Read most of this thread a points to ponder
wine bags ftw
I am totally in agreement with
@mnemosyne that wine bags are the best "life hack" for darkroom. My last order, I bought a set of 50. They're specifically for preserving ... wine ... which can't be oxidized after decades in storage. What can possibly be better? Glass wine bottles, you say? That is true, it is also stored in glass. The great thing about the bags is you can pour out a little bit at a time without "opening a bottle" that you have to finish soon later. The downside is it's a pain to pour chemicals back in. For chemicals I use pretty often and discard after a few weeks, it's glass bottles, but I'm thinking of going back to the plastic accordion bottles for those short term use ones.
blix
There's been many debates here about using blix vs separate steps for bleach and fixer. I go back to this one
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/just-how-bad-is-blix-vs-bleach-fixer.53336/
The gist is: you can order "Ektacolor Blix Part B" which is only the bleach,
and use most any fixer (I use Flexicolor which is a film bleach for most b/w, c41 film, and ra4, and alt processes) (Edit: maybe don't do this, I'm re-reading my sources here on Photrio, and I may have gotten it wrong). Apparently if you want to save money, the bleach is more durable than the fix, so by separating them you get more life out of the bleach, and buy fix in bigger qtys to reuse in b/w if you are into that. To mix separate baths here's the rule of thumb: a 4L blix kit will provide you 3L bleach and 3L fix.