Water is the most important part of cleaning... pretty much anything. Without water we don't get suds, we don't wash, we don't rinse and things don't get clean.
But water can also be a source of grief.
I once asked someone if they had hard water. They said they didn't know. That means it's probably soft. People with hard water know they have hard water. The evidence is everywhere: the calcium and lime build up around faucet heads, the rings in glasses and the toilet, the dingy, gray-looking clothes, the mass amounts of soap needed to get a good clean.
And for diapers you can start to get those same build-ups in clothes that effect absorbency, etc.
I grew up in hard water but had a short reprieve when I moved to Virginia where the water was nice and soft. My clothes and diapers came clean the first time with my Charlie's Soap and I didn't have a very difficult time with laundry or diaper care.
Then we moved.
Hello Iowa. Hello hard water!
My Charlie's Soap became inefficient.
So, I started the search for the perfect, hard water combination.
My first stop was to try the water softener additive Calgon. It certainly helped the laundering process but it was very expensive. The amount of water I was using to wash, plus the Calgon, plus the detergent was just getting too expensive of a combination.
I was willing to do it until my son started getting a little bit of a rash. Upon research I found that Calgon can be rash inducing on some babies.
I was getting a little discouraged.
Then a friend of mine gave me a tip.
She went out and bought a $6, 50 lbs bag or Morton's Water Softener salt pellets. She puts 6-10 pellets in each load of laundry and VIOLA, no Calgon, the bag lasts forever and clean laundry is her only result.
I figured it certainly wouldn't hurt to try. After all, it's only $6.
It's the greatest hard water tip I've ever gotten.
I also switched from Charlie's Soap to Planet Laundry Detergent and while I loved my Charlie's in soft water it just wasn't enough for the hard water conditions here.
It helps get the diapers (and our regular clothes) clean, clean, clean, without the dingy build up and with no rashes.
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I think what you are seeing is a psychosomatic result. Adding salt to hard water will give you salty hard water. The only way to know if the salt actually softened your water is to test it. Salt is used as a recharge medium for resin-based softeners which replace calcium ions with sodium ions. It is the resin that enables this result, not the salt. The salt is used to flush the calcium ions from the resin and recharge it with either sodium or potassium ions.
ReplyDeleteI suggest you re-post once you've actually tested your water hardness. That's much preferable to spreading misinformation.
Interesting... I was searching this info for my grandpa. He will be happy for such a great info. Thanks for sharing...
ReplyDeleteAna
Great post! I hope you will share more with us. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteNice post! Thanks and keep on sharing.
ReplyDeleteMichael
Wow! You are the best. Thank you so much for sharing this invaluable info!
ReplyDeleteSmiles to you,
Chiara
VERY helpful!! Thanks.
ReplyDeletePhil
i cannot wait to try this on my super hard water!! thanks so much!!
ReplyDelete