Saturday, August 20, 2011

My Cloth Diaper Stash and Washing Routine

Cloth diapering can save you so much money!  And there are a lot of different diapers! When you first start researching cloth diapers it can seem overwhelming and even expensive.  There are a lot of products that make cloth easier (like a diaper sprayer, all-in-one diapers, etc.)  but all that is  not necessary.  Determining which diapers and what supplies you need depends on your lifestyle, how much work  you're will to do and how much you can spend.  After a lot of trial and error, I finally have a diaper stash that works great for us!

Saving money was on of the most important factor for us.  We also don't have a washer or dryer, so the diapers had to be easy to hand wash.

My Stash
Diapers-
1. Econobum covers and Rock-A-Bye-Booty cover- PUL waterproof covers.  These hold the flat diapers on and keep pee from getting every where :)
2. Good flats and cheap flats- Flats are a big, square piece of cotton.  Some people fold and wrap them on their baby.  I choose to fold them and lay them in a the cover (my daughter is way too squirmy to try to fold them on her).  My "good flats" are bigger and thicker than my cheaper Gerber flats.  I also have several flats that I made.
3. Doublers- To help soak up pee, I made a bunch of doublers.  They are just a small rectangle piece of cotton (I sewed about 5 layers together from old shirts I had).  Microfiber is also a wonderful absorber and inexpensive, you can find microfiber towels at places like Walmart)
4. Fleece Liners- I lay fleece on top of the flat (closest to baby's butt).  It helps keep moisture off of her.  I found an old fleece blanket and cut it into strips.
5.  I also have about 9 bumgenius 4.0.  I use for quick diapers changes or while out and about.  I stuff them with the flats.  I found that the big inserts that BG 4.0s come with are too hard to hand wash and dry. I also found that the flats and inserts soaked her pee better.  Looking back now, I wish I just bought more covers and flats, instead of BG 4.0s. 


Supplies-
1.  Cloth Wipes- I use cheap washcloths cut in half. 
2.  Wipe Solution and spray bottle- Water and a little bit of castile soap.  There are so many easy-to-make wipe solutions online!  I wouldn't recommend castile for sensitive babies, but it works fine for my daughter :)
3.  Wetbags- I have one for diapers at home and a small one for on-the-go.

Yes, i use a gigantic bottle :) I only fill it half way but I like the way it sprays.

Cleaning Supplies- especially for hand washing :D
1.  Bucket
2.  Detergent and/or Original Blue Dawn
3.  Gloves
4.  Wonderwash- obviously, not necessary but we found it worth the money!  It cuts wash time down a lot!
5.  Clothes line or Drying rack- We don't have a porch or yard, so I hung string in our bedroom.  Works great all year.

Stuffing and folding:
For most diapers, I fold one good flat with an insert.  For overnight diapers, I add an extra cheap flat.

Lay out flat and insert
Fold bottom half (since I have a girl, this works because most of the fabric ends up in front)

Keep folding sides over.  Add fleece liner.
Place in an adorable cover
Finished product!
Put it on an extra cute baby


Cleaning:
I store dirty diapers in a wetbag until it's time to clean.  I wash diapers once a day.
Here's how I do it :)
1. In the bathtub, I rinse and wring everything in the running (cold) water.
2. Put everything in Wonderwash, which is in the tub.
3. Fill bucket with cool water and a tiny bit of soap (detergent or dawn- yes, I usually use dawn.  I haven't had any issues using it and I feel like it gets my diapers the cleanest).
4.  Pour the soapy water into Wonderwash.
5.  Put the lid on and spin for a couple minutes.  If you don't have a Wonderwash, I've seen people just fill up a big bucket or the tub and stir everything around.  If you do this, I would imagine you would need to squeeze your diapers a lot to get the water and soap through them.
6.  Pour out all the water and diapers into tub.
7.  Fill up bucket with water, pour into empty Wonderwash and drain it to get out the left over soap.
8.  Rinse and wring out diapers in running water to get all (well, most) the suds out.
9.  Put diapers back into Wonderwash.
10.  Fill bucket with hot water and pour into Wonderwash. (steps 9 and 10 without a Wonderwash- just refill bathtub with hot water)
11.  Spin a couple minutes and then pour everything out.
12.  Rinse with running water and wring again.
13.  Hang up to dry!

Wow, that sounds like a lot!  It's really not bad!  It takes about 20 minutes all together.

Some tips to make things go smoother:
-  For poop diapers: I plop the poop into the toilet. (Which you are also supposed to do with disposables, in case you didn't know)
-  For extra gross poop diapers- I use a glove, dunk and swirl in the toilet.
-  You can stop at any step, you don't have to do it all at once.  If a baby needs to eat or someone needs attention, you can leave it all in the tub.
-  I don't wait anymore than 2 days between washes.  Otherwise the load gets too big to do all at once.
-  Sometimes, I will rinse all the diapers, add a little soap in the bucket and let the diapers sit for the day.  Then, when I have time at night, I will finish washing.
-  I keep a baby gate in the bathroom doorway, that way I can see/hear the kids but don't have to worry about them getting to the bucket of water.

You could always just get your kids to wash for you :)




Happy diapering!! I really hope I didn't scare anyone away with my stash and washing system :)  It's really easy and simple once you get in a routine.  
Please let me know if you have any questions!



More baby and diaper pictures :)



Back in the old "Snappi and Origami Fold" days!
Ok, lets be honest.  This is how my kids spend most of the day. :)







Monday, August 1, 2011


Happy World Breastfeeding Week!!
 
I'm so excited to be apart of this celebration of women, babies and feeding the natural way.  Here is some information on this year's theme:

"When we look at breastfeeding support, we tend to see it in two-dimensions: time (from pre-pregnancy to weaning) and place (the home, community, health care system, etc). But neither has much impact without a THIRD dimension - communication!

Communication is an essential part of protecting, promoting and supporting breastfeeding. We live in a world where individuals and global communities connect across small and great distances at an instant's notice. New lines of communication are being created every day, and we have the ability to use these information channels to broaden our horizons and spread breastfeeding information beyond our immediate time and place to activate important dialogue.

This third dimension includes cross-generation, cross-sector, cross-gender, and cross-culture communication and encourages the sharing of knowledge and experience, thus enabling wider outreach."

How perfect is that?!    

I feel lucky and amazed at how awesome my breastfeeding journey has been so far.  Stella nursed like a champ 20 minutes after being born! Before I had Stella, I was determined to breastfeed her.  I got informed, educated and was going to make it work no matter what.  While in the hospital there came a point where the nurses said Stella had lost a pound in a day and needed to be supplemented and she wasn't getting enough milk (later we found out that the nurses weighed her on different scales and one wasn't balanced right. ha).  I was devastated!  I felt really discouraged.  But we stuck to it, spoke for hours with lactation consultants and got through it.  Baby girl is (almost) 11 months now.  She's strong, healthy and growing like a weed. 


I love that this year's theme has to do with communication!  There is no big company to put out breastfeeding ads, like formula companies.  No one makes money off of nursing moms (er.. unless you think about how much we would save if WIC didn't have to get out so many formula vouchers).  So, it's up to all of us to spread the word and information!  I am shocked at how often I hear wrong information being puked out of the mouths of people, who have cleared done absolutely no research on the subject.  Moms have to rely on doing their own research.  A lot of woman (like myself) think it will just come naturally and when it doesn't they get bombarded with formula ads, formula samples and everyone telling them to simply "supplement".  So, this year's theme fits perfectly.  We need to make breastfeeding normal.  Information and help need to be easily accessible.  So, keep posting pictures and sharing ads on facebook.  Keep nursing in public so everyone can see that is normal and natural.  And most importantly, keep supporting other moms!