Rick a burlap bag and a brick will solve your problem at the source unless it's your wife's cat.fossil said:Geez, I guess we need another new forum for household tips. What do you folks do about those nasty cat puke stains on your carpets? Rick
Ed
Rick a burlap bag and a brick will solve your problem at the source unless it's your wife's cat.fossil said:Geez, I guess we need another new forum for household tips. What do you folks do about those nasty cat puke stains on your carpets? Rick
kenny chaos said:fossil said:What do you folks do about those nasty cat puke stains on your carpets? Rick
How the heck did a cat get in the house?
EDGE said:Well, "fossil", I don't have any cat-puke stains on my carpets. I don't have any cats and my floors are concrete.
Doing The Dixie Eyed Hustle said:Chutes, read the labels. The ingredient list on the bottle of Cuddle Soft says "contains biodegradable fabric softener ingredients(cationic)".
fossil said:EDGE said:Well, "fossil", I don't have any cat-puke stains on my carpets. I don't have any cats and my floors are concrete.
Maybe I could keep the carpets and just get some concrete cats. Rick
chutes said:Much of my motivation for buying the stove was to save money over time. I was thinking last night about ways to reduce my electric bill as well. I would guess that my clothes dryer is a big electric hog, and with a wife and 3 kids, we do at least a couple of loads per day it seems.
Has anyone tried using their stove room to dry clothes? Perhaps some kind of retractable clothesline? I work from home, and so wife and kids are out all day on weekdays. I could easily hang things up in the stove room - which is typically in the high 80s, but would that work effectively? Anybody try this or do it regularly?
Thanks-
Dave
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