The Potty Pail cloth
diaper sprayer attaches to your toilet supply valve with a brass tee fitting and features a 1/4 turn brass shut - off ball - valve followed by a 4 ′ long sprayer hose and spray head.
A diaper sprayer attached to the toilet is wonderful thing to have.
I much prefer to just use my Spray Pal with a Cloth
Diaper Sprayer attached to the toilet.
How does
a diaper sprayer attach to my toilet?
Not exact matches
Some parents use
sprayers that
attach to the toilet to spray any poop off the
diapers before storing them.
Shake excess waste into the toilet and use a
diaper sprayer that
attaches to your toilet to remove the rest.
There are different
diapering accessories to help reduce the amount of solid waste on your baby's cloth
diapers - like stay dry
diaper liners, flushable
diaper liners, and even a
diaper sprayer you can
attach near the toilet for hands - free cleansing.
The spray collar is small, clear, and
attaches directly to the
diaper sprayer for your convenience.
The
diaper sprayer is a small water
sprayer that
attaches to the water line which feeds your toilet.
You can do this with a
diaper sprayer (think of a kitchen sink
sprayer that
attaches to the back of your toilet), or you can use a rice paper liner (they look like a dryer sheet) and put the waste easily into the toilet.
In case you've never heard of them,
diaper sprayers are little hoses with high - power spray nozzles that
attach to your toilet pump.
A nice plus for washing
diapers is a
diaper sprayer — a simple device that
attaches to your toilet and aids in the removal of solids from them.
You can use disposable, flushable liners, you can use a
diaper sprayer that
attaches to your toilet supply line to spray the poop into the toilet, you can use a sports squeeze bottle the same way, you can use a rubber spatula to scrape the poop off, or you can dangle, dunk and flush.
The
Diaper Dawgs spray collar is the smallest spray shield out of all three and after you attach it to your diaper sprayer there is no assembling req
Diaper Dawgs spray collar is the smallest spray shield out of all three and after you
attach it to your
diaper sprayer there is no assembling req
diaper sprayer there is no assembling required.
Charlie Banana also sells a
diaper sprayer that you can
attach to your toilet, but in my 4 years of cloth
diapering, I've stuck to using the wipe method.
There are also
diaper sprayers available that
attach to your toilet if you choose to go this route.
Place the shield in the toilet,
attach the
diaper, turn on the
sprayer and spray till clean.
If you would feel more comfortable rinsing your cloth
diapers, a
diaper sprayer that
attaches to your commode or bathroom sink is a great idea but certainly not a necessity.