You can also make laundry with ashes. It’s a bit long, but it’s possible! The ancients used carya ash. Find out how to do it here.
12. To care for fruit trees
Sprinkle ash around your fruit trees: apricots, peaches, cherries… stone fruits love it! Just like apples which suffer from bitter spots, a problem which concerns certain varieties notably Bramleys.
13. To repel aphids
When you have a nasty infestation of aphids or other crawling insects, thoroughly wet your plants and sprinkle them completely with sifted ash. Leave on overnight and rinse in the morning. All the insects will be dead or gone. It works very well on willow and tomatoes.
14. To chase away fleas and ticks
You can also use wood ashes to prevent an infestation of fleas and ticks or to chase them away and avoid bites. Sprinkle ash over the area requiring treatment. The critters won’t last forever! I regularly spread it on the pieces of wood that I store behind my house. And I already treated the yard because of the fleas that had infested my poor dogs!
Our reader’s bonus tip
Jocelyne A big thank you to Jocelyne who was kind enough to share with us her tip for recycling wood ashes.
She uses them to remove traces of hair dye left on the skin:
“When I dye my hair and there are traces left on my skin after rinsing, I remove them with ash.
I wet a corner of a cloth, dip it in ash and rub the marks on the skin. I rinse and there are no more traces. It works where nothing else does.”
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