You should rinse with hot water to ensure that they are clean then wring it out until no water is left then leave the toys out in the sun to dry and get rid of any bad odor or harmful bacteria.
Bleach will take a stain out.
Bleach, bleach and more bleach You can't sterilize a well, you can only sterilize water that comes out of it. If the water is contaminated when it comes in, nothing you do to the well will affect the water itself, more contaminated water will enter the well.
Mine gets dirty a lot because of my business. I use a bleach solution about 2/3 bleach and 1/3 water and spray it on the area you want to clean. you may have to let it stand on the agitator a few minutes to remove stains and you might have to scrub with a scouring pad, wearing gloves. This will bleach your clothes so don't lean against it while cleaning and run a rinse cycle to remove any bleach inside your machine. This process also kills the germs too.
I tastes the same, trust me i have had experience. it tastes like a regular olive.
It depends on the seed. Some will sprout. Some will just get fat and moldy.
Rinse the infected area with cold water and then seek medical advice.
Sure, no problem. You should CLEAN the tank, of course...a good thing to clean tanks with is bleach-and-water, and then RINSE it thoroughly. Get your mom or dad to help you with bleach, right on.
no, never! Use hot soapy water then rinse them in warm water.
This depends on what killed the betta. If it died of old age, I would just rinse the tank thoroughly under the tap and then let the tank and gravel dry out completely for a few days. Then refill it, treat the water and add another betta. If you aren't sure why the betta died or think a disease may have played a part, you should bleach the tank. I'm doing several tanks at the moment because I just lost four bettas to columnaris. Make up a bleach solution that smells strongly of bleach and soak the tanks in it for a few hours. Then clean them thoroughly with a soft cloth soaked in bleach, rinse with cold water. Make up a solution of chlorine neutraliser at five times strength and rinse the tanks in that, then rinse them in cold water again. Let them dry and leave them empty and dry for at least a week. Then fill them, treat the water and replace the betta.
Nothing to most people. If you find it irritates you,just rinse off with cold water. Bleach dissipates fast.
You can do so, but be sure to rinse the soap residue off. Otherwise, a mild bleach solution in water should do the trick.
I wouldn't recommend it. Most aquarium decorations tend to be made of porous material, which will soak in liquids (such as bleach), and, rather than allowing them to rinse off immediately, will release them when another substance (such as aquarium water) permeates it enough to force the bleach out.
Soak it in a tub of hot water as well as oxy-bleach and then rinse in cold water. Hang to dry.
Soak the bottle overnight with hot water and a tablespoon of baking soda. If this does not work you can do the same with hot water and a teaspoon of bleach, but rinse out very well if bleach is used.
Soda fountain dispenser heads can be removed and soaked in soapy water. I recommend soaking for a couple of hours to remove the sticky residue. Rinse well and reinsert. Do NOT use bleach as it breaks down the plastic and you will be replacing parts quite often.
Yes, You can. Try Dry Scrub - Rinse with Water - Scrub with Bleach Mixture
you should