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I'm a cleaning expert, everyone is using this cheap viral product but there's three surfaces it should never touch

I'm a cleaning expert, everyone is using this cheap viral product but there's three surfaces it should never touch

The Irish Sun2 days ago
WHEN it comes to cleaning, everyone is looking for quick cheap hacks to lighten the load.
Experts come up with amazing tips using ingredients you normally find in your cupboard or fridge to get the
work
done cheaper.
2
Cleaning hacks are a godsend for many households
2
Using anything acidic on some surfaces could ruin your home
But one pro says a popular viral cleaning recommendation could be ruining your
home
.
Joseph Passalacqua, CEO of
Despite its growing popularity on social media platforms like TikTok, he says some surfaces can be permanently damaged by the acidic substance.
And he said it could cost householders thousands to repair.
READ MORE IN FABULOUS
Joseph said: "Natural stone surfaces like marble, granite, and quartzite should never come into contact with white vinegar.
"The acidity eats away at the calcium carbonate in these materials, permanently etching the surface."
The cleaning expert says stone surfaces are damaged by acidic solutions, restoration often requires professional intervention, which can cost hundreds or even thousands.
He added: "Many homeowners think vinegar is safe because it's natural, but so is lemon juice, and both will destroy a marble countertop just as quickly as any harsh chemical.
Most read in Fabulous
For stone surfaces, the expert recommends pH-neutral cleaners specifically formulated for the material.
And while many cleaning videos suggest vinegar for stainless steel surfaces - like draining boards or hobs - Joseph says this is a big no.
Inside filthiest house cleaned up by Kim Woodburn on How Clean Is Your House?
The cleaning guru said: "Vinegar can cause pitting on the surface of stainless steel over time.
"If you must use it, always dilute the solution with
water
to minimise damage."
The expert pointed out that repeated use of vinegar on stainless steel dishwashers and oven tops can also lead to a dull finish and eventually permanent spots that cannot be buffed out.
He said stainless steel should be cleaned with mild dish
soap
and
water
or dedicated stainless steel cleaners.
The third category of household surfaced to keep vinegar away from is anything with electronic components, the expert says.
He explained: "Spraying vinegar directly on screens or electronic interfaces can make touch screens less responsive and damage internal components.
"Many people spray vinegar directly on their TV screens or computer monitors thinking it's safer than commercial cleaners, but they're actually risking permanent damage to expensive equipment."
He recommends using specialised cleaners designed specifically for electronics as well as microfibre cloths.
But where can you use vinegar safely?
The cleaning expert explained that vinegar's popularity stems from its effectiveness on many other surfaces and its low cost compared to commercial cleaners.
Joseph explained: "Vinegar works wonderfully on glass, ceramic tile with sealed grout and porcelain fixtures. It's also excellent for removing mineral deposits from showerheads.
"Just keep it away from those three key surface types."
"The rule of thumb is simple. If something is porous, sensitive, or high-end, verify that vinegar is safe before applying it. When in doubt, test in an inconspicuous area first or simply use something else."
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Sarah Harte: The Gen Z stare is real, and we've all seen it
Sarah Harte: The Gen Z stare is real, and we've all seen it

Irish Examiner

time8 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Sarah Harte: The Gen Z stare is real, and we've all seen it

To paraphrase Jane Austen, it is a truth universally acknowledged that a middle-aged person, being a morally righteous pain, must want to criticise younger generations. It's an age thing, a bit like slowing down on a walk to read planning permissions. Recently, however, I have found myself in several professional situations that have led me to question both the social skills and, crucially, the expectations of some younger employees. At the weekend, I read an article in The New York Times about 'the Gen Z stare' with a sense of recognition. The Gen Z stare is when a Zoomer is asked a question in a public setting, and instead of answering verbally, they deliver a passive-aggressive stare. This phenomenon is currently sparking debate and garnering millions of views on TikTok. I've been on the receiving end of this stare professionally, even in interviews, always with those under 30, because it's very age specific. In the middle of an interview, facing down a superior blank stare, you wonder if you have hit your head, or have they? Am I that boring (possible), or are the questions off (again, possible)? These interviewees shared another commonality. When you approach them before the interview to shake their hand and say you look forward to interviewing them (standard protocol before an interview), they regard you as if you were unhinged. You fleetingly wonder if you have food in your teeth. Afterwards, these interviewees do not thank you. They float off back to their lives as if you are roadkill. At this point, I move from being nonplussed to wanting to shake them so hard that their teeth rattle in their heads. No longer socially acceptable, I know, to voice these thoughts. Content creators and influencers are currently debating online what's behind this dead stare. Various causes are being cited, including social anxiety, excessive use of technology leading to reduced face-to-face time and therefore impaired conversational skills, the impact of covid, a new type of stranger danger taken to its limits and normal adolescent and twenties bolshiness. All these reasons sound plausible. But what about a culture of entitlement? One Gen Z content creator explained that her peers dole out the stare instead of a verbal response because they feel they may not "owe" somebody a conversation. I find the use of the word "owe" telling. Some of the characters I've met over the last year came across as entitled bots who badly needed direction on the obligations of being a functioning young adult. More generally, I have discussed new workplace behaviours with various friends who are employers or senior managers in different walks of life, ranging from blue-chip corporate echelons to small businesses. The broad consensus is that there is a lack of understanding of how to behave in a professional context, and a marked interest in what works best for Gen Z employees. To take just one example, a refusal to take messages or calls outside of strictly defined working hours. So, if you forget to ask your junior employee a question before 6pm because your head is over a document, it will have to wait until the next day. Two minutes past six is too late, loser. You see the two ticks, and you know they've read the message, but tumbleweed. Any attempt to circumvent this watershed is viewed as a significant infringement of the employee's rights and liberty to live their best life. And if you query it directly, you could end up in the hot seat for bullying, so you grit your ageing teeth. There is no question that we can learn from Gen Z. Clear work-life boundaries are not a Gen X strength. Stick us down a coal mine and we will prostrate ourselves at your feet. Yet might the dead-eyed stare and the reluctance to take the call two minutes after 6pm tip over into the territory of viewing the world and your employer as there to serve you? Let's presume the experts are correct and social development has gone haywire due to what happened during the pandemic and young people being hypnotised by devices (devices we gave them) because much evidence supports this thesis. Is it not time for us to offer some guidance on expectations in the professional and social spheres to younger generations? Parenting Nobody is suggesting that a respectful working environment isn't preferable, but there is a balance to be struck, and the pressing question for me is what produces this entitlement? Could a parenting trend be in the dock for producing a certain type of employee? Gentle parenting centres, critics believe, around never saying no to your child because, as advocates would have it, 'adultism' is a structural discrimination that results in children being marginalised with their needs sidelined. Of course, children's rights are important. There is a growing, much-needed awareness in the legal sphere that children are separate entities with rights and voices. Yet, the idea that you should not say no to your child is bonkers. It will have consequences not only for the child and the adult they become, but also for society as a whole. A London friend shared an amusing story with me about an intergenerational family lunch she attended. The five-year-old nephew bit his three-year-old first cousin. The grandfather of both children told the five-year-old in no uncertain terms that biting was bad and that he was a bold boy. The parents of the biter took this very badly. They didn't commiserate with the victim; instead, they asked the biter how he felt and if he was okay. This was a laborious process. The parents of the biter ended up leaving in high dudgeon because nobody else agreed with them. Side note: Everyone was thrilled that they left and went on to have an enjoyable day. I wonder what happens to the biter in the long run, and more importantly, what happens to us when he leaves his cosy burrow where he reigns as a Pasha. When he graduates from biting his younger relatives in years to come, will he be doling out the dead stare? Will he be refusing to answer a work query at two minutes past six because he is the most important person in the universe? Team Human The voices of adults don't matter more than those of children, but young people need guidance and boundaries that make them feel more secure and help them navigate life. It's also what the wider society and the economy need; human beings who grasp that they are slotting into a bigger picture, although hopefully not as mindlessly as we did. Part of this is learning to understand that while at a given moment you may wish that your boss or the person you're serving would fall off a cliff, you need to maintain a minimum level of social grace and self-regulate. This needs to be taught with respectful but plain speaking. There's a quid pro quo for being paid. And there are hierarchies, explicit and implicit, at work. Best to figure this one out early. We're all part of Team Human. A valuable lesson in our increasingly individualised society is that collaboration and the collective good are worth something both inside and outside of work. A dead-eyed stare doesn't cut it. I've read other journalists suggesting that Gen Z don't have specific characteristics, and suggesting so is lazy stereotyping. But this is clearly untrue if you're an employer who is dealing with this behaviour on the frontline. When the recession arrives, as it always does, lessons will be learned. Competition for jobs may end up resting on the social skills Gen Z has dispensed with. Best to get ahead of the pack now, and start learning how to make eye contact and small talk. Read More

The little-known reason Scots should love BATS and why they're a lifesaver in the garden this summer
The little-known reason Scots should love BATS and why they're a lifesaver in the garden this summer

The Irish Sun

time14 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

The little-known reason Scots should love BATS and why they're a lifesaver in the garden this summer

KING Charles is to provide a new home for bats at his Scottish mansion so work can go ahead. Surveys found evidence of potential roosting sites after he applied for permission to build a luxury wedding venue in Dumfries House near Cumnock, Ayrshire, where bat boxes have now been installed in the grounds of the A-listed building. 4 The common pipistrelle is having to fight for survival. 4 A cloud of dreaded midges, that can blight any summer event. 4 Dr Joe Nunez-Mino is one of the UK's top bat experts. But The King isn't the only one to be left in a flap over bats with a £100million 'bat tunnel' also constructed for the controversial HS2 rail line in Buckinghamshire. Chief Features Writer MATT BENDORIS speaks to a top conservationist about why we need to help these nocturnal flying mammals. DOCTOR Joe Nunez-Mino has many reasons why a thriving bat population is good for the environment but one should endear them to Scots more than others - their voracious appetite for midges. As the biting insects continue to cause havoc at family barbecues and day-trips this summer, the one thing helping to keep them at bay are Scotland's airborne mammals. And Dr Joe from the Bat Conservation Trust insists that our nine species of resident bats help in many other ways too. He said: 'We can only estimate but we do know bats eat a lot of insects, each individual bat eating hundreds or even thousands (of midges) every night. 'Different bat species specialise in eating different insects, from biting insects like midges through to moths, including some insects that damage crops and gardens. 'To give one example, a study published last year estimated that bats in apple orchards reduce the total weight of apples damaged by codling moths by 50 per cent.' Most read in Fabulous In the UK all bat species and their roosts are legally protected by both European legislation and domestic laws including Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations (2017). But since the Wildlife and Countryside Act of 1981 it has been a criminal offence to disturb a structure or place bats use for shelter or protection. 'He is spooked' - Moment The Open commentator hides under his jacket as BAT invades broadcasting booth at Portrush It means DIY and commercial builders have to carry out expensive bat surveys costing several thousands - or more if the mammals are found and need to be removed. Dr Joe said: 'There is a cost associated with protecting the environment just like there is with health and safety or protecting historical heritage. 'While we as an organisation don't have any control or influence on the costs of bat surveys, we have worked with some Statutory Nature Conservation Organisations (SNCO) to streamline the process where possible. 'To avoid delays, it's important to take bats into account from the earliest stages of planning work.' He adds: 'Having a bat roost does not prevent developing a property, bats just need to be taken into account as part of the process. Householders should seek advice from their SNCO.' However Dr Joe believes that bats get a bad press including the 1km long bat tunnel in Buckinghamshire that added an extra £100million to the runaway cost of the HS2 rail line. He said: 'We were not involved in the process. However, we do know that multiple cross-party inquiries have found that HS2's delays and cost overruns stem from mismanagement, not nature protections. 'HS2 did not carry out a timely strategic environmental assessment which could have identified viable alternatives that could have avoided significant expenditure and delay.' While in 2002 Scottish wildlife artist David McRae, 56, from Tayside, died from rabies after being bitten by a bat - it was the first case of indigenous rabies in the UK in 100 years. Dr Joe said: 'Two rabies-related viruses have been detected in two bat species in the UK and in only a very small number of individuals. 'If someone is bitten, licked, nipped or scratched by a bat they should wash and disinfect the area and urgently seek medical treatment. 'The NHS has said prompt post-exposure vaccinations have been 100 per cent effective in preventing the disease.' But Dr Joe believes that work done by organisations like his and the stringent laws are helping bats, which have been in decline, to slowly make a recovery. BATS HAVE DELAYED HOUSE DEMOLITION BUT I STILL WANT TO PROTECT THEM LAST March my wife and I bought an uninhabitable bungalow on Scotland's West Coast and wanted to pull it down before it fell down and replace it with a shiny new build. But 16 months on there hasn't even been a spade in the ground because late on in the planning process it was suddenly announced we needed a bat survey. The problem was by the time we were informed last year, the flying mammals would be hibernating for the winter and a dusk survey - with infrared cameras and sound equipment - couldn't be carried out until the spring. In the end we didn't have any roosting bats, but it has added a £1,800 bill to the project we hadn't budgeted for. Someone else in the area wasn't so lucky and it cost them £5,000 to have their bats removed by an ecologist. But surely with all the technology now available there has to be a quicker - and far cheaper - way of checking where they are roosting, so people can get on with their projects? And when I do finally get my new house built any neighbourhood bats are more than welcome to come and live rent free. He explains: 'All bat species have suffered historical declines in population numbers but we have seen signs of initial recovery in some species. 'We are currently able to monitor five of the nine resident bat species in Scotland through the National Bat Monitoring Program. 'Of these five, four species - Daubenton's bat, Natterer's bat, common pipistrelle and brown long-eared bat - show no significant change since the base line year of 1999 and one species has increased - soprano pipistrelle. 'Bat conservation is important because they are a vital part of our natural heritage which make up around a quarter of our mammal species and they also play a critical role in the ecosystem. 'There is very good evidence that bat populations help to reduce the need for pesticides which ultimately harms the health of other wildlife and people too.' Read more on the Irish Sun He adds: 'Scotland would have a lot more midges and other insects without them.' *For more information on the Bat Conservation Trust visit 4 Soprano Pipistrelle bat numbers are showing signs of recovery.

Wilko's 49p buy will keep out creepy crawlies as UK's ‘biggest spider' believed to be hiding in homes
Wilko's 49p buy will keep out creepy crawlies as UK's ‘biggest spider' believed to be hiding in homes

The Irish Sun

time17 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Wilko's 49p buy will keep out creepy crawlies as UK's ‘biggest spider' believed to be hiding in homes

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