Green Cleaning Products Paola KS

Clean your home with the eco-friendly, non-toxic and biodegradable cleaners that will protect your children and pets while making your home spic and span. Green cleaning products are safer to use and help the environment. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to all the related products and services in Paola, KS listed below.

Walmart Supercenter
(913) 294-5400
310 Hedge Lane
Paola, KS
Store Hours
Mon-Fri:8:00 am -Sat:8:00 am -Sun:8:00 am -
Pharmacy #
(913) 294-5777
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Friday: 9:00 am - 9:00 pm Saturday: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Sunday: 10:00 am - 6:00 pm

Supertarget
(913) 393-4400
15345 W 119Th St
Olathe, KS
Store Hours
M-Fr: 8:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.Sa: 8:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.Su: 8:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.

Aldi
20250 W. 154Th Street
Olathe, KS
Store Hours
Monday-Friday 9am - 8pm
Saturday 9am - 8pm
Sunday 10am - 7pm

Price Chopper Bakery & Deli
(913) 557-5666
309 N Hospital Dr
Paola, KS
 
Moon'S Iga
(913) 755-2635
701 6 Osawatomie
Osawatomie, KS
 
Walmart Supercenter
(913) 884-8004
1725 E Santa Fe St
Gardner, KS
Store Hours
Mon-Fri:8:00 am -Sat:8:00 am -Sun:8:00 am -
Pharmacy #
(913) 884-8411
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Friday: 9:00 am - 9:00 pm Saturday: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Sunday: 10:00 am - 6:00 pm

Walmart Supercenter
(913) 829-4404
13600 S. Alden St.
Olathe, KS
Store Hours
Mon-Fri:8:00 am -Sat:8:00 am -Sun:8:00 am -
Pharmacy #
(913) 829-5300
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Friday: 9:00 am - 9:00 pm Saturday: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Sunday: 10:00 am - 6:00 pm

Caseys General Store 1337
(913) 294-9717
404 S Silver St
Paola, KS
 
Wal-Mart Supercenter
(913) 294-0819
310 Hedge Ln
Paola, KS
 
Pretz George Dairy
(913) 755-3806
27375 W 347th St
Paola, KS
 

Green Cleaners: Does It matter? Where Do I Start?

Green Cleaners: Does it matter? Where do I start?

September 19, 2009   Alli Marshall

While there still aren’t products out there to make housework less detestable, there are products that make housework more healthy. We’re talking green (non-toxic, biodegradable) cleaners. On the Free To Be You & Me track “Housework” (taking you back to 1972 here), Carol Channing chanted, “Your mommy hates housework, Your daddy hates housework, I hate housework too. And when you grow up, so will you.”

Why use green cleaners? Because chemicals in conventional household cleaners—ammonia, chlorine bleach, aerosols and petroleum distillates—lead to health hazards. Negative effects include headaches, flu-like symptoms and possibly cancer.

Children and pets are vulnerable to chemical toxins because they crawl or lie on the floor and tend to put everything within reach into their mouths. Also, studies show many chemical cleaners can trigger asthma. These are great reasons to go green, even if you don’t have little people or furry friends sharing your living space. Exposure to household chemicals accounts for a significant percentage of Poison Center calls, not to mention that discarded products wind up in our waterways where they threaten fish and wildlife.

The Clorox Green Works line is an easy place to start greening up your cleaners. No specialty shopping trips needed, the price is right (under $10 for a 64 oz. bottle of all purpose cleaner) and reviewers like Good House Keeping give the line a thumbs up. Also widely available: Seventh Generation cleaners. Seventh Generation offers cleaners for every kind of dirt. Need a fresher carpet? The Carpet Spot & Stain Remover uses hydrogen peroxide (the same stuff you use to clean your teeth and disinfect a cut) as the stain removal agent.

While grocery store brand Mrs. Meyer’s Clean Day stops shy of a chemical-free claim (“Honestly, this is an impossible claim to make. Water is a chemical, air is a chemical, essential oils are chemicals, and the world as we know it is a configuration of various carbon chains,” says the Web site), the company promises it’s “Aromatherapeutic” cleaners are safe to use in the presence of children, pets and expectant moms. Shop by scent (including basil, lemon verbena and geranium) or task; the dish soap is a sure bet with grease-busting action and runs about $4 for 16 oz.

But do they actually disinfect? There is some discussion around this subject — after all, the whole point of cleaning is to remove the dirt, funk and germy nastiness. But, like good ol’ soap and water versus fancy-shmancy antibacterial soap, a little elbow grease gets the job done. Method is one company that’s worked to meet both environmental standards and clean standards. “Efficacy” tops the company’s “What we’re for” list and, while they don’t offer disinfectant, they do have this to say: “If method ever did an antimicrobial product, then we would make sure tha...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist