Write an article based on this "Keep the temperature around 60° F (15.5° C). Give cyclamen bright but indirect sunlight. Encourage a humid environment during the winter. Water them daily with room temperature water. Expect blooms from mid-winter until early spring. Prune spent flowers and yellow leaves while they’re in bloom. Stop watering them once the blooms fade in late spring. Dig up the corm and replant it in early fall."
article: Cyclamen bloom during the winter in their natural habitat. They prefer temperatures between about 40° and 60° F (4°-15.5° degrees C). This is pretty chilly for indoors, but if you keep your house on the cooler side, your cyclamen will be happy.  If the temperature gets above 65° F (18° C) during the day, or dips under 50° F (10° C) at night, cyclamen usually won’t succeed.  Although they like cool environments and good air circulation, keep cyclamen away from drafty areas. Cyclamen love sunlight, but direct sunlight is a bit much for them. They don’t like that much heat in general, and hotter temperatures will often force the plants to go into dormancy. A sunny window is great for them, as long as the sunlight isn’t direct and the temperature is cool. An east or north-facing window is a good option. Daily misting is a good way to provide some humidity for your cyclamen when they’re in bloom. Another great option is to position their pots over a pebble-filled tray of water. They will not do well if the environment is dry or arid, and they crave moisture. Keep their soil moist but not soggy. Touch the soil daily and when it feels dry, water them with room temperature water. Always water cyclamen near their base, and never pour water over the crown of the plant. This can cause the corm (the bulbous part at the base of the stem) to rot. You can use tap water for this, as long as you've let the water come to room temperature first. As long as the temperature and light conditions are met, cyclamen will usually bloom from mid-winter until late spring. In some cases, very happy cyclamen may even bloom until early summer. The bloom colors vary, and you may see pink, red, white, striped or multi-colored blooms. Pruning will prolong the blooming season, because this allows all the nutrients to go to the healthy blooms and leaves. Use mini floral snips to cut off the dead blooms. You can use the snips to remove yellow leaves, as well, or simply pinch those off. Once new blooms stop forming and the old blooms are fading away, stop watering the cyclamen. The plants go into dormancy in the summer. If the soil stays moist during dormancy, the tuber (or corm) will rot and the plant will die. Once the soil gets dry, you won’t need to re-moisturize it all summer long. While the cyclamen is dormant, you can store it in its pot or dig up the corm and keep it in a box of dry peat moss. When cyclamen go into dormancy, their leaves turn yellow and they look dead. They aren’t dead! Dig up the corm, replant it in the fall, and start watering it again when new growth appears. Your cyclamen will produce another season of blooms. Cyclamen can live for many years and even though they look dead when dormant, they will spring back once the temperatures cool down.  The corm is the tiny bulb at the bottom of the stalk. The plant's roots grow out of this bulb. The corm sits at ground level and is mostly visible, and the roots grow into the underground. Store the corm somewhere dry, like a box of dry peat moss kept in a cool, low-humidity area of your home.

Write an article based on this "Clean with oil and vinegar. Make a cleansing polish with vinegar, olive oil and hot water. Make orange vinegar. Combine soap with the vinegar."
article:
Mix two cups (480 mL) of white vinegar with two cups (480 mL) of vegetable oil in a spray bottle. Shake to blend the solution well. Spray enough solution to thinly coat a small area of your floor. Rub the solution into your floor with a clean rag. Dry the same section of the floor by buffing in circles with a separate clean rag. Repeat to clean the whole floor.  You can also use a clean mop to rub the solution into the floor. Mix a fresh batch of this solution each time you use it so the oil doesn't become rancid. Combine ¼ cup (120 mL) of olive oil and ⅓ cup (80 mL) of white vinegar. Add in 5 cups (1.2 L) of hot water. You can also put in up to 12 drops of essential oils. Polish the floor using this solution, either with a damp mop or on your hands and knees with a clean rag. Buff the floor in circles with a clean rag after you finish polishing the floor. Take a glass jar and fill it a third of the way with dried orange peel or completely fill it with fresh orange peel. Pour in white vinegar until the vinegar is one inch (25.4 mm) from the top of the jar. Put a plastic lid on the jar and let the mixture sit for one or two weeks. After a couple of weeks, strain the peel from the vinegar and preserve the vinegar in a clean container. Clean your floors using a method described above using a combination of ½ cup (120 mL) of the orange vinegar with two gallons (7.57 L) of water. Mix ⅛ cup (30 mL) of plant-based or castile soap with ⅛ cup (30 mL) of white vinegar and one gallon (3.785 L) of warm water. Add up to 15 drops of essential oils if you wish. Use this to clean your floors as described above. Rinse the floor well with hot water and dry it completely with a clean, dry towel or rag. For extra heavy or sticky messes, add ¼ cup (60 mL) of baking soda to this solution. Be sure to rinse this off well with hot water and dry the floor completely after cleaning.