Carpets fresh and clean.

The most encouraging news of the day is, the sun is shining, and the garden is growing. There is already a little Delicata squash on one of the two plants I started from seed in March.

I hired a man to clean about half of my wall-to-wall carpets. Last night and this morning I pushed and hauled furniture around so that I could thoroughly vacuum all the places beforehand. “Kyle” came this morning and was a very conscientious worker with a good deal of experience, and also lots of information for me about the various fibers he’d be cleaning, and how carpets wear, and how stains are removed. He told me that he usually vacuums himself, and was reluctant to skip that step. He asked if I had a good vacuum…? I do, but I let him do that part everywhere again with his machine, for his peace of mind.

Hall carpet just after installation.

I am so happy to have this job done. I don’t have pets, and all the grandchildren have been trained by their parents to remove their shoes in the house, so my rugs get along without frequent shampooing (this is an understatement which I won’t elaborate on); but I had reasons for deciding that this was the time.

While this thorough maintenance was happening over the course of several hours, I cooked up a pot of split pea soup; I roasted eggplant, toasted walnuts and made a batch of quinoa. The flannel bedsheets went into the washer and were replaced with the summer type, and I checked off several other tasks around the house, some of which have been delayed a couple of weeks, and some for months. It’s uncanny how every time I whittle down my to-do list, a few more things break or come due for maintenance.

Checking off the carpet cleaning, which should have been done years ago, felt really good. But — there was a little problem, which immediately added another task to my list. A solution that Kyle used, on a spot barely visible before, reacted with something I evidently used sometime in the past, and left a bleach mark in the middle of my hall. I usually only use water on spots, because they are most often just garden dirt, and I have no memory what it was I put there. Anyway, I will be contacting someone who can patch it, and I’ll have to take a piece from the back of a closet in order to match it. It will probably look fine, and anyway, people are not taking time to notice the carpet when they are walking down the hall. It will give me the pleasure of checking one more thing off the list — yay!

This Sunday we Orthodox will celebrate Pentecost, and I am getting excited thinking about the day. We decorate with greenery of all kinds; in our temple it’s often whole trees that are brought in for the feast, and in some parishes around the world they cover the floor with grass and wildflowers.

Pentecost in Poland

The thought of decorating the church floor takes me back to my new problem of an ugly spot on my floor. It makes me think about how many times I covered a stain on some garment or bath mat, etc, with embroidered flowers. My mind did immediately go in that direction when I saw the small bleached area in the carpet, wondering (very briefly) if there were a comparable fix that I could accomplish in a homey DIY way. It’s not easy to give up doing those creative things, especially when Chesterton’s words linger in my mind: “Thrift is the really romantic thing; economy is more romantic than extravagance… But the thing is true; economy, properly understood, is the more poetic. Thrift is poetic because it is creative….”

See the golden bee curled up in a ball?

I’m so happy that I can still be creative in the kitchen and garden. That is about all the creativity I have time for anymore! The borage (pictured just above) is blooming and the bees are loving it; they don’t mind having to hang upside down to drink. So many things are blooming, but I will just show you one more, the mock orange. Two bushes were planted on either side of my patio so that their scent would drift across the space where one might sit of a spring evening. Alas, spring evenings aren’t conducive to being outdoors in this neighborhood, neither does this particular mock orange have a strong scent; I have to put my nose right in the flower to detect it. So nothing is lost! And the loveliness of these flowers to the eye is great wealth. Thank you, Lord.

8 thoughts on “Carpets fresh and clean.

  1. I was pleased to read that you had made a pot of split pea soup and more good food even if it’s warm outside. We eat soups and quiches in all seasons and it’s only on very warm days when I don’t want to use the oven that we have lighter fare.
    It will be nice to have your rugs refreshed and, in time, the offending spot fixed.
    Your Mock Orange is lovely. Mine is tucked behind a rather large Butterfly bush and half hidden from view. I will make a point of going back there and paying it a visit tomorrow.
    Have a blessed Pentecost.

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  2. Is it a patterned carpet or solid? Acrylic paint works well on such things. You can thin it out, mix the color (hopefully exact, at least close), go over it again if it doesn’t cover enough and dries quickly. Or fabric paint (same thing). You may need to heat set it (fabric paint) with a hot dryer, though that might only be if it’s going in the wash and a carpet wouldn’t (unless Kyle visits again.)

    I love my flannel sheets but I’m always glad to bid farewell to them in the spring! (Though sometimes I’ll put the top sheet on over the cotton sheets as a lightweight cover, rather than a blanket (because sometimes, you just want a little more than a sheet!)

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    1. Thank you, Jeanie, for the good ideas. I did read a little about those re-coloring techniques, but this carpet is composed of several different colors woven together. So probably impossible to match, evenly approximately. You are very kind to try to help me!

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  3. When I think of embroidered flowers solving problems, I think of them covering holes and tears in clothing rather than stains. I’ve never been one to do that, but my mother often accepted the challenge; I still remember some of the flower-strewn shorts and jeans that she created.

    My own flannel sheets were washed and stored weeks ago, and we’ve moved into the season where using the oven isn’t something I do. I’ve never considered non-use of the oven creative, but it’s certainly partly due to thrift. Keeping the electricity bills down is as pleasing as not heating up the kitchen!

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