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Talk to me about cloth diapering
Do any moms here cloth diaper? I'm strongly considering it, but my H is not too happy with the idea. From research, it doesn't seem like it's as difficult/nasty as I pictured it, but of course still more involved than disposables. How has your experience been, especially when you are not at home?
Re: Talk to me about cloth diapering
we cloth diaper and love it. my husband doesn't mind it either, and he's never known anything else so I don't think he finds it particularly hard.
sure you have to wash them, but its a load every two days, so it doesn't bother me.
this is a good website to check out - http://www.pinstripesandpolkadots.com/
is there anything specific you want to know?
The Rowdy Roberts
As for the actual process, it's not a big deal. We used a diaper sprayer to rinse all poop diapers, even before he started solid foods, just because it was easy and seemed like a good way to reduce poop in the washer. There is a myth that formula poop isn't water soluble and can't go in the washer, but it's not true. We are an FF family and have had no problems. So basically you change the diaper (and if a pocket or aio it's the same as a sposie except will have snaps or velcro to keep the diaper closed and on), place the dirty diaper in a wet bag or pail liner (which goes in a garbage can), put a new diaper on and you're done. It's an extra load of laundry every 2-3 days (or longer, depending on how big your stash is), but especially in the nb stage you will find a huge increase in your laundry due to newborn spit up and such so for me one more load was nothing.
I would absolutely read up. There are blogs that put down a lot of the common cd "rules" and makes it a lot easier than it seems. For instance, cd specific detergent is actually a bad idea, so your regular detergent is fine as long as it doesn't have fabric softener. You will hear that you can't use certain diaper creams, but that also turns out to not be entirely true.
And with any item that you want to reuse and have last you may have some maintenance to tend to. For instance, sometimes the diapers get some build up. A simple bleach soak will usually fix that. Sometimes they get a barnyard stink. Again, a bleach soak can fix that.
We have had to switch to sposies overnight bc DS is such a heavy pee'er overnight. I hate it, but I was spending money on options and not finding anything that worked 100%. DS didn't get his first rash until he was 7 months old and even then it didn't really fully break in to a rash. Once he got older I often switched to a sposie when leaving the house for a long period of time just to keep me from having to change a diaper on the fly (or reduce the risk at least-I hate changing in public restrooms). Our stash has cost us easily less than $600 and it was bought in phases since we were working with sized diapers and not one size (until we got to AIO's).
I would refer to Kelly's closet, Jillian's drawers, and the cloth diaper asylum for info (the first two are websites, the last is a FB group that is extremely helpful).
We cloth diapered from two weeks until 2.5yrs when he trained and plan to do the same with this one. We used prefolds (old school type, piece of cloth you secure to baby, then put a waterproof cover over top) in the newborn stage until he fit into the one size pockets (we prefer BumGenius 4.0 One Size pockets) which is basically a shell and you stuff a liner (piece of absorbant fabric) inside the pocket. When you do a change, you remove the diaper, pull or shake out the liner and drop both pieces in the wetbag. Putting a pocket on is the same as a sposie but, as CCH said, just with snaps or velcro.
We used a sprayer only when solid food was introduced and poops became tricker to clean off. The first 6 month he was EBF so poop was water soluable so everything just went straight in to the bag until laundry day. EBFpoop doesn't stink (it smells a bit sweet if anything) so smell wasn't an issue.
We have a small wetbag for going out and would bring our dipes along. If he was due for a poop we would sometimes put him in a sposie but most of the time it was cloth all the time when out and about. No rinsing needed for pee.
We switched to sposies at night as well when he was soaking through every cloth option we tried.
We have really loved the cost savings and the fact we never run out of diapers and have to run to the store. We did cloth laundry every 1-2 days in the early months, and were down to twice a week in the toddler years.
We have tried a variety of options, styles and brands, but it really comes down to personal preference, ease of use and budget.
Good luck!
TTC#1 July 2010 PCOS dx April 2011 DS born: February 21, 2012
TTC#2 June 2013 MMC Sept 2013 (partial molar), CP 02/2014 DS2 born: December 5, 2014
AIO are great because there's no stuffing or any added steps, just put it on like a disposable. We rinse poop diapers (even though she's EBF and its water soluble, her poop doesn't smell good and rinsing also helps prevent staining), and rinsed or just pee diapers go in a diaper pail with cloth/waterproof liner. Liner and diapers go in the wash together, heavy duty cycle (cold prewash, hot wash, extra rinse). We use ecos unscented detergent, standard amount for one load. Then we line dry the diapers, outside or inside. Sun helps get out stains.
I love CD because we never run out like @lindsayandjamie mentioned, the cost savings are awesome, she doesn't get a rash, and we don't fill up our trash every day with disposables like we did the first couple weeks before she fit into the OS diapers!
TTC September 2013 | BFP 11/21/13 | Chart | EDD 8/3/14 | It's a girl!
DD born at 42 weeks 1 day | 8/18/14 5:33am | 8lbs 4oz 20.25in of perfection!
The site that @amccul20 linked is a good one. If you're not sure of what type of diaper you might like best, you could think about doing the trial program offered by Jillian's Drawers: http://www.jilliansdrawers.com/products/clothdiapers/tryclothfor10/tryclothfor10 While I've never used it myself, I've heard really good things about it.
If you have any further questions, I'd be happy to answer them! There are also some good groups on Facebook dedicated to cloth diapering that can be very informative for answering questions you might have.
Team Green to Team Pink! Baby A born
Here comes 2u2! Team Green to Team Blue! Baby L born
so these girls gave you lots of info!
we have mainly AIO diapers. I do not rinse the poop out (he's EBF still) and all diapers just go directly into the diaper pail. I wash every 2 days and hang to dry if the weather is nice. we do have some pockets, but those are more work IMO and so I won't buy anymore.
I keep a wet bag in my diaper bag and when we're out and about or even just at the IL's we just put the dirty diapers in the wetbag and they go in the wash next time I do diaper laundry.
at home I have a diaper pail that I put a pail liner in instead of a plastic bag and when its full I take the pail liner and dump all its contents into the washer then throw the pail liner too and wash it all together. (I would add my wet bag contents and wet bag too if I had those to wash).
Bear goes to daycare and so we send diapers with him twice a week and a new wetbag every day and his daycare lady just uses the cloth and sends home the wetbag with dirty diapers every day. we have 3 wetbags so we can send a new one every day.
The Rowdy Roberts
B/w 1/8: betas 17,345, progesterone 25.6