Getting Started with Cloth Diapers
By Theresa Rodriguez Farrisi
It costs about the same to use cloth and disposables, right?
No way! If you launder cloth diapers at home, you can save as much as $1,500
over the entire diapering period. This includes all your diapers, covers,
and wash products. In fact, each time you use a disposable, it costs you
nearly a quarter. By contrast, home washing can cost as little as five cents
per change. And, if you decide on a diaper service, it will run about $.20
per change.
What should I buy to get started with cloth diapers?
Your newborn will need to be changed from ten to 15 times a day, your older
baby, eight to ten. State-of-the-art products are now available that make
cloth diapering easy. You can get anything from low-tech wool soakers to
high-tech breathable synthetic covers to organic and green cotton prefold,
contour, or fitted diapers. Here's what I suggest as a basic diapering layette:
3-5 dozen cloth diapers, or 5 dozen all-in-ones
5 diaper covers per size
2-3 dozen cotton washcloths
a decent, nonvinyl diaper bag
1-3 washable, waterproof ditty bags (for traveling)
diaper rash cream, ointment, salve, lotion, or powder of your choice (Don't
use talc; it's bad for baby's lungs)
pins, clips, or Snappis as needed (unnecessary with pinless diapers and/or
covers)
You can't possibly go out or travel and use cloth diapers, can you?
Sure you can. For trips of less than a day, just keep some waterproof, washable
ditty bags handy for your soiled diapers. For extended trips, many parents
still choose cloth diapers when they have access to laundry facilities along
the way. Other hard-core cloth users bring a small suitcase or use part of
a larger one to hold plastic bags with rinsed cloth diapers that are washed
once the family is back home. Others reserve use of disposables just for traveling.
Nighttime diapering is such a hassle. Do cloth diapers work at night?
Of course. In fact, many cloth diapering combinations (including all-in-ones,
superabsorbent terry diapers, prefolds with a diaper doubler, and a substantial
diaper cover) are so absorbent that many parents find they can go a whole
night without a wet bed or an unhappy baby. Some parents simply use two prefold
diapers, one folded in half in the middle of the second one, along with a
secure diaper cover that fits well around the legs.
I can't believe anybody spends the time soaking and washing cloth diapers!
You will find that an extra couple of loads a week is no big deal. And having
children means more laundry in general. Keep a diaper pail with a lid next
to your changing area and put soiled diapers in it after a brief rinse in
the toilet when necessary. You can put water in the diaper pail, but most
moms omit the water after awhile. The diaper pail can be deodorized with
a little laundry detergent, baking soda, vinegar, or borax. There are nonsoaking
diapering methods that I describe in my book and ways to keep your time doing
laundry to a minimum.
If you do use water in your soaking pail, run diapers on a spin cycle first.
Use a gentle detergent such as Ivory Snow, Dreft, Ecover, Bio-Kleen, or Castile
soap. Add borax, baking soda, vinegar, or bleach. Some prefer nonchlorine bleach,
and others like the whiteness of chlorine bleach, although chlorine bleach
can wear out diapers over time (and you wouldn't use it on green cotton diapers).
If baby has a diaper rash, change laundry soaps and see if it makes a difference.
Don't wash more than a couple of dozen diapers at a time. Wash with hot water
and rinse twice. Dry at high heat for at least 45 minutes or hang diapers outside
in sunlight, where ultraviolet light will naturally disinfect them.
Theresa Rodriguez Farrisi is the author of Diaper Changes: The Complete Diapering
Book and Resource Guide (Homekeepers Publishing, 1997). This book includes
60 mail-order sources, product reviews, and special diapering information.
For more information on the book, call 800-572-1826 or see www.mcn.org/c/homekeepers.
The Farrisis eagerly await the birth of their fifth child in August.
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