Showing posts with label laundry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laundry. Show all posts

Monday, 17 February 2014

DIAPER PAILS & WET BAGS - time to use some common sense in todays crazy world of sensless marketing

WET OR DRY:
Do not use a wet pail meathod.  Leaving diapers in a wet pail of water and vinegar  is bad for the fabric.  Alright,  now that we have answered that, lets move on.

*WARNING*
My advice is different then all the current advice and ads I have seen on the internet.  In fact I think everyone has gone a little crazy. 

After 18 years and 5 kids (soon to be 6) I have Learned that storing dirty diapers can be done in exactly the same way my mom did it for my siblings and I.  And its cheap and simple.

NEEDS:
• plastic diaper pail with lid for diapers and diaper liners
• small wet bag for covers that are not able to go in regular laundry (such as PUL or wool)
*this is simply to avoid sorting while doing the laundry so really its more of a suggestion then a need.

WHAT YOU DONT NEED:
• liners of any type for your diaper pail.
•massive wet bags for 4-5 days worth of laundry
•deoderizers for your pail.

WHY YOU DONT NEED THESE THINGS:
1. You dont need to line your pail cuz you should rinse it out each time you do laundry anyways.  It keeps it fresh and clean.  If you do line your pail with a wet bag whats your plan while washing the wet bag? If you use a disposable pail liner fine, but no one did this prior to the diaper genie.  We just quickly cleaned our pail.  So its a waste of money in my opinion.  And seriously a rinse of hot water and drop of vinegar with a rag takes like 2 minutes and is hygienic.  Even with a liner I'd hope you rinse the pail now and then.

2. You do not need anything that holds more then 2-3 days worth of diapers (unless you have more then one child in diapers) because letting it sit more then 3 days is nasty and a good way to get ammonia build up in your diapers.

3. You dont need deoderizers if you do your laundry regularly and rinse out your pail.  Dont believe me? Do you use one in your wet bag?  Yeah didn't think so.  Just put the lid on the pail. 

DIRTY DIAPER STEPS
1. Through disposable diaper liner with poop in toliet and flush or (if not using disposable liner) rinse off poop and flush
2. Put cloth liners in diaper pail.
3. Close Velcro on diapers (if your diapers use Velcro), this makes the Velcro last longer and means you dont have to do it at laundry time
4. Put diaper in pail and close lid.
5. Put diaper cover in wetbag. (If it can't be laundered with diapers).
6. On laundry day just dump into laundry (if you followed all above steps)
7. Rinse pail with water and vinegar using an old rag.  Put rag in pail. 

WHAT DIAPER PAIL DO I SUGGEST?
this very simple basic pail.  My mom had one just like it too. It holds one load of diapers (2-3 days). 

I've heard my beloved favorite diaper pail is next to impossible to find now adays because everyone has bought into these rridiculous ideas that they need to spend money on a bunch of special crap. Yes *Crap* that's what I think of all the modern diaper storage items! And if it means the only way to find a basic diaper pail is on eBay then I just might rant about it. If shipping means more cost then I'll be looking for a similar sized plastic lidded pail, likely a plastic kitchen garbage can with lid. And it wont cost me much to buy one of those. Wanna know how much I spent buying the above diaper pail last time? $12. And I had a fresh smelling house. How? Cuz I put the lid on the pail all the time and cuz I cleaned my diapers and my pail regularly. Its just common sense and good hygiene.

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Laundry, Laundry, Laundry

LAUNDRY! 

Thats what everyone is really worried about with cloth isn't it?  Im going to discuss the "chore" of laundry as well as ways to do cloth diaper laundry. 

First I've never understood the distress of doing laundry.  Yeah it can take 1hr-1 1/2hrs per load start to finish but really in that time you spend like 10-15 min actually doing something.   The rest your waiting on a machine (unless hand washing).  To me this is the greatest chore!  When I had home laundry or apartment building laundry it was great.  Laundry mat....well getting it there can be a bit of a chore (unless you drive, then don't complain).  I walk to the laundry mat (with a granny cart lol).  But hey, I'm out of the house for 2 hrs working my butt off for 15 min, reading, playing on Facebook or grabbing Tim's (to people outside Canada that's coffee and a donut).  Sounds like a sweet chore to me.  Now putting away laundry....ok not as big a fan lol. 
LESSON1: It's all how you look at it

^^ the real work horse lol^^
Ok so hopefully that helps you look at one household chore a little better. Its the sit and chilax chore

Next: laundry detergent:
Ignore the cloth diaper manufacturing instructions and do not spend money on special laundry soap. Also do not buy special detergent for baby clothes either. Its all a big capitalist scam! Your baby clothes and diapers will wash fine in regular laundry detergent, a Bio soap will be more gentle on the fabrics though. 1/2 tide with 1/2 white vinegar is a popular choice. I also like 1/3 Swish, 2/3 laundry detergent , then white vinegarin the rinse cycle. Swish a cleaner of all things (laundry, mop bucket, in a spray bottle like fabreeze, just anywhere in your house).

Homemade Laundry Soap:
There are many recipes for this. I like cheap and simple so here it is:
Equal parts:
•borax
•washing soda
Mix together dry and add 1/2 cup as dry laundry powder to machine or tub. You can still add vinegar
*To Make Washing Soda: simply put baking soda in a large pan or cookie sheet (evenly) and bake at 400°F for about 20 min stirring occasionally. It will turn from powdery to grainy. You will notice the change as you stir.
You can buy washing soda but for some reason it costs more and is harder to find. LESSON 2: special laundry soap is a capitalist scam, as is buying washing soda when you can just bake baking soda. (PS, Im also a Native rights activist but I'll try not to let that pop into the blog to much unless it's helpful to cloth diapering)

Washing Cloth

So you have a diaper pail or wet bag full of cloth diaper laundry that has built up over the last 2-3 days.
* do not let go longer then this or ammonia will build up, and its kinda gross to have it sitting there, building up.

The diapers should all be seperate from liners (nothing stuck together), and they should be free of all debris (poop and disposable liners). Also if using Velcro diapers stick Velcro together before washing so it lasts longer
*covers such as PUL that cannot be washed on hottest settings should be sorted into seperate wet bag at change time. Otherwise you need to pull these out now.

Now turn machine to hot or medium heat setting, add detergent mixture of your choice. Let machine fill a little and add diapers and cloth liners. One regular cycle on is all it takes. if soap is left behind rinse with vinegar.

When the washing is done it all goes in the dryer or hung to dry. Now there are a few options to cut down on cost (either in your electric bill or at the laundry mat) amf still give the softness of a dryer.
1. Dry partially then hang to dry, iron to soften.
2. Hang to dry then iron or throw in dryer for 10 min to fluff.
Its that simple.
STAIN REMOVAL
Poop stains? Do Not Bleach! Bleach breaks fabric fibers and over time you end up with worn out diapers with little holes. Its also rough on babies skin. So what do cloth mama's do? Well most hang in the sun and let the UV rays from the sun bleach them out.
**What do I do?
I lay them on the grass in the sun. The grass/UV combo works wonders and you get the UV direct onto the diaper. It works great and I totally swear by it. What about in the winter? Boil it. Using disposable liners greatly cuts down on poop stains, but when that explosive poop hits, well then you need these simple techniques. If your diaper has elastics (and my hybrids do), dont boils regularly as it wears on the elastic.
LESSON 3: Bleach bad; Nature good.
HOMESTEADER STYLE
Boiling Laundry
I have not done this yet except to get out a tough poop stain during the winter (so we are talking 1-3 diapers not a whole load). I am however very interested in this. I just need to track down a very large stock pot. It's simple. Boil water, add tiny amount or laundry soap (tiny, boiling requires less soap!), add clothes and stir. Drain, let diapers cool down over edge of pot (pick up with tongs so as not to burn your hands) and then rinse. *Do not rinse before cooling or you will shrink the diapers and liners!!
You dont need a scrub board as the boiling and stirring does the work. (Stir with a wood spoon or you'll risk burning yourself) This is why I'm interested as a home laundry meathod. If I had to scrub I would not be game. My arms could not handle the work and with a baby who would have the time? I realize boiling a few diapers is different then a whole load, but if I find that big stock pot, I'll let yous all know. *edit* Sunset I went with my hybrid design I wont be doing this method regularly as it's hard in the elastics*

Alright, so diaper laundry isn't as bad or as expensive as it might seem. It doesn't require special products either. It does require doing laundry more often if you have a small family. If you have a large family then chances are you already do laundry every 2-3 days (at least), anyways.

Know Your Diaper!! If your using an AIO or a diaper with a water proof/water repellent layer inside the diaper *please* carefully read the laundry instructions. Often these cannot go on a hot water setting or be boiled. Snaps are also an issue on hottest settings, as is elastic (which can loose its elasticity).