Grant and I have been discussing and praying about ways to lower our budget, so we can start saving up a financial reserve and storing food. The answer came in an inspired email from my mother-in-law. It was just a suggestion to check out someone's blog that I had been putting off till I had the time. What I found out when I read it was there are TONS of ways that we can save and be more self-reliant. The blog is written by a sweet lady who lives in Australia and writes to encourage people to be more green, save money, be self-reliant, and value homemaking. She is an excellent writer. It is an inspirational blog.

So I took dear Rhonda-Jean's advice and dared to knit my own cloths, make my own bread and yogurt, and make my own house-hold cleaners... including laundry soap.It has been quite the adventure. I snooped around our local grocers looking for ingredients I had never heard of. I mean... how many of you know what Bicarb soda is? really...

After a few hours of mispronouncing the name to store clerks and looking up and down the cleaning aisle (sure I had missed it) I found out that Bicarb Soda is Sodium Bicarbonate, known in AMERICA as Baking Soda! :D I laughed so hard at my foolishness. Of course the most common ingredient in so many of these cleaners was Baking Soda! I had heard of using Baking Soda to clean and deodorize before!

When I bought the BIG pot I would need to make my ten liters of laundry liquid, the store clerk asked if I was going to make spaghetti. I laughed and said, "Nope! I'm making laundry detergent!" I got the strangest look.

Turns out that just like making healthy bread is cheaper than buying healthy bread because the amount of each ingredient you use costs much less, making your own laundry detergent is MUCH cheaper than buying even the store brands. Plus it doesn't have some of the unnecessary chemicals (ones added just to make bubbles) and such.

At the Harold B. Lee Library, I found a wonderful book written by a chemist about what the ingredients in common brands of household chemicals do and why they use them. I couldn't put it down. It's entitled
The Complete Guide to Household Chemicals by Robert J. Palma, Sr., Ph. D. with Mark Espenscheid. I strongly recommend it to those of you interested in simplifying your budget and understanding the preservatives and additives in household chemicals, foods, and such. It even covers what is in your cars and why.
Anyhow, here are the pictures from my fun experience.
This is all I needed to make my laundry detergent.

I graded up that little bar of laundry soap and heated it in some water on the stove till is was all melted. Then added the other ingredients.

After it was all mixed together, I poured it into a bucket and added a bunch of water and then let it set up. This is the ten liter bucket while it was cooling. The whole process took about 25 mins.
4 comments:
That is so cool! You inspire me to try homemade laundry detergent myself!
Wow! This is really neat. What a fantastic idea! Thanks for sharing.
Wow, you're so inspiring! I think I might actually try these things! :) Thanks for sharing!
Woo hooooooooooo!~
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