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Karvonen Design StudioSave Photo
7. Watch What Goes Into Your Dishwasher

Check plates for things like toothpicks, bones, olive pits and fruit pits, paper labels stuck on jars and sticky pricing labels left on newly purchased plates.

If you pull a glass dish out that’s been chipped, check immediately for broken pieces or shards in your dishwasher. If small enough, broken glass can start breaking down and get inside the system.

8. Use Your Machine’s Options

Check out the cycles and options on your machine, and don’t be afraid to use the ones that work best for targeted cleaning. The pots and pans setting, for example, isn’t just for washing pots and pans, but is for tackling a higher level of food soil.

If you don’t run your dishwasher every day, use the short wash and rinse cycles until you’ve got a full load. For example, if you load up your dishwasher at night but still have room for dishes after breakfast and lunch the next day, run a rinse cycle. This will rinse food soils out of the system before you run a regular cycle and will help cut down on odors.



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Ballard + Mensua ArchitectureSave Photo
2. Maintain as Needed

Keep on top of garden maintenance even as you relax your winter cleanup approach. Remove dead or weak branches from trees and shrubs to prevent them from breaking off and causing damage during storms. You’ll also want to remove any rotting stems on herbaceous perennials, and any diseased foliage.

Replace fading annuals with cool-season choices — especially in warm-winter areas — to keep some pops of color in your landscape. Remove and compost any remaining warm-season annual edibles and herbs. Prune back woody herbs that can handle the cold, such as rosemary and thyme, by about two-thirds to prepare them for winter. To eke out the last of the harvest, dry any herbs and preserve the last of any fruits and vegetables.

Are there annuals and annual edibles, such as tomatoes, that you love having in your garden? Before you move them to the compost pile, gather some seeds to get started for next year.

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This article was originally published by a
www.houzz.com . Read the Original article here. .

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