Those swatches aren't exactly what the colors look like in real life (Herbal Wash looks
like diaper waste on my computer screen), but you get the picture.
Not exact matches
It always breaks my heart to see my friends
waste their money on disposable
diapers when there are high quality, sustainable products out there
like this.
Disposable
diapers generate sixty times more solid
waste and use twenty times more raw materials,
like crude oil and wood pulp.
My 2nd issue is the ones that say they are just
like xyz but really delaminate the first time you get them, so you have people SO disappointed with cloth
diapers, and feeling
like they
wasted (albeit little) money, and are so disenchanted with the process.
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.
If you hate changing
diapers, the cost, the
waste, or you feel
like your baby probably doesn't want to sit in them, there is a way OUT.
It seems
like such a
waste when you're augmenting your stash with a couple more
diapers to have to wash them so many times before you can use them.
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.
Rather than buy new
diapers (which just seemed
like a
waste of money at that stage; she'd been out of daytime
diapers for a year!)
Aside from saving in the long run, you are also helping in saving Mother Nature from getting more
waste such as disposable baby products
like diapers.
«Sometimes stray dogs tamper with the garbage leading to
waste products
like diapers spilling all over the city's streets,» bemoans Mafuta.
It seems
like a real
waste to stuff it in the pocket, but even though you could use the
diaper as a cover and lay the insert on the inside, that's not really how FuzziBunz are designed.
Still, in our house, we've found that the water trick seems to work well enough, especially considering that ever since my daughter had a very bad
diaper rash as a baby, we've used the Earth's Best brand wipes, which aren't cheap and which I don't
like to see go to
waste.
That's why it's important for new parents to find ways to be green without breaking the family budget,» says Kelly Wels, the founder of KellysCloset.com, an Internet baby boutique specializing in eco-friendly products and cloth
diapers... Wels says that Tobin,
like other new moms, is part of a growing number of families who are saying «no» to disposable
diapers, which are known to create the third most landfill
waste in the U.S., and saying «yes» to more eco-friendly options.»
Generally pleased with the disposability of my toddler daughter's
diaper waste (knotted
like ineffectual sausage in the
diaper pail), I reluctantly tried the cloth option.
Cloth
diapers keep more trash (and human
waste) out of landfills and drastically reduce things
like packaging and chemical processing.
That's right, EADC buys and sells used cloth
diapers so you don't have to feel
like you've
wasted your money.
throwing away the zip - locks after unloading the dirty
diapers each time seemed
like a
waste of money and back tracking my green efforts.
It can seem
like a
waste of water and energy to run multiple cycles to prep just a single
diaper.
Much
like the
Diaper Genie, the Litter Genie is a cat
waste system that eliminates poo odors from creeping through your house.
So what I'm doing to meet local code and respect the land owner is bagging the
waste every few weeks into a biodegradable «plastic» bag and then sending it along with the city trash; at that point its essentially
like a
diaper, but the plastic will break down in a landfill quickly.
it eliminates a lot of
waste from those plastic bread wrappers — use cloth napkins — use cloth
diapers & cloth
diaper wipes (in combo with a
diaper spray,
like one by california baby)-- shop season - end clearances at outlet stores for great prices on kids» clothes and save them for hand me downs or then donate them