Making your own hand sanitizer is a cinch
Since the latest coronavirus broke cover and started scaring the bejaysus out of everyone, you may have noticed that the supplies that folks think they'll need in the event of a pandemic are becoming hard to find.
I'm paranoid about potential pandemics, but I come by it honestly enough.
In my old life, I worked in law enforcement while SARS was scaring the shit out of everyone in Toronto. Years later, I was charged with coming up with a Swine Flu action plan for the company I worked for in Vancouver. This time around, at the first sign of things going sideways in China, I stocked up on hand sanitizer, disposable gloves and, in case anyone in my household gets sick, N95 masks.
Not everyone's as uptight about hygiene in a time of plague as I am though. If you can't lay hands on a bottle of hand sanitizer to save your life (hopefully not literally), you'll be happy to know that making your own at home is crazy easy.
The fine folks from ThoughtCo have an easy-to-follow recipe that'll have you sanitizing your meat-hooks without soap or water, in no time. They explain, at length, how to make the gooey magic happen, but here's the short version:
- Take 2/3 of a cup of 99% isopropyl alcohol or ethanol and mix it with 1/3 of a cup of aloe vera gel.
- Mix them together.
- Dump the resulting goo into a dispenser of one sort or another.
- That's it.
Like all good recipes, this one should be shared with your friends, family and community: being able to create an unobtainable safety product on your own can go a long way towards reliving stress.