Guest Writer: Ruth Morse
I have a couple of very important questions. These are not profound, earth shattering questions. The answers won't help bring world peace. They won't find a cure for a catastrophic illness.
But this particular subject BUGS ME! And I offer some helpful hints on how to recycle your lint, many different things you can do with it.
Are you ready for the questions? Here we go....
Question #1: Where does all that lint in the dryer come from??
I understand lint after drying a load of fluffy bath towels. Or brand new sweatshirts. Or even sweaters.
But, it's always there, no matter what was in the load!
I mean, these might be Jim's well-used Land's End tee shirts. I washed them last week! How come they produced more lint this week? Jim doesn't WORK in a lint factory. I'm beginning to think we LIVE in one. I don't see lint in the air. I don't find it on the floor. The only place it appears is in the dryer filter. What gives?
Short pause while ya'll ponder that question.
Question #2: Is there any good use for lint?
Walmart and JoAnn's sell big bags of poly-fill. Is that just glorified lint? Are there hoards of people saving their dryer lint to sell? Is this a home-based business opportunity that I have overlooked?
Out of curiosity, I just googled "uses for dryer lint." There were 40,600 hits! Obviously, I have been throwing away a valuable resource.
Want to know what some of them said? Brace Yourself.
- Use it as packing material when you ship a present. I don't know how you are going to explain that to Aunt Minerva, but give it a try.
- Spin it like wool into thread and use it to weave, crochet or knit. Please don't send me a scarf made out of this stuff.
- Use as mulch around your plants to protect them in cold weather. Huh? Some people must have higher quality, better looking lint than we do.
- Use it carefully because it is highly flammable. Which leads to another use: fire starters. Stuff a bunch in an egg carton, pour melted paraffin over the mess. They say you can just break off a chunk and throw it into the fireplace or fire pit to get your wood going. I suppose you'd better use a cardboard egg carton, unless you enjoy melting foam fumes along with burning lint fumes.
Once I got to the disclaimer about lint being flammable, I lost all interest in molding, stuffing, creating, gluing, or bedazzling my old tired lint.
And that leads to the one serious suggestion in this whole post: clean your lint filter every time you use the dryer. Routinely check the vent opening outside the house (editor's note: Wha???) for accumulating lint. (Editor's note: Yikes) If possible, clean the entire dryer hose annually.
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...and one more thing......
uh, I'll get back to you when I remember it.
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The Cheap Senior Citizen is a Guest Writer who occasionally shares helpful hints she has learned through her experience.
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uh, I'll get back to you when I remember it.
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The Cheap Senior Citizen is a Guest Writer who occasionally shares helpful hints she has learned through her experience.
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1 comment:
All I know about lint is that I saw a "huge" guy on TV that was saving all his navel lint for the Guiness World Book of Records, good grief!
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