We are expecting our first child this year (yay!) and in all the bits and pieces that make a baby's life go round we are at an impasse about cloth or disposable diapers?
Were any of your children raised on cloth diapers? Did you try cloth and switch to disposable?
What are the pros and cons?
Do you have any recommended brands to fill out my numbers after I run out of home made pairs?
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[–] TradRight14 0 points 7 points 7 points (+7|-0) ago (edited ago)
Absolutely love cloth diapering, it’s so easy and faster IMO than disposables, plus babies don’t get diaper rash, easier to do EC and because being dirty in cloth is uncomfortable, they potty train sooner. I bought 2 dirty cheap 8 pack pocket covers off amazon, but stuffing pockets is time consuming and unnecessary IMO, I just line the diaper with a prefold, and switch it as soon as it gets wet. I have a sprayer hose attachment for the toilet for poopy diapers that is incredibly effective and not gross (no need to get the shield IMO) and I haven’t even gone through my first bag of diaper soap. I have 80 corron prefolds and 16 covers and because I line them (like a panty liner) microfiber doesn’t touch baby’s skin, and I only have to change the cover once a day or when poop gets on it. I wash laundry once a week and don’t even come close to running out. We do elimination communication but also diaper full time, so the only other “accessories” we have are a wet dry bag for when we are out and about, and also a toilet seat insert for baby to go potty after she wakes up in the am and after naps.
It’s easy, easier to check when they are wet, cleaner and better for baby’s skin, NO POOPY BLOW OUTS! Super cheap!! And honestly, I keep disposables in the car if I forget to bring clean ones to change, and I absolutely hate them, harder to tell when damp, have to roll them up and find a place to dispose of them, diaper rash, they stink like chemicals. 10/10 love cloth.
Edit 1:
Also, I had new born covers at first, but then I bought the kind that have adjustable snaps and are “one size fit all” my baby is almost a year (next week) and has used the same size covers since 2 months, and also the same liners, and I expect that she will be out of diapers completely not long after she can start walking (any day now)
Edit 2:
We use a basic super cheap pail with a closing lid and yea, it smells like ammonia after a couple of days, but we hose the poop into the toilet, and you spray it and it comes off completely, then you wring it out and throw it in the pail. We don’t put feces in to the washer and we have never had issues with larvae, bugs, or residual smell. Extra hot soak super white 80 minute extended wash setting for sure 😂 and a scoop of diaper soap and oxygen brightener works great. Come out of the dryer and don’t smell at all.
[–] beefartist 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
You are rocking it totally ...we keep telling ourselves we should get the shield and never bother. Our shower is close enough to the toilet that we don't have to run ice cold water through the sprayer. We discovered leaving the lid OFF of the dirty diaper hamper pretty much eliminated the ammonia smell and the laundry room never stinks because of it.
[–] Broc_Lia ago
I looked this up out of curiosity, that's pretty revolutionary. I'm surprised it's not everywhere.
[–] TradRight14 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
It’s everywhere not in the US. Many other cultures do it or variations on it, calling it “waiting on baby.” Saves diapers and gets them out of diapers sooner.
[–] KILLtheRATS ago
Ho can it be faster than getting a new diaper.
[–] TradRight14 0 points 4 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago
Because I have to unfold a disposable to then put it on and secure it, where as when I have prefolds you just remove the wet one, toss it into the bin, lay the flat one to line the cover and snap it closed. Can be done one handed without dropping baby’s legs. I keep disposables if I am out and about and forget to bring clean liners, or if we are on vacation. I can can change a cloth diaper in about half the time it takes me to do a disposable, the only thing that makes disposable easier is if baby poops then you can tods the entire thing instead of bring it home, hose it out, and then throw it in the bin, but because we do elimination communication we catch most of baby’s poops in the toilet.