Posted on 09/24/2019 9:55:53 AM PDT by bgill
I still have some of those cloth-diaper "dustcloths" that are now pushing 40 years old. They've grown so soft with thousands of bleachings and washings. Great for polishing windows and mirrors.
ow Im wondering if cloth diapers are still available. They work fine.
My four children were born between 1977 and 1999 all of them wore cloth diapers, my choice. For less than what 1 package of disposables would run, you can get 10 cloth diapers.
And Dreft!
Mine slightly older. I used cloth diapers most of the time, but also wanted to have disposables for the many car trips to grandma's. It was before the advent of big box stores. I got Toys R Us to sell me an entire carton for a much lower price. Had to drive around to the back of the store to have the stock clerk hand the carton out over the loading dock.
Cloth diapers are great if you have a washer and or dryer in your home or with a washer but no dryer, a place to hang them to dry on a laundry line in the back yard.
But that just isnt an option for many poorer families or even many middle class families. And if you dont or even if you do but have to work out of necessity and have to put your baby in a daycare or use a sitter, disposable diapers are pretty much the only option. Even with rinsing and bleach, imagine going to a public laundromat with a pile of dirty diapers. Imagine being the one using that washing machine afterwards.
When I lived in an apartment with no in apartment washer and dryer, using the laundry room it cost $1.75 per washer (and these were not very big washers, in fact they were on the small side) and $1.50 per dryer that often didnt completely dry the clothes so if you needed to dry them more, you had to put in another $1.50 in no adding a quarter for extra time. Then they raised it to $2.00 per wash and $1.75 per dryer. I did better by going to the laundromat but it still wasnt cheap and I hated the laundromat you think the people of Walmart are bad, I could tell you some stories about the people of the laundromat that would make the people of Walmart seem like candidates for the local country club in comparison. Sometimes Id buy a couple of pizzas for their family and go to my nieces house to do my laundry and when my nephew would ask me to house and cat and dog sit for them, one of the perks was bringing my laundry and using their high tech front load washer and huge dryer : )
My niece and her husband gave birth to triplets 10 months after their first daughter was born and spent a small fortune in disposable diapers. Being that they were the parents of multiples, they did get some discounts the first few months. She was a stay at home mom for their first 5 years and when she did go back to work it was as a teaching assistant in their school district so she had flexible hours and would be off work when they were off school.
But even with using disposables, that first two years before they were potty trained her washer and dryer was running close to 24-7 just with clothes and bedding for the 4 babies and the adult clothes hers, her husbands who worked construction and her HS age daughter and step son. Seriously their washer and dryer was constantly running and their water bill was huge.
When her mom had her older sister back in the mid 70s, the first year she used cloth diapers but her mom had paid for a diaper service but for the next two, born less than a year apart and she had to go back to work to make ends meet, she went to disposables.
My best friend used cloth diapers for her first child. She used cloth because she wanted to be more environmentally friendly, and this was in the early 80s. She was a bit of a neo-hippy earth mother back then. She also insisted that she would only feed her son healthy and organic foods and would never let him eat junk food or watch TV.
Then she got pregnant with her second child three months after her son was born.
With two toddlers in diapers, she went to disposables and I remember the time I went to visit her and she giving her son a small bag of Cheetos and telling him go watch TV and share the Cheetos with his sister just so she could have a few minutes of adult time talking with me.
A ten-pack costs a dollar apiece on Amazon, except for the shipping charge.
oIn the old days people used cotton diapers, washed them out and used them again. Now hundreds of thousands of plastic diapers go to the landfills every year. Doesn’t sound like saving the planet to me.
WIC, EBT, SNAP actually don’t pay for diapers. Food only, AFAIK.
Still, people could use cloth diapers and wash them, with the snap-on plastic over-pants to contain leakage.
It’s what my family did & everyone before disposables became a thing.
What kind of idiot rinses out a disposable diaper & reuses THAT?! Yuk!
Yes, I remember seeing (long ago) a documentary about non-biodegradables in landfills.
The plastic in disposable diapers & garbage bags just seethes & bubbles on the soil like some kind of writhing monster that won’t die.
My daughter was born in 1981. Before she was born I bought a huge economy box of diapers out of each paycheck If people asked me what I needed Id tell them diapers. My mom hit every yard sale she could find to buy baby clothes. In all sizes. By the time daughter was born I had a linen closet stuffed full of baby diapers and baby clothes. Enough for a full year in all sizes. Oh yeah, I was a single mom since I kicked the no good dad out as soon as I found out I was pregnant.
These people are all just wanting freebies.
“, imagine going to a public laundromat with a pile of dirty diapers. Imagine being the one using that washing machine afterwards.”
That makes NO sense. Do you think that everyone that washes diapers at home has two washers? I can think of a lot of yuckier things that could be in a public washer.
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“”I still remember rinsing dirty diapers in the toilet then dropping them in a diaper pail. She probably washed them every other day. Washing, using bleach, using fabric softener etc. We did take disposables when traveling.””
I am the wife and the mother and used cloth diapers as well. We moved from one state to another when our daughter was 8 months old and that’s the only time she was in disposable diapers (1974)..No one ever said it was fun but it was certainly economical. Besides, when they were no longer needed as diapers, they had multiple purposes for cleaning etc.
Very well done, Mom and Grandmom!
We had no money to spare for the new baby so did what was within our budget. Didnt ask anyone for anything unlike these freeloaders.
Thanks!
My friends do that today to save money and they have twins!
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