- Vacuuming - This is carried out in order to ensure small amounts of dirt, animal hair, grit or debris is removed from the carpet or hard floor through the use of a high quality vacuum cleaner.
- Mopping - This is done only on hard floors, mostly bathroom and kitchen spaces in order to have them sparkling clean. Most professionals will make use of anti bacterial solutions to make the area as clean and safe as possible.
- Dusting - This involves cleaning all areas where dusts are likely to settle.
- Furniture cleaning - This involves cleaning all furniture ( both soft and hard furniture) to ensure that they’re maintained to a high standard.
- Bin changes - This includes emptying and replacing all waste baskets accordingly. The old waste bags will also be removed by the cleaners.
Walsingham
Walsingham is a town in North Norfolk, England, well-known for its religious temples in honour of the Virgin Mary. It also contains the damages of two middle ages monastic houses. The civil parish, consisting of Little Walsingham and also Great Walsingham, together with the depopulated medieval village of Egmere (grid recommendation TF 897 374), has a location of 18.98 kilometres ². At the 2011 census, it had a population of 819. Walsingham is a major centre of Pilgrimage. In 1061, according to the Walsingham tale, a Saxon noblewoman, Richeldis de Faverches, dreamt of the Virgin Mary in which she was instructed to build a reproduction of your house of the Holy Family in Nazareth in honour of the Annunciation. Her family name does not appear in the Domesday Book. When it was developed, the Holy House in Walsingham was panelled with wood and also consisted of a wooden sculpture of an enthroned Virgin Mary with the child Jesus seated on her lap. Among its relics was a phial of the Virgin's milk. Walsingham became one of northern Europe's excellent places of pilgrimage and remained so with most of the Middle Ages.