Know Your Roots found a new home!

Spring is a time for new beginnings, and so it is appropriate that early this past spring we found our new home. Finding a home for our multigenerational family and business was no easy task. It took almost two years. Our list of needs and wants was great and nothing seemed to fit the bill until we walked into the house on Brook Road. It simply felt right, as if we always belonged there ~ home. Although it was very painful saying farewell to the land we nurtured for almost 7 year; it was clear that we were making the right move.

There are many wonderful features to our new home but the one that is hard to miss, are the gardens. The previous owners had cultivated the landscape for over 23 years with lots of love and intention ~ not to mention, hard work. As an herbalist and forager, the land will present many amazing learning opportunities for me. There are so many cultivated plants that I have never come across before. Some plant varieties are familiar, as I know their wild relative but others are quite foreign to me. It will be wonderful experimenting and learning from all my new green allies.

The land does have some of my favorites, while others are not to be found, so I did my best to transplant my dear plants into the nursery Mike built for them. Folks, let me be honest, this was very difficult for the forager in me. I felt like a fish out of water, I am not sure I did it right, but I do visit them a lot, ask them to grow and water them with lots of love and intentions. I hope they feel comfortable and will flourish on their new land.

Interestingly, Boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) did not come back in abundance on the land at my old house this year. Therefore, I only took one small plant. Sadly, it wilted within the 2 mile drive to the new house. I was very nervous and planted it on the edge of our little stream bed in the back, as it likes wet feet. To my surprise, it is doing the best out of all the transplants and has already started to produce buds.

I am eager to teach and share our new land with you. My first class “The Golden Answer,” will held be on September 2nd. It will be fun exploring the Golden Goddess on our new land. I am particularly, curious to see how many different varieties of Solidago we will find. There are over 130 different species in North America. Our old land had huge stands of Goldenrod, which predominately 5 species. A time of new beginnings begins…

I am looking forward to sharing and exploring our new land with you.

Getting the rust out

Nasty stained tub! YUCK!

Nasty stained tub! YUCK!

Over the past weekend, we moved out of our old 1858 house. And of course, I needed to clean it for its next residents. I used my magical remedy on our rust covered tub and thought I would share my discovery again with you.

I really hate cleaning something when it doesn’t end up looking any better than when I started. I really need the validation of appearance that it is indeed clean. Call me superficial, but that’s the way it is. We live in a house built in 1858 and not being validated for my efforts happens a lot. The hard water leaves a nasty terracotta hue on everything, and the other day, I decided I couldn’t bear looking at our tub anymore. It did not matter that it was clean and it was only a stain covering most of the tub. I wanted to take a shower in a WHITE tub. Of course, I tried my old buddiesbaking soda and white vinegar, but nothing. I scrubbed it with comet and left it on over night. Perhaps the stain was not as orange, but it was still there. I started to Google rust stains. I came across an interesting remedy that the blogger swore by ~ Dawn dish detergent (it had to be Dawn) scrubbed into the tub then sprayed with white vinegar, and left on over night. I decided to give it a whirl ~ it did not make an ounce of difference. Needless to say, I was getting a bit despondent. I know I should be grateful that I have a clean tub, but living in grunginess tends to get a girl down after awhile.

I remembered years ago, hearing that Cream of Tartar was good for removing rust stains. I decided to Google it. There were quite a few blogs about using Cream of Tartar for cleaning and some other interesting tidbits about it. Cream of Tartar is a by-product of the winemaking process. It comes from tartaric acid, a naturally occurring substance in winemaking. It’s found in the sediment left behind in wine barrels and bottles after fermentation, before it gets purified into the powdery white substance that we use in baking. Another helpful tip for bakers who have run out of baking powder ~ all you have to do is combine cream of tartar with baking soda to create your very own baking powder. Cream of Tartar is also known as potassium bitartrate. It is an acid salt, and something very interesting about acid salts it that when they are dissolved into a liquid, they lower the pH of the liquid.

But I digress, Cream of Tartar is also known for removing stains, even rust stains on bathtubs. I found several recipes; all of them combined the cream of tartar with an acidic liquid ~ white vinegar or hydrogen peroxide or lemon juice. I suspect the acidity of the liquid helps the Cream of Tartar do its job. I was curious to see which liquid would better facilitate the bleaching action of the cream of tartar.

I decided to compare Cream of Tartar with white vinegar and hydrogen peroxide. I didn’t think it was necessary to use lemon juice as well. The recipe is very simple and the results blew me away.

The miracle

The miracle

  1. Combine equal parts of Cream of Tartar with the acidic liquid to make a thick paste.
  2. Gently cover the tub in the paste ~ no scrubbing needed.
  3. Wait 30 mins. and rinse off paste.

    Just mix into a thick paste

    Just mix into a thick paste

tub half and half

Check out the difference!

I was blinded by the white tub in front of me! Both pastes worked well, but I think the one with the hydrogen peroxide might have been a little brighter. I am so amazed how easy and fabulous the results were. I know it may be silly but I cannot tell you how fantastic it feels to shower in our bright white tub.

I swear, it really is the same tub!

I swear, it really is the same tub!

How do you clean rust stains? Please share and I will continue to share.