Tough Toilet Cleaning

Tough Toilet Cleaning

Tough Toilet Cleaning

 

Tough Toilet Cleaning

Maybe it’s just where I live, but it seems in our house the toilet tends to get dirty real fast. When I first moved in, if we’re gone for a weekend then it would get that brown mold in it. I learned a little trick from my good friend Carley, to take care of the mold in the toilet is put 4 cups of bleach in the tank of the toilet and spray some bleach or cleaner with bleach in it around the bowl.

Then let it sit for 8 hours, so I do it before I go to bed. When I wake up I scrub the toilet and it is sparkling white! I haven’t had a problem since, but I still bleach the toilet every six months just to be sure, obviously with the usually cleaning as well.

Well a week ago I noticed that I was get these green hard water lines in the toilet. I tried the bleach but it didn’t come out. So naturally I did a little research. I put vinegar in a squirt bottle and spray the hard spots and let it sit for about 30-60 minutes. Then put baking soda on the toilet brush and scrub the hard spots.

They came right off. Something you should know and learn from my mistake is that if you have used bleach make sure you flush the toilet until it’s all gone before you use the vinegar. Apparently there is a toxic chlorine gas is released and unless you want to unleash chemical warfare on yourself then it’s probably not the best idea. The terrible chemical reaction will burn your nostrils, eyes, throat and may make it tough to breathe, so take it from me. Just don’t mix them!

Tough Toilet Cleaning

Hope this helps!

10 thoughts on “Tough Toilet Cleaning”

  1. I've tried just about everything to get rid of the green & brown hard water deposits. Even scraping them off with a butter knife! CLR, Lime-A-Way, Vinegar, Bleach, Clorox (the powder), NOTHING has worked. And my toilets? We're talking about a 1" line of hard water buildup. It's due to the seriously hard water here. I even have to clean the calcium deposits off my humidifier every single time I refill it.

    I'll have to give the baking soda a shot. Thanks for linking up at TitiCrafty so that I could find this!

    1. Use a pumice stone, found in the nail clipper aisle, after a regular bowl cleaning. It does not scratch the porcelain but works nicely to remove that hard water line. Do not use on chrome.

  2. Excited to see your post because I have those green hard water marks around the rim and everytime I clean I have no impact on them. It drives me nuts! Thanks for sharing on the Four Seasons party.

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