house-use-a-rotating-list-of-monthly-housekeeping-tasks/

Reduce working mom’s stress by hiring home cleaner and maids

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

For working moms, their “work” day never really ends. They may go to work from 9-5 and come home, but they come home to more work. They have a family to feed and take care of and a house to keep in order. They never really have a chance to leave their work stress at the door when they come home to their family.

Those that work outside the home tend to have more socializing opportunities, but they have less time for meeting the needs of their family. One way to reduce stress so working moms can get their life back is to hire hiring home cleaner and maids to help them out.

A professional Las Vegas house cleaning will ask a number of questions about your home and your family during the process of building your cleaning estimate, and you should in turn ask questions about the cleaning service. Find out whether the Las Vegas maid service company is bonded and insured; this protects your home and your property from theft or damage.

Any reputable maid service should be able to provide you with a certificate of insurance to assure you that they are indeed properly insured. Understand what the company’s cleaning policies are should you need to change a scheduled cleaning, whether or not they require a contract for a specific length of time, who will provide the cleaning products, what happens if something in your home is broken or damaged, and what type of quality guarantee the maid service offers.

It’s better to fork over a little money to maid services or a babysitter than to drive yourself crazy with the added stress. The costs will be low, since you’ll use these services once in awhile versus all the time.

Source: http://www.roxrevolution.com/reduce-working-moms-stress-by-hiring-home-cleaner-and-maids/

Start your own home-based house cleaning business

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

ouse cleaning is in big demand at the moment and it will continue to be in demand over the coming years. The reason being is that peoples’ lifestyles have changed and more and more people are turning to house cleaning services to help free up some of their time.

Why not get in on the act now, take advantage of this demand, and start profiting from your own home-based house cleaning business

Below are the main points you need to know to start-up as an Independent Cleaner.

Choose a Business Name

For advertising purposes you really should give your cleaning service a name. It could just be your own name, i.e. ‘Joan Walter’s House Cleaning’ or you could give it a more generic name i.e. ‘Your Sparkly House’. Well, you get the idea anyway!

Having a business name forms an identity for your business. If you are serious about making a profit and an income from this, then you need to take your little business seriously and it all starts with a name.

Choose Your Territory & Customers

You need to know who your customers are going to be and where they live. You might not have your own transport, so this will have to be taken into consideration. If you have a car then you will be able to travel further a field and be able to do more cleans per day.

It would be sensible if you targetted people near where you live if you don’t have your own transport. But you will also need to identify if the people in your area have the money to pay for a cleaner.

So finding out who can afford your cleaning service is important. You also need to know if there are enough of these premium customers within a certain proximity of each other? Ideally you would want as many customers as close to each other as possible. This way you can do more cleans per day and not lose too much time traveling from one customer to another.

Set-Up Costs

As an Independent Cleaner, there is very little you need to buy when starting a home business. Most Independent Cleaners tend to use the cleaning products and equipment of their customers. So you won’t need to buy any cleaning products. This is the main reason why you will make a healthy profit!

The following are what you will probably have to spend some money on:

o A tabard/apron
o Advertising
o Travelling costs

Pricing

You need to set yourself a price structure. The best way to do this is to ring around the local cleaners in your Yellow Pages and find out what they are charging. You can also get this information from your local job center.

You can then set your hourly rate in proportion with your competitors. Whether you choose to undercut them, charge the same, or set your prices slightly higher is totally up to you.

Advertising

If you don’t carry out advertising activities, then know one will know about your cleaning service. The best and cheapest way to do this is to create small flyers and to put them directly into your potential customers’ mailbox.

Simply type up your flyer in a word processing document, or get somebody to do this for you. Try and put at least two flyers on one page. Take these your local library or wherever has a photocopier. Get them copied as many times as you can afford.

Put your flyers out by the hundreds if you can. You will be surprised at how quickly this actually takes. You could even have your first phone call by the time you get back home.

In addition to flyers, depending on your budget, advertise your cleaning service in the Yellow Pages. If you cannot afford this from the onset, once you start making some money you can then think about placing an advert then.

Expanding

Once you are well on your way of having a full, jam-packed diary you might want to think about expanding your cleaning business. By now you will be beaming with confidence of what you have accomplished all by yourself. So thinking about hiring a cleaner to help you expand should not be too daunting.

Put an ad in your local newspaper advertising for a cleaner. Once you have chosen a satisfactory candidate take him/her with you on your cleaning rounds for him/her to get used to your cleaning methods and techniques.

Once you are happy and confident that he/she can go and clean on their own, you can then either have some free time to yourself or double your customer base.

Once you are totally confident with managing cleaning staff there is no reason why you can’t hire more cleaners.

Source: http://www.freedomrocks.us/start-your-own-home-based-house-cleaning-business/2008/

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Bathroom daily cleaning

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

What cleaning tips do you need to incorporate into a daily routine for the bathroom that will keep surfaces sparkling and the atmosphere inviting? Pick up some standard cleaning supplies and try working these seven things into a daily routine:

Step #1: The Shower Wipe Down
After taking a shower in the morning or in the evening, take the time to wipe down the surfaces with a sponge. Or a quick spray with a mildew killing bathroom agent on mildew prone spots is also an excellent idea if you don’t have time for a srub down.

Step #2: Toilet Bowl Cleaner
To stop stains from forming on the toilet, work a quick scrub down into a nightly routine. Before or after an evening shower, clean the toilet quickly with a brush. Or, just spray a little cleaner in the bowl and let it set to keep stains from forming.
Step #3: Quick Counter Scrub
Keep on top of bathroom counters by wiping them down as part of the morning or evening routine. A quick wipe down on a daily basis will practically eliminate the need for serious scrubbing later on.

Step #4: Mirror, Mirror
To keep mirrors looking great, wipe water spots and toothpaste residue off with your bath towel. You could take it a step further by gathering cleaning supplies like paper towels and glass cleaner to shine your mirror as well.
Step #5: Daily Dust
Tuck a small duster under the sink to quickly dust surfaces such as light fixtures or the counter to pick up powdered makeup and loose hair. Running the duster along the baseboards every now and then isn’t a bad idea either.
Step #6: Spic and Span Floors
It’s unlikely you’re going to mop the bathroom floor everyday, but using a duster mop or a swiffer dry dust mop will help keep hair, makeup and dust from buliding up on the floor. Also, dry wet spots on the floor after showering with a spare towel.
Step #7: General Tidying
Keep a hamper in the bathroom to collect clothes and towels. Hang towels to dry on racks or door hooks instead of leaving them on the floor or in the sink.

All told, a seven-step daily routine working into a morning or evening pattern can help keep bathrooms sparkling and looking great. There’s no reason to let your Chicago apartment bathroom get grungy and dirty when a few minutes a day can keep the area in tip top shape. And, even if you can’t do this everyday, every 2 or 3 days would be great as well.