San Antonio Express-News

Don’t let vacuum roller get clogged with long hair

- John, via email Heloise

I have long hair and have noticed how it has become the current fashion trend, so I thought I’d share this hint. I discovered that having long hair is nearly as bad as having a shaggy long-haired dog in the family! In the past, when I vacuumed the carpets, the roller got filled with innumerabl­e, annoying, tightly wound strands of strong hair that had to be pulled out.

Suddenly, I got an idea. Certainly, I thought the hair is just lying on the surface of the carpet. What if I used a broom or a brush to capture a portion of the hair before I vacuumed? I went to my broom closet and found a scrubbing brush on the end of a broomstick. So, I tried long gentle sweeps of the surface of the carpet, and sure enough, I could pick up quite a bit of hair, saving some of the usual struggle of removing hair from the roller brush. From that day on, that is what I do.

Priscilla Zanni, Vancouver, Washington

Dear Heloise: With regard to the lady who tapes her grocery list and coupons to her car steering wheel, I have a far better solution, so as to not forget those things when going shopping. Take a clothespin or a clip and just attach the list to your car keys! If you need to take food somewhere, put the food in the fridge along with the car keys. You can hardly forget your keys when leaving home.

Victoria, Sidney, Ohio

Dear Heloise: One of my family’s favorite ways of economizin­g and reusing resources over the holidays is wrapping gifts with black and white newspaper and tying them with twine or ribbon. This produces a simple, rustic look and cuts down on the storage space necessary for all the usual gift-wrapping bling.

A Reader, in Virginia

Dear Heloise: How do profession­al maids clean walk-in showers, where the walls and part of the floor cannot be reached from outside the door? I end up taking off my clothes and sloshing around in some chemical cleaners. I fill a large drinking cup with water from the showerhead to rinse the tiles and floor. Surely, profession­al maids do not clean showers in their client’s houses in this manner.

John, here’s another solution. This is my Heloise home-style method for cleaning the shower: Use a sponge mop that has been dipped into a bucket containing a mixture of 1/2 cup of vinegar, 1 cup of clear ammonia and 1/4 cup of baking soda in 1 gallon of water.

Rub the mop around the surfaces, and then rinse with clear water. (Also, don’t try to remove stains on porcelain tiles or fiberglass with abrasive powders or steel-wool pads, because they will scratch.) Happy cleaning!

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