hey!! Hubby started a coup yesterday against cloth diapering. He made the compelling argument that as the parent doing the most childcare he should get the final say on this. I agree but am sad about all my cloth diapering environmentally friendly dreams...
are there any biodegradable disposable diapers out there?
Re: Disposable diapers -enviro friendly?
We're planning to use both, starting with disposable for preemie/newborn sizes, then mixing it up. I understand that it helps a lot with potty training, since the kid can feel the wetness with cloth, so we'll becoming for mostly cloth by that time. So you might be able to make a compelling argument for including some cloth in the routine once the baby is a bigger size.
7 IUIs, 7 BFNs.
2 IVF attempts, both cancelled and converted to IUI, both BFNs.
Decided that my tired old ovaries are ready to retire.
Next step- reciprocal IVF, using my wife's eggs, my uterus!
fresh 5 day transfer (2 embryos) 4/17/17- BFP!
Identical twins "due" 1/2/17 (but anticipated arrival sometime December)
So, just know that cloth diapers are not necessarily that much better for the environment, esp. if you are considering the greener diapers as mentioned above.
Married May 2014
DD born August 2016
Baby #2 due December 2017
@jackiesmom324 I would suggest looking into a cloth diaper service if you have one in your area. They pick up the dirties, drop off clean diapers every week. The cost is about the same as disposable diapers but the ease/convenience is worth the price for us. Also if you are using daycare, make sure they are ok with cloth diapering. All the ones we've looked at in town have been fine with it, but I've heard many are not. We will probably use disposables when we are on the go/traveling. I'm leaning towards Earth's Best as it's made with renewable energy (not petroleum), and chlorine free. I've also heard good things about gDiapers, which have a flushable insert that shouldn't be as much work but I haven't looked into them too much.
i think the current numbers are that the total carbon footprint for disposables is 2.5x that of cloth. It's 1.5x if you have less efficient appliances / use a dryer instead of air drying.
I do think your husband should have final say since he's going to be handling most of it, but he may not realize that it's a significant environmental difference and not very hard to use/wash cloth.
my MIL is going to be doing some child care for us and was freaked about the cloth until I showed her how simple it is.
i can get you links if needed.
eta plus if you have more kids down the road the cost savings increase and your still putting less waste in the landfills)
Diagnosed : unexplained infertility
6 rounds of IUI and a MC 2/2014, rainbow twins 4/2015
TTC #3 5/2016
Restarted Fertility tx
IUI 2 rounds, baby girl 12/17
DH hates cloth, but we did a nanny-share with DD and both kids had CDs, so it was no big deal. I would do the laundry every few days in the evening and DH didn't have to deal with them too much.
Honest Company
Seventh Generation
gDiapers (cloth diaper inserts that are disposable)
Earths Best
BabyGanics
Nature Babycare
Bambo Nature
Naty
Whole Foods 365
Target Up&Up
and more, I'm sure!
Although it should be pointed out that while eco-friendly diapers are an excellent choice, they are essentially pointless unless you dispose of them properly.... if you put them in a plastic bag (diaper genie bags, plastic shopping bag, garbage bag, or other similar bag) they won't be able to break down as they should, they will just sit in the plastic in a landfill somewhere and it will literally be no different from using a chemical filled mainstream diaper.
Also, landfills are not meant to break-down garbage, there's not enough airflow to allow for it. So even just tossing diapers not wrapped in plastic, just loose in your big curbside can, it will still take a VERY long time to break-down.
The best way to dispose of them is to compost them (poopy diapers cannot be composted) or to tear them up and flush them.
Ultimately cloth diapers are the best choice for diapering, because the method of disposal is far greener than biodegradable disposable diapers.
@jackiesmom324 I think it's good that you are researching but I'd encourage you not to agonize over whatever decision you ultimately make. Most of my CD friends end up still using a fair share of disposables during the newborn days, during travel, daycare, etc. and the investment may not pan out equally if LO is an only child or last child and you are CD for the first time. The good (?) news is that kids in the Western Hemisphere don't potty train very early so you have plenty of time to experiment and change your mind!
I've known for a while that despite the pressure to do it, CD just isn't for us but I continue to work to reduce my carbon footprint in other ways. On the other hand, my CD-ing SILs are the kind of people that run a load(s) of laundry daily, wash a towel or set of pajamas after one use, etc. and so I'm fairly certain their overall family water consumption negates whatever environmental resources they are preserving by using cloth. It literally is all "coming out in the wash" like the saying goes.