Cloth diapers
with urine residues can cause diaper rashes, because babies» skin is sensitive to ammonia.
If you don't use enough detergent, you will end up
with urine residues - this causes stinky diapers.
Not exact matches
But if the fabrics are already saturated
with softener
residue, they simply won't be able to absorb
urine, which is the job you need them to do!
If soap
residue remains in your diaper, it reacts
with urine to create ammonia, which can cause cloth diaper rash.
The most important part of washing your diapers is making sure they've rinsed very clean — you don't want to irritate baby's bottom
with detergent
residue, or worse — stale
urine that didn't get out in the wash!
Detergent
residue left in the diapers interacts
with fresh
urine and begins to stink.
The goal in stripping your diapers is to get ALL
residues out — detergent,
urine, etc. — so if you haven't been using enough detergent in your usual wash routine, you're going to start off
with two hot wash rounds
with a full cap of detergent in each one, followed by several hot washes and rinses until all the bubbles are gone.
OPTION 1: Wash
with a wool bar Rinse the wool in lukewarm water to remove any
urine residue.
When we «burn'these foods for energy we are left
with a
residue or «ash» which is then ejected from the body in the
urine.
Monsanto itself declares 5.6 mg / kg of plant weight to be an «extreme» level of glyphosphate
residue, and Norway scientists recently found 9mg / kg average in GM soy from Iowa, and German scientists found that increasing levels of glyphosphate
residues in human
urine correlated
with increasing incidence of chronic illness.)
The bladder is opened, the stones removed,
urine collected for analysis, and finally the bladder is flushed
with a sterile saline solution to remove any remaining
residue in the bladder.