S’more stuff
Use up any left-over marshmallows and graham crackers (they’ll go stale before next summer), then make space in your kitchen by moving the s’mores maker and s’mores sticks to an out-of-season storage spot, like your basement or attic. Besides, now is the time to roast s’mores and host a backyard bash with these 11 insanely smart party ideas before summer is officially over. Add a reminder in your spring calendar about its location; you don’t want to have to re-buy it when you can’t find it next year. Other little-used space-hoggers to store or donate include the ice cream machine, frozen drink maker and Popsicle mold. See there, now you have room in your kitchen cabinets for the streamlined Cuisinart Programmable Breadmaker. You can bake up a loaf of fresh bread to enjoy with your pumpkin spice latte.
Farmers market and co-op clutter
Farmer’s markets and local co-ops and CSAs will be closing down for the season, making this the perfect time to ask yourself, “Just how many berry baskets do I need to keep?” If you have extra baskets, bushels, boxes or empty canning jars from your recent trips it’s time to return them—co-op organizers and farm stand owners will thank you. On your next trip try these eco-friendly, reusable, drawstring bags for carrying home your fresh fruit and produce—and try these tricks to organize your fridge.
Seasonal gift sets
Whether a houseguest gave you those lemon sugar drink stirrers or you bought a set of BBQ spice rubs for yourself on a whim, now is the time to enjoy them. This stuff doesn’t store well and, trust us, there are many more gift sets in your future. Come fall, treat yourself with this authentic Serendipity Frozen Hot Chocolate Gift Box.
Summer staples
Unless you grill year-round, it’s time to purge the pantry and freshen up the fridge. Start using up those meats you bought in bulk, all those messy marinades, rolls that go stale and summer salad seasonings. Going into the holidays, maximize the storage space and minimize the mess in your refrigerator with a 6-piece set of Sorbus Stackable Containers—like these 40 kitchen organizing tips, you’ll wonder how you lived without them for so long.
Random kitchen clutter
Make space by relocating that soft-side cooler and picnic basket you only use in warmer months. Finish up those packs of flip-flop and flamingo-themed paper plates and napkins, they are not worth storing for a whole year. Then, toss these 13 kitchen items today. Still need more space for all that holiday prep and cooking? Try this slim Kitchen Cart on Wheels with two adjustable shelves, four hooks and a wood top.
Kitchen cabinets and drawers
A quick scan of kitchen cabinets and drawers can yield easy space-making tosses: Look for summer-themed placemats with the backing falling off and the ratty seasonal kitchen towels. Don’t overlook the thermal travel totes with broken zippers, the leaking ice packs, the useless thermoses without lids and the equally useless lids without thermoses. Be sure you have at least one Insulated Casserole Carrier for the upcoming holiday potlucks and family dinners.
Gourmet gadgets and recipes
Cracked corn-on-the-cob holders are no longer safe and neither are those rusty crab claw crackers. Splintered wooden skewers are certainly not something to store another season. Recycle clipped and printed recipes, after all how many recipes for potato salad do you really need? While you’re at it check out your cookbook collection—that 250-page BBQ cookbook you never even opened? Donate it for someone else to enjoy. That will make space for the Ski House Cookbook filled with full-color photos and 125 effortless, comforting winter meals.
Specialty summer drinks and glassware
Make room today by de-cluttering your kitchen drink cabinet. First, use up things that won’t save like the margarita mix and coconut rum. Next, recycle the broken stuff, like the chipped glass drink dispenser, broken palm tree stemware and cracked plastic coconut drink holders. Finally, recycle the refillable souvenir cups you never remember to bring back to the park anyway. Fill some of the newfound space with a few Yeti Insulated Mugs, the ideal way to take hot coffee or soup on-the-go in colder months.
Grilling gadgets
Take a minute to reconsider holding onto that BBQ grill pizza pan if you never used it. And do we even have to discuss the bent and downright dangerous grill cleaning brush? Toss it. Don’t forget to return the empty propane tank, too. Keep your grill safe and secure all winter with a 58-Inch Waterproof BBQ Cover.
Summer swag
Did you really need another disposable pen, or did you just grab it from the display table because it was free? Seriously, toss broken chip clips and logo-laden promo items like street fair jar openers and summer concert drink cozies. Then donate festival and arcade prizes, like that oversize teddy bear that’s about to turn into a dust collector—find out where you can donate almost anything. Keep the plush toys you can’t part with fresh and clean by laundering them in the Teddy Needs a Bath protective bag.
Seasonal souvenirs
Keep the memory and lose the stuff: Photograph ticket stubs, postcards, cheap seashell rings and broken braided shark tooth necklaces before tossing. Donate that souvenir given to you by a well-meaning friend that just isn’t your style (looking at you, howling coyote figurine). Invest in a digital photo frame to enjoy an ongoing slideshow all the special memories.
Summer fun tote bag
You know that bag you toted around all summer long? The one still stuffed with summer leftovers? Donate the summer reading book club pick you never started, then get rid of the melted chewing gum and stretched out hairbands. Toss the trash, recycle the receipts and rescue the loose change from the bottom of the bag. During the colder months keep your everyday necessities, like gloves and scarves, easy to grab on the go by tucking them in the pockets of this over-the-door organizer.
These cute reusable grocery bags makes your shopping chore fun.
Pest control
No one needs to store almost empty pest control products or ones that never worked well. Your local municipal hazardous waste collection is a good way to recycle things like mosquito traps, bug lamps, bug repellent wristbands and mostly burnt citronella candles. And in the wintertime repel rodents looking to nest in warm storage spots, like the garage, with scented Fresh Cab Botanical Pouches.
Clean out the car
Now that summer road trips are over, your car deserves a thorough detailing. Toss the trash including fast-food wrappers, dig out stray French fries and all those Goldfish crackers your kids dumped in the door console. Then make room in the trunk for all that holiday shopping by relocating summer fun items, like folding chairs and beach blankets, to out-of-season storage. Finally, add a collapsible, multi-compartment trunk organizer with plenty of space for shopping bags. You can keep potted mums upright on your drive home from the nursery or transport dishes to holiday gatherings in the insulated compartment.
Make sure you keep these easy snacks in mind for your next road trip.
Anything borrowed
Remember that large salad bowl you borrowed from your sister-in-law and forgot to return? How about that oversize beach towel a friend left in your car after your last lake trip? Now is the time to give it all back. Return anything that you borrowed or that was accidentally left at your home over the last few months. Ensure anything you accidentally left behind can easily be returned by attaching these peel and stick write-on labels.
Outdoor fun
Between blow-up lawn dice that have sprung a leak and the broken ladder ball game, trash can pile up quickly. The warped flying discs, dripping bottles of bubbles and tangled kites all make the outdoor “no-fun list” and need to be dumped ASAP. Then grab this 13-piece Snowman Decoration Kit, complete with hat and scarf, so you are ready for the first snowfall.
These are the most fun outdoor games to play at summer parties.
De-clutter decor
Swap out summer stuff like seashell photo frames for fall-themed pieces. Lose the tattered “I’d rather be at the beach” welcome doormat, the threadbare sailboat throw blanket and torn seahorse throw pillows. The sand dollar soap dispenser, the seagull shower curtain and the starfish flower vase can be stashed away for next year. Make packing away seasonal stuff easy with these Storage Cubes with Clear Window. There’s no more rummaging through plastic bins as the window lets you see exactly what is inside.
Stacks of paper
Purge the piles of seasonal papers like those fliers from summer concerts, the day trip brochures, amusement park maps and random leaflets you picked up from tables at the summer street festivals. Before you recycle them, note events you want to head back to next year in this Vacation Journal, that also includes helpful checklists and space to list day trip ideas.
A professional house organizer would toss these 24 household items.
Back-to-school supplies
Even if you are not going back-to-school, late summer is still the best time of year to survey your supply cabinet. Donate any excess supplies to a local school supply donation drive. Recycle those things that are meant to stick but no longer do like sticky notes, return address labels and three-hole punch paper reinforcements. Then stock up on holiday supplies like gift bags and bows. Keep them damage-free and orderly in this double-sided Hanging Gift Bag and Wrap Organizer.
Exterior mess
Either commit to reusing those hanging flower baskets by filling them with fall flowers or foliage or let them go. Cheap solar lanterns that no longer light up and bent metal garden art that can’t be salvaged also need to disappear from your life. Toss the faded flip-flop door wreaths and cracked cafe light strands in favor of a seasonal Pumpkin and Pinecone light-up door wreath.
Before and after sun skincare
Bottles of sunscreen and tubes of aloe gel don’t keep indefinitely. When open for a year or longer or exposed to temps of 75 degrees or higher the active ingredients can become less effective. Always consult the manufacturer for specific guidelines but it’s a pretty safe bet you should toss the three-year-old self-tanner. Check to make sure you have plenty of moisturizers on hand, like Udderly Smooth to soothe dry, cracked, winter skin.
Swimsuits and summer outfits
Toss anything that got ruined like cork wedges that got wet or t-shirts with set in mustard stains. Next, look for things you didn’t wear this season and super season-specific shirts (we’re looking at you, firework glitter shirt.) Find out where to donate those along with the sandals that pinch your toes. Next, dig through your swimsuit drawer and toss the stretched-out ones. Prep for muddy and snowy shoes with a Waterproof Boot Tray.
Storm supplies
Emergency storm supplies do not last forever. Replace expired rations of food and water for your family and your pet. Check expiration dates on batteries, first aid supplies and medication. Ensure you have a Portable All-in-One Portable Charger which will jumpstart dead car batteries. It includes a floodlight, phone charger and USB power bank. Here’s what food to have on-hand when the storm hits.
Natural treasures
Reconsider anything summery you brought indoors that once belonged outdoors like the sea glass you scavenged from the beach, the driftwood you are using as a centerpiece and all those rocks. Return them to nature and plan to hunt for more next season. In the meantime, you’ll be making space for autumn’s acorns and pinecones and the holiday’s holly branches. Display those autumnal treasures inside a 10-inch Hurricane with Flameless Candle.
Garage garbage
Bye-bye broken tiki torches. Adios overflowing box of stuff to sell at the yard sale you never hosted. Farewell no-longer-inflatable pool toys, ciao camping coolers that don’t keep things cold. Let go of the bent hammock stand and weather-worn grill cover. With the broken summer stuff gone you’ll have space for an Outdoor Patio Fire Pit Bowl, perfect for those chilly evenings.
Here are the best storage containers to get your house in order.
Unload umbrellas
There are three types of umbrellas to pare down: First, any rain umbrella that broke in a storm or is not in working order, second, that torn patio umbrella that you kept “just in case.” Third, the pile of paper drink umbrellas that won’t ever see the side of a glass because you forget you own them. The one umbrella you’ll absolutely want is the Better Brella. The reverse-open technology keeps the wet surface away from you.
Chairs and cushions
Find the flimsy folding chairs, dump the dangerous deck chairs and be gone broken beach chairs. The tandem swinging chair, hanging on by a rusty chain, is also not something you need to keep. And let’s not even bring up the gross chair cushions that are beyond being salvaged. Spoil holiday houseguests with this Deluxe Airbed with Headboard and pillowtop surface; the built-in air pump makes for easy inflation.
Gardening goodies
Let go of broken deer fencing, the cracked lawn sprinkler, rusty stakes, tattered ties and faded herb garden markers. Seedling starters, unused fertilizer and leftover soil can all be given to a local co-op or go back to a nearby flower nursery. Showcase your seasonal mums and pumpkins in a distressed oak Whiskey Barrel.
Water activity equipment
It’s time to say goodbye to the trusty beach rolling cart with a broken wheel that you always meant to repair. And that raft that you never used because it takes two hours to blow-up can find a new home with someone who owns an electric pump. Now you’ll have space to store Flexible Snow Disc Saucer Sleds so you’re ready for fun in the snow.
Empty boxes
The boxes from your online orders—big and small, short .and tall—get rid of them once and for all! Recycle these boxes now, or better yet fill them with donations and give them all away. You are guaranteed to get more boxes with all your fall online orders and holiday gift buying. Make recycling during holiday parties or while unwrapping gifts super easy with Pop-up Trash and Recycling Bins. Here are 10 organization tips from Marie Kondo, herself.
The post 30 Things to Throw Out Before the Fall appeared first on Taste of Home.
Jamie Novak