Friday, March 25, 2011

Cloth Diaper 101




Since the day we brought Anna home from the hospital- she has been in cloth diapers. Some people wait a few weeks before starting, but we figured if we didn't start from the beginning- we may never switch over to cloth diapers. Another reason was that I was so excited to start the process. I had day dreamed about my little baby in cute little cloth diapers since the day we found out we were pregnant, I couldn't wait to make that dream come true! I literally think the moment we walked into the house- we were at that changing table putting on her cute little pink diaper














Why are we using cloth? Yes, it saves the environment a little, but really- disposable diapers will be made whether we buy them or not.

The reason we do it is because:

1) most people around here cloth diaper- so it was normal to us. Scott hadn't been around too many diaper changes until we moved here and babysat some of our friends kids- so cloth was really all he knew.

2) It saves money and is good for the environment- but really both of those are pretty minial reasons why we chose to cloth diaper

3) It was a challenge for me- and I was up to the challenge!

4) After not being able to give birth to my daughter "the normal way" or naturally- this was something I could do. I needed to feel in control of something!

5) It's what is best for our daughter. Why wouldn't you give them the best possible. What is in fact inside those disposables? Do we truly know if they are safe? Why risk your child's health on something you could prevent. Here's how I look at it. When you go to someones house, do you bring store bought pie or a homemade pie. Of course, you bring the homemade. It's just better. That's how I looked at cloth diapers (weird analogy, I know!)

We love it. Looking back- I have never once doubted our decision. Sure, sometimes it takes a little more work, but its completely worth it.















Here are some supplies we have.

-When Anna was first born, we started off with 12 BumGenius 3.0 - Extra Smalls (6-12 lbs). My friend and I split them (her baby was born 3 months earlier- so would be done with them by the time Anna was born). We bought them at Thanksgiving time when they were on sale. She stayed in the XS for about 1-2 months and then we continued to integrate the 4.o All-in-one diapers and she is still in those today.

-18 cloth diapers (we started with about 6 and slowly bought more):

BumGenius 4.0- All in One. I recommend this diaper to everyone. It is by far my favorite. The snaps are going to last through the entire diapering experience and multiple babies- so make sure to get the ones with snap closure instead of velcro (the velcro will pick and loose its ability to hold the diaper shut)

(note, these are all the 4.0 diapers- just set on different size snaps to make the different sizes. The smallest fits about 8-9 pound babies and the biggest goes up to about 35lbs)
































Flip- we have two covers and about 10 liners. This is a money saver and allows you to use one cover for multiple diaper changes. You simply put the liners in your trashcan and keep replacing them with fresh ones.




















-Diaper Sprayer- this is a MUST if you are doing cloth diapers







































-Trash Can- any cheap kind will work though






















-Pail Liner- you put all the diapers in this (in the trashcan) and then when you wash diapers- you also wash this with them... so you need 2- one to use while other is washing/drying




















-Wipes- either regular wipes or cloth wipes. If using cloth wipes- I make a solution or will buy a liquid concentrate. If I'm lazy or we have just gotten back from vacation- I use regular wipes and throw them away.

-Detergent- Rockin' Green Detergent. Hands down the only detergent you will ever need. Nothing else works.

Our routine:


-Take dirty diaper (and cloth wipes, if you are using them) and pull the liners out of the diaper. Place all of it in the pail liner which is in your trashcan. If it is a poopy diaper, first spray poop off with your diaper sprayer and then wring it out and put into your trashcan.

-Repeat process (many times during the day!)

-About every two days, take the entire bag to the washing machine. Turn bag inside out and put the bag and the diapers into the washing machine. Set the washing machine on cold rinse and do a rinse. (If i'm feeling like I need a little more cleaning, I will do an entire washing cycle). After this is done, pour in the detergent... I use about three scoops, and run an entire washing cycle with an extra rinse on hot. After this is done, take your diapers outside and hang them on the line.


-When they are dry, stuff the diapers so that you don't have to do it with a squirming baby on the changing table and you are ready to go!














It's that simple!











Video demonstration of how to cloth diaper coming soon!








Cloth Diapers 101


Thanks to my sweet hubby for filming this for me. Thanks also for not telling me that our swifter and Anna's church bookbag were in the background... excuse our mess :)





(Granola Mamas- feel free to add your experience and tips to this post)

2 comments:

  1. you make cloth diapering looks beautiful! Post looks great can't wait for the video portion:)

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a perfect, concise explanation of cloth diapering! And such a cutie modeling them! :)

    ReplyDelete