Here are five household items that can help melt snow and ice—and keep you safe on slippery sidewalks and driveways.
Whether you are out of rock salt or you never purchased it, you can still use some household items to melt the ice and snow.
The best time to salt your driveway is not when you think — and it’s a common mistake.
Clearing snow and ice after a major storm is no easy task. Here are a few easy solutions.
It’s hard to ever feel fully prepared for a winter snowstorm. You can’t always find road salt in stores, and you may not even ...
Road crews know one natural ingredient that makes deicers more effective and less damaging than rock salt, and it's a ...
Ice melt flying off shelves? Try rock salt, fertilizer, sugar beet juice or baking soda as alternatives to keep walkways safe ...
Millions of people in the U.S. are about to be battered by a massive winter storm. Are you prepared?
At the first sight of ice and snow, many people rush to the stores to buy rock salt and ice melt to spare themselves the hassle of finding and avoiding slippery ice patches. If you didn't look at the ...
Try these five common household items to melt snow and ice after the winter storm: A simple solution of warm water, ...
Salt spread on roads and sidewalks to melt snow and ice wreaks havoc on local streams and groundwater, not to mention our ...
Here are five household items that can help melt snow and ice—and keep you safe on slippery sidewalks and driveways.