How to get clean without chemicalsYour mother was right - a little elbow grease will go a long wayBy Ray Ford
Look for the EcoLogoCanada’s Environmental Choice certification for soaps and shampoos includes biodegradability tests, and a ban on phosphates and harmful ingredients, including EDTA, and alkylphenol ethoxylates, surfactants that break down to produce nonylphenols. But there aren’t a lot of EcoLogo-certified personal-care products available. Only two companies, Deb Canada and Nature Clean, have certified shampoos on the market. Use elbow greaseIt’s the missing ingredient that’s not on the label, and never part of a marketing campaign, but a little effort and persnicketiness can trump harmful chemical cleaners. Take handwashing: Conventional soap merely makes your hands slippery enough to rinse off dirt, organic material, and bacteria. You don’t need a fancy germ-killer, you just need to work the soap around for about 15 seconds before rinsing. “It’s really a mechanical cleansing,” says Dr. Lindsay Nicolle, a professor of internal medicine and medical microbiology at the University of Manitoba. When soap and water aren’t handy (such as in the outhouse), alcohol-based hand sanitizers are a lake-safe option. But they only tackle microbes, not actual dirt. “If you’ve got soiled hands, they don’t get through the dirt,” says Nicolle. Maintain a buffer zone Put as much distance as possible between your cleaners and the lake. Bathing in the lake is always a bad idea, but so is washing the boat or car near the water. A buffer zone of plants and trees, combined with good septic maintenance, will help scrub out contaminants before they hit the water.
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Published in the May 2008 issue of Cottage Life magazine. Copyright © 2008 by Cottage Life. All rights reserved. Reproduction of any article, photograph, or artwork, for other than personal use, in whole or in part, without the written permission of the publisher is strictly forbidden. |
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