Room by Room Cleaning Schedule

This post is linked to Works for Me Wednesdays over at We Are That Family.

As a part of my cleaning routine I like to tackle two rooms each morning.  Doing two rooms each day six days a week means no room has to go for more than a few days without a thorough cleaning.  Here’s the rotation that works for our house:

  • Monday – Bedroom and Bathroom
  • Tuesday – Kitchen and Entryway
  • Wednesday – Living Room and Office
  • Thursday – Bedroom and Bathroom
  • Friday – Kitchen and Entryway
  • Saturday – Living Room and Office (or switch Office for Spare Bedroom)
  • Sunday – Day of rest!

With this rotation the main living areas are tidied for the weekend when we are most likely to get visitors.  My only downfall is that Wednesday is my early day at work and I never seem to build up the gusto after work to clean like I would in the morning.  This is bad because Wednesday is the day I tackle the kitchen which is by far the toughest to maintain.  It still works out pretty well though.

I love having a schedule like this.  It keeps me focused and helps me to avoid the feeling of running in many directions at once.  Plus, when I get my two rooms done I let myself relax – even if the rest of the house is looking beautiful.

Is there a certain rotation that you use it your house?

Notes on Strawberry Jam Day

Remember last year?  My Mom and sister and I teamed up to make our jam for the whole year.  This year I took the idea to our church instead.  Our church is always looking for new fellowship ideas and  I was hoping the event would draw people in.  The thought was that I would bring my berries and supply the sugar and know how to anyone who wanted to can some of their own.  Here are a few notes on how things went:

  • Attendance – myself and 4 others
  • Strawberries used – approximately 20# whole, uncleaned
  • Pints produced – 23
  • Time from start to finish – about 4 hours
  • The cleaning went very fast – maybe a half hour to an hour.  There was a bit of a downtime after that until we had several batches going back to back.  Next time it might be better to start a few batches right away before the cleaning is done.
  • You can never have enough tubs for everyone to put their scraps in.
  • On the stove we had a canner, and small saucepan with lids, and two pots of jam going at once.  We started with only one pot of jam so we had room to heat the pot of hot water for the jars.  Once it was hot enough with moved the pot of jars on to the floor.  It stayed plenty hot the whole time.
  • We used almost 10# of sugar.
  • Don’t forget the lemon juice!  I almost did.
  • This time I was the only one who brought berries to process.  If there were multiple people canning jam for themselves I think it would be handy to have each keep their jam on one bath towel and label that towel with a piece of masking tape and their name.  That way the jam could be left there to cool if needed without any confusion.
  • Next year I need to pick the date further ahead.  This time I didn’t pick until less than two weeks before which left very little time for advertising.
  • I paid $1.10/# and priced other places at $1.50/#.
  • We had a wonderful time!! I really enjoyed the fellowship and would like to get together like that more often.

If you’d like to plan something similar and have any questions I will try to help you if I can.  I think this is the type of thing that could really take off given today’s economic troubles and rising concerns over food safety and origin.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.