2 Hamper Bags for clothing. When your clothes get dirty, pre sort your whites and coloreds using either hamper bag. Stow both hamper bags in the ditty, and when the ditty gets heavy, it’s laundry day. Can also get a third hamper bag for towels.
Recently, my mother told me that when I was a kid she used to use the third section of the laundry hamper for clothes she wanted to get rid of (the rest of the household would otherwise wear our clothes even if they were stained, full of holes, or otherwise looked terrible). She would keep this unwearable clothing there so when we asked about a specific thing, it was “in the laundry”, then threw it out once we stopped asking. Part of me feels betrayed but it’s a genius tactic and I never noticed.
•There is a pet-safe, skin-safe disinfectant/antiseptic called chlorhexidine, mainly used in veterinary and medical settings. You can buy a gallon jug of it for <$20 at a farm store or some online pet supply stores and you dilute it so much that such a jug will easily be enough for even the dirtiest home for years (just make sure to store it well). It can be used to treat wounds and even as a mouthwash but for that you need it even more diluted, also don’t let it get near eyes. How much you dilute it depends on the exact solution you buy and what you’re using it for. With a 2% chlorhexidine glutonate solution (the most common) you use 1 oz per gallon of water for medical use (i.e. applying to skin) or 2 oz per gallon of water for a general disinfectant. I think of it kind of like bleach but more gentle and afaik it won’t stain stuff.
•Diatomaceous earth is a great, non-toxic way to torture bugs to death. It’s been mentioned ITT but I have some more specific tips:
-Put a thin layer of it on their point of entry and around walls (roaches and such prefer to stick near a wall rather than dash across an open space).
-If you have ants in your house, follow them to their holes and plug said holes with it.
-It’s got a dusty texture so wear a cloth mask when applying to prevent inhaling a lot of it and keep in mind that it will get all over the floor.
-I leave it for about two days. The goal is for every pest around to come across it so the longer you have it there, the better. It just gets annoying after a couple days and by that point the returns if having it longer are diminishing.
-Try not to use too much because then there will be more to clean and that’s a pain. The ideal way to clean it is a shop vac, do not use a regular vacuum.
-You likely won’t see the bugs die on the spot, but if they walked on the DE then they’re doomed, it just might take a while for them to bleed out.
-It only hurts things with exoskeletons, so it should be safe for children and pets (unless you have spiders, bugs, or other arthropods as pets, then it is not safe for them).
•Some insects go to light and some flee from it. Use this to your advantage. Also a lot of flying insects automatically go upwards when they don’t have a specific goal, so the best traps are basically upside-down funnels into an enclosed space with something that will kill them.
•Make sure you’re storing your produce correctly:
https://www.seattle.gov/util/cs/groups/public/@spu/@conservation/documents/webcontent/1_037049.pdf
https://blog.misfitsmarket.com/the-ultimate-fresh-produce-storage-guide/
•Know which fruits and vegetables produce lots of ethylene (a gas that makes things ripen) and keep them away from fruits and vegetables that are sensitive to ethylene. This is why you can make a banana ripen faster by putting it in a paper bag with an apple; apple are ethylene producers and bananas are ethylene sensitive.
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https://www.lancasterfarming.com/country-life/food-and-recipes/keep-fruit-fresher-longer-the-role-of-ethylene-in-storing-
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produce/article_a94185ec-5d38-56c8-9c29-647ef36f731b.html#:~:text=There%20are%20no%20hard%20and,summer%20squash%2C%20and%20sweet%20potatoes.
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https://ucsdcommunityhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/ethylene.pdf
I also posted some stuff in the poor thread:
Does anyone have advice for dusting? I have a lot of things that get dusty but hate doing it, especially with small, delicate things.