It turns out that we are still using cloth, and it really isn't that hard. Of course, I am not working outside the home, so that does play a role in giving me the time to wash diapers every other day and then stuff them with the inserts at night. At first I thought I might continue with cloth even if it was a pain out of sheer stubbornness, just because everyone seemed to think I would quit. I have been pleased to realize that I am not doing it out of stubbornness; I kind of like it. Washing and stuffing the liners back in the clean multicolored shells feels like this comforting ritual; you know, because women are just naturally passionate about cleaning, like in those commercials where it looks like the women wants to make love to her disinfecting counter-top cleanser. Aaaanyway, the point is, it just isn't as hard or time consuming as you might think.
Here is a quick little run down of cloth diapering in case you are curious how it works or might want to try it on the tiny butt in your family.
- First you have to choose which ones you want...this is the hardest part. There are more brands out there than you can imagine unless you have already waded into that world in the last handful of years. I did tons of research, but sort of ultimately picked the same ones my brother and sister-in-law were going to use for their daughter who is very close in age to ours. ...tired of diaper research, they are smart people, lets follow suit... We are using Bum Genius 4.0, which seems to have been a good choice. Thank you Jodi and Dan!
These close with hook and loop (like Velcro) and have a pocket that an absorbent insert goes into. Also, the size is adjustable, so you don't have to keep buying new ones as your baby grows, which is good because they cost about $18 for each shell (comes with 2 inserts, one small, one larger).
- I have 1 diaper pail for cloth and one lidded trash bin for used wipes and the occasional disposable diaper. Plus a small plastic bin on top the table to toss the dirty diaper in until I can spray it off in the toilet or just pull out the liner and shove both parts in the diaper pail.
- I wash diapers every other day. You have to use cloth diaper safe detergent (as well as diaper rash creams); what makes them safe is that they don't have ingredients that cause the diaper to start repelling urine, mostly animal derived substances, and they rinse completely out without leaving residue that can irritate the baby's bottom.
- You want to use a hot wash cycle to sanitize, and running an extra rinse cycle is a good idea to make sure all the detergent is rinsed out really well. Then the diaper shells need to air dry, but the inserts can be put in the dryer.
There isn't much else to it. They have come a long way since the white squares of cloth with pins in the sides that our grandmas remember.
ZEN MOMENT WITH PERRIN..."Oooooo, tassels." |