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Home Remedy Stuff

1 01 2006


A home remedy is a treatment or cure for a disease or other ailment that employs certain foods or other common household items. Home remedies may or may not have actual medicinal properties that serve to treat or cure the disease or ailment in question; many are merely used as a result of tradition or habit or because they are quite effective in inducing the placebo effect.

Believe it or not, most of the time — home remedy do works however sometime you don’t have right ingredients at home especially at last minutes. Personally, sometime I would use over the counter and sometime I would use home remedy. Whichever works for you.

  • Good dog and cat repellent.
    Place mothballs in areas. They will avoid it. Animals hate mothball odour.
  • Keep bugs out of paint.
    Pour a little insect repellent into the can - it does the trick. 
  • Easy boiled egg peeling.
    Keep lid on for a few minutes after boiling, pressure causes shell to fall off. 
  • Peel onions without tears.
    Let water run over them while peeling. 
  • Easy to rid pets of fleas.
    Put a foam rubber bed in the pet’s bed - fleas hate it.
  • A simple roach formula - IT WORKS!
    Crumble cigarette butts in water, let dry then spread in roach areas.

Check out for alot more home remedy or secret stuff at 
http://www.inter-web.co.uk/secrets.htm

There’s more good health home remdy: Click here and here.

Grant W Laird Jr.
http://blog.grantlairdjr.com


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2 responses to “Home Remedy Stuff”

24 08 2006
bangremedy (02:18:43) :

Thanks for Info..about Home Remedy Stuff

11 03 2007
David Espy (16:27:22) :

I think based on the info below that it is not prudent to publish that mothballs be used a cat or dog deterrent.

Mothballs
Did You Know…Mothballs can be potentially toxic to dogs, cats and other animals, particularly those containing an ingredient known as naphthalene. Some mothball formulations may alternatively contain an insecticide known as dichlorobenzene, which is somewhat less toxic than naphthalene. However, it can still cause stomach upset and potentially even neurologic effects, if large enough amounts are consumed. In 2005, the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center managed close to four dozen cases involving animals exposed to mothball products.

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