Quote:
Use a cotton ball, and spray it with the bleach solution.
Solution:
2 cups household bleach in an empty clean milk jug, LABEL it with a sharpie pen.
Fill with water.
Dump into an empty spray bottle & use for all sorts of clean ups: toilets, counters 9especially after cutting up meat) dish drainers, dish washers or what ever.
Dab the spot every so often.
Alcohol on a cotton ball also works, but burns and takes a bit longer to kill off.
Then hydrogen peroxide should work too? Basically anything that kills germs without killing the host? The vet had me use Captan on the dogs. I had mixed success with it. I don't think that it's recommend by any source as safe for humans.
my experience? hydrogen peroxide doesn't seem to affect fungus ... at least not the fungi that affect the humans around here (we've tried it)
I pour a dollop down the sinks now and then, since it does affect many bacteria, and the heat and oxygen it generates, tends to break up whatever gunk is sitting in the P traps and overflow drains -- by the time the peroxide gets to the septic tank, it has given up its additional oxygen and reverted to plain H2O
oxygen doesn't seem to poison fungi the way it poisons many bacteria -- so it's a germicide but not a fungicide
Use a cotton ball, and spray it with the bleach solution.
Solution:
2 cups household bleach in an empty clean milk jug, LABEL it with a sharpie pen.
Fill with water.
Dump into an empty spray bottle & use for all sorts of clean ups: toilets, counters 9especially after cutting up meat) dish drainers, dish washers or what ever.
Dab the spot every so often.
Alcohol on a cotton ball also works, but burns and takes a bit longer to kill off.
Then hydrogen peroxide should work too? Basically anything that kills germs without killing the host? The vet had me use Captan on the dogs. I had mixed success with it. I don't think that it's recommend by any source as safe for humans.
my experience? hydrogen peroxide doesn't seem to affect fungus ... at least not the fungi that affect the humans around here (we've tried it)
I pour a dollop down the sinks now and then, since it does affect many bacteria, and the heat and oxygen it generates, tends to break up whatever gunk is sitting in the P traps and overflow drains -- by the time the peroxide gets to the septic tank, it has given up its additional oxygen and reverted to plain H2O
oxygen doesn't seem to poison fungi the way it poisons many bacteria -- so it's a germicide but not a fungicide