Tip # 1: Do not slave yourself or your family members home.
You and your family are the best judges of how often you need to clean your home. The size of your household, number and ages of family members, if any of you have environmental allergies, your tolerance for the disorder, and many other factors can influence how often you choose to clean. No need to clean everything every day, every week or even every month. You only have to clean each room and each item as many times as necessary to maintain the kind of environment you want. It was found that was useful for the whole family to sit together and discuss the issue.
Tip # 2: Establish a regular cleaning schedule.
It is easier to keep the house clean if you keep things from getting too dirty or dusty. When long delays between cleaning sessions, it becomes much harder work. A good cleaning checklist can really help, even better, you may want to consider using software to keep track of your cleaning schedule.
Tip # 3: Reduce the clutter!
Would you like to show souvenirs, figurines, ornaments, or around your house? It can beautify and personalize your home but also add to their burden of cleaning. The more you reduce clutter, the easier it is to keep dust under control.
Tip # 4: Dust Control.
Regular dusting and vacuuming are the keys to control dust at home. Most people who are allergic to dust are actually allergic to the feces of dust mites (yikes!). Dust mites are microscopic bugs that feed on skin flakes found in the dust. If you provide dust mites, with plenty of food to allow dust to accumulate in your house, then they reproduce rapidly. The increased dust mite population in turn produces more and more allergens (dust mites, and more and more). It's an endless cycle. Periodic dust removal eliminates not only the "dust", but also reduces the breeding population of dust mites. If you've allowed a lot of dust to accumulate, will have to dust and vacuum more often at first. If you establish a regular schedule, you'll notice there's less dust and less each time you wipe. When this happens, you can reduce dust and vacuum often. In our house, dust and vacuum every room once a month and there is very little dust between cleanings. Regular cleaning is the key!
To remove dust from a room, start by dusting on top. This allows loose dust fall on lower surfaces, giving a second chance to dust when cleaning the lower surfaces. Do not stir up dust or film on the air, wipe it with long strokes if possible and keep it on the cloth. We like to use cloth to remove dust and we were often out of our house to avoid the release of dust back into the air inside our house. Dust and remove everything from the top of every horizontal surface, then dust the surface. This is easily done if you keep clutter to a minimum. When you have cleaned all horizontal surfaces in the room, finished vacuuming the floor.
Tip # 5: Keep the toilets clean easily.
To determine how often you need to clean toilets, showers and bathtubs, note how long it takes for soap to form a film on surfaces. It is much easier to clean these surfaces when the film is thin, so do not wait until it thickens. For our family, two to three weeks of the cycle works on the right.
Foam soap and hair combine to connect your bathroom drains. If you use liquid soap instead of bar soap will reduce the problem of soap suds. Do not let the hair go down the drain when you wash sinks or in other times in the middle, especially if you have long hair.It's easy to pick up the hair that accumulates in sinks and on the counter every time you brush your hair, and you will find that your drains running freely almost indefinitely. You can sweep the hair by hand or using a tissue if apprehensive. It's worth the effort, and their bathrooms look better, too.