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Spring Clean Your House in a Weekend

Spring cleaning is a job few people enjoy. But it doesn't have to be overwhelming—and you don't have to do it alone. Working together, your family can get it over and done with in a weekend. Here's how to tackle the job with a minimum of fuss.

Get Ready
  • Walk through each room in your house with paper and pen; list what you need to do.
  • Take stock of cleaning supplies and equipment. Buy items you need.
  • Call a charity organization and schedule a time after your cleaning weekend for them to pick up items and clothes you want give away.
Get Set
  • The week before spring cleaning, have family members declutter for 10 minutes each night. Be ruthless with things like gift boxes, grocery sacks, old magazines and catalogs and craft materials you've saved to use but haven't.
  • Clean out remainders from your refrigerator and freezer, and purge your pantry of food you never use. Do one or two shelves at a time during short nightly segments.
  • Assign cleaning tasks to family members according to age and skill level.
  • Stock plastic buckets or totes with cleaning supplies.
  • Put trash bags in central locations for easy access Saturday morning.
  • Attach a long extension cord on your vacuum cleaner so you can move quickly through rooms and hallways. Replace the bag if needed.
  • Spray your oven with oven cleaner Friday night. Put the drip pans from your stove and the ventilating fan/hood filter in a sink full of hot soapy water. Let them soak overnight.
Go!

Get up early Saturday morning and have family members strip bed linens (including mattress pads) and remove curtains that need cleaning. Begin washing. Keep laundry moving from washer to dryer every 30 minutes.

 

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Morning Jobs: Living Areas and Bedrooms

 

  • Vacuum. Moving from room to room, use brush attachment to vacuum cobwebs from ceilings and corners, light fixtures, ceiling-fan blades, shutters or blinds, door and window moldings, lamp shades, pictures, windowsills and baseboards. Use upholstery attachment to vacuum drapes and upholstered furniture.
  • Dust and polish wood furniture, shelves and knickknacks.
  • Wipe off woodwork with sponge and mild soapy solution.
  • Clean mirrors and glass furniture tops.
  • Flip mattresses and put clean linens on beds.
  • Dust-mop or vacuum wood floors and vacuum rugs or carpets.

Early Afternoon: The Kitchen

 

  • Vacuum ceiling and corners, fan blades and light fixtures.
  • Vacuum refrigerator coils and front grill.
  • Defrost freezer if necessary. Wipe off refrigerator shelves.
  • Clean inside microwave.
  • Finish cleaning oven and stovetop. Replace drip pans.
  • Wipe off outside of appliances.
  • Clean countertops and backsplash.
  • Disinfect trashcan.
  • Wipe off woodwork, and drawer and cabinet handles.
  • Vacuum, mop and wax floor

Late Afternoon: Clean Bathrooms

 

  • Remove shower-curtain liners. Wash for five minutes with a bath towel on delicate cycle; hang on a line or shower rod to drip-dry.
  • Launder throw rugs. (Toss the bathtub mat in this load.)
  • Vacuum ceiling and corners, light fixtures, windowsill and baseboards.
  • Spray shower, tub and toilet with heavy-duty cleaner. (Be sure to open a window or turn on exhaust fan first.) Let solutions go to work, then wipe off and rinse clean.
  • Wipe off woodwork and switch plates, bathroom scale and knickknacks.
  • Clean mirror and chrome fixtures.
  • Vacuum floor, then mop floor with disinfectant.
Smarter Cleaning
  • Think gravity. Clean from top to bottom; that's the direction the dirt goes.
  • Vacuum — instead of dusting or sweeping — whenever possible. It's quicker and usually more thorough.
  • Use time-saving cleaning wipes.
  • Don't get distracted. If you find a magazine you've been looking for under a bed, don't stop to read it.
  • Don't clean anything that's not dirty. For example, wipe smudges off a door without cleaning the entire door.
  • Work around a room instead of crisscrossing it so you don't have to carry supplies and equipment back and forth.
  • No help from a spouse? Your children too young to help? Team up with another mom in the same boat. You help her spring clean and she helps you do the same. Two vacuums and four hands can get both homes done twice as fast.  

For more ideas on housekeeping for people who hate housework check out the book, The Family Manager Takes Charge (by Kathy Peel).

 

 

Spring Clean Your House in a Weekend:  Created on March 2nd, 2006.  Last Modified on January 21st, 2014

 

About Kathy Peel

Kathy Peel lectures each month from podiums across the nation and is a frequent guest on television and radio programs. In her engaging, entertaining style, she gives audiences practical advice and news they can use on topics such as parenting, home organization, time management, family relationships, women’s issues, entertaining, entrepreneurship, life balance and practical spirituality. www.familymanager.com