21 February, 2011
Mailbox Mondays 2/21/11 - Prepping Diapers & Stinky Pails!
Every Monday, I will answer reader submitted questions in my Mailbox Mondays post, and ask you to weigh in your opinions.
Questions don't have to be cloth diaper related, just email maria at change-diapers.com with "Mailbox Mondays" in the subject, or Fill out my contact form for readers, which you will always be able to find on my Contact Page.
Julie says:
Hi Maria!!
First off I just want to say I LOVE your blog! It was one of the first cloth diaper related blogs I came across when I was pregnant and looking into cloth diapers. I had a couple of questions for you.
First off, I started my cloth diaper stash with a big purchase so it was easy to just throw all of the items in the wash to prep them all together. Nowadays, I find myself buying one or two diapers or inserts at a time and I would hate to run a laundry load for just a couple of items. Do you have any suggestions for prepping just a couple of diapers or inserts at a time?
Also, my daughter was exclusively breastfed for the first 6 months, but now that she is almost 9 months and eating solids, I am finding that her diaper pail is getting MIGHTY stinky. I do try to spray the poopy diapers with my sprayer but that doesn't really seem to be helping. Any other suggestions?
Thanks so so much!
Sincerely,
Julie J.
I really appreciate hearing that you enjoy the blog, and find it helpful! You really have no idea how warm & fuzzy that makes me feel!
If I get a new diaper that doesn't have special prepping instructions (if it's made of microfiber, microfleece, PUL etc.), I throw it in the wash with my other diapers once, then use it. Things like organic cotton and hemp usually need to be washed at least three times before using, and will continue to gain absorbency for up to 10 washes.
The problem is that they need to be washed separately, since the fibers contain natural oils that could be deposited onto your other diapers, and cause them to repel. Check with the manufacturer/the product packaging, because some companies send natural fiber products partially prepped. As annoying as it is, and wasteful as it seems, you really do need to wash them separately to protect your other diapers.
I have heard of people boiling hemp prefolds/inserts to remove the oils faster, but I haven't tried that myself! I would definitely suggest exercising caution if you try that, and I am not responsible for any burns or fires that may occur, eek! "Ma'am, what were you doing when the fire started?" "Errr, well, uhh...I was just...uhh...boiling my...hemp."
As far as your stinky pail goes, my first two suggestions would be to keep the pail open a crack, and to wash more often. You'd think keeping the pail closed tightly would keep the smell in better, but I find that letting the air circulate means less stink. Washing no more than every 2-3 days, and washing the liner each time helps quite a bit as well. Wahmies pail liners have a swatch of fabric at the seam, where you can add a few drops of essential oil to help with the odor. If yours doesn't have that feature, several WAHMs also make pail powder that you can use to eliminate odors and add scent.
How about you? How do you prep new diapers when you only have 1 or 2? How do you combat pail stink?
24 November, 2010
Rockin Green Funk Rock & Mighty Mighty Marshmallow Classic Rock Review & Giveaway (CLOSED 11/30)
In my opinion, wash routine and detergent are the biggest hurdle in cloth diapering. My personal motto is "if it ain't broke, don't fix it!" If you have a detergent and wash routine that are working for you, stick with it. After trying many different detergents, I've been using about 1/4 the lowest load line of Tide powder, with an extra rinse. About once a month, I notice a slight ammonia smell or funk to my inserts, so I wash just the inserts with a dab of bleach, and rinse until the water is clean and the bleach smell is gone.
So why am I messing with it? I was sucked in by the new Rockin' Green Funk Rock Ammonia Bouncer, thinking that maybe by using it, I could eliminate the monthly/semi-monthly bleaching. I decided to also buy a bag of the mighty mighty marshmallow classic rock detergent to use along with it. Lucky for you, I bought an extra bag of each to give away to a reader!
I also snagged one of the magnetic measuring scoops that sticks right to the washer!
I don't know if the mighty mighty marshmallow smells exactly like marshmallows, but it smells sweet and yummy!
The Funk Rock package suggests first soaking the diapers overnight in 3T of Rockin' Green, so that's what I did. I followed that up with a full wash/double rinse, and at least two more full washes/double rinses.
Next, I opened up the funk rock. The package says to initially use 4T and soak 30-60 minutes.
I soaked for about two hours, then followed with a full wash/double rinse, and two more full wash/double rinses.
After that, the diapers stunk. Not like ammonia or funk, but like poop. Like they hadn't been washed. I did another wash with 2T of Rockin' Green, with more full wash/double rinses. In all, I had been washing/soaking for a full 24 hours+. I did at least 8 or more full washes, all with double rinses. I reviewed a sample of Rockin' Green back in April, and learned that you need to soak and rinse like crazy when first switching. That the switch can bring all the funk to the surface.
To be honest, after a full day of washing (and this was only half of my diapers!) I was ready to throw in the towel. I was sniffing them after every wash to see if it was getting any better, but it wasn't.
So, at the time I'm writing this at 10:40 P.M., my stinky diapers are being washed in Tide. Hopefully the detergent police don't come after me, but I won't stray again as long as it's working for me!
We have mountain spring well water, a water softener and an HE washer. Even if you have exactly the same, what works for me may not work for you, and vice versa. Unfortunately, that's just how washing goes! So, even though this didn't work for me, it may work for you. Who knows, it I'd kept washing for another day (or three) maybe it would have worked out. Right now, I don't care to find out. I'm having a moment where I'd like to pretend my laundry room doesn't exist! I'm having flashbacks to a month of constant washing battling stinkies!
I just want to be clear that Rockin' Green has worked wonders for so many people, especially the Hard Rock version for those with hard water. I still wholehearedly recommend trying Rockin' Green if you're having trouble. It just isn't the right detergent for me!
Please note: This giveaway is not sponsored, endorsed or approved by, nor affiliated with Rockin' Green or any retailer.
# of entries received as of November 30th at Giveaway Close: 197
FTC compliance: I paid normal retail prices for all items, I was not compensated for this post, and all opinions are my own.
Labels:
ammonia,
detergent,
Rockin' Green,
stinky,
washing
20 September, 2010
Mailbox Mondays 9/20/10
Every Monday I will answer user submitted questions. They don't have to be about cloth diapering! I'll always answer questions via email, but if you would like your question to be answered in a Mailbox Mondays post, send an email with the subject "Mailbox Mondays" to Maria at change-diapers dot com.
Please note: My intent is to get a queue of questions for the next several months, so it may be some time before your submission is posted. If you would like me to email my response so you don't have to wait until your question is posted, let me know!
Kristina says:
Hi, I am interested in trying out Wool Covers. What can you tell me about them in terms of care and usage. Thanks!
Kristina
Wool is fantastic! I was initially a little afraid of wool, but it was so much easier to take care of than I imagined. I have Kissaluvs, a Mobums and a Little Beetle cover. The Mobums review has step by step photos demonstrating how I wash the covers.
I rarely have to wash them, you know you need to when they start hanging on to a urine smell (or if they are soiled.) Otherwise, just air them out between uses.
I use liquid lanolin that I found at my local organic store to lanolize when they don't seem to be as absorbent, but there are any number of lanolizing products out there. Using a lanolin containing wash (like Eucalan) will greatly reduce the frequency with which you need to lanolize.
Wool was my lifesaver (over a super-absorbent fitted) for night time, when my son was a super soaker!
Does this answer your questions? What else do you want to know? How about my readers? Do you use wool?
Crystal says:
Maria,
I have been having stink issues with my hemp gDiaper inserts. I have tried just about everything, including stripping multiple times, a little bit of bleach in the wash, I switched to Rockin Green detergent, and I wash at least every 2 days. And I have tried sunning (all day in Florida heat) when I have the time, which I try to find the time at least once a week. The smell isn't ammonia, it's just a funkiness, and it comes out of the washer and dryer smelling this way. We have no rash problems cropping up, just the smell. Any ideas on something else to try?
Thanks,
Crystal
What have you been using to strip? It seems that sometimes adding things make stinkies worse. I would try running the inserts through several cycles on hot, with water only; no detergent or additives. See if you are getting any suds or residue in the water.
I know you said you already tried bleach, but after you've made certain they are rinsed clean, try 1/4 cup of bleach in the bleach dispenser with only the inserts in the wash.
Do you have hard water? It may be mineral deposits causing the funk. Try the Rockin' Green hard rock if you haven't already, or try adding calgon water softener.
Sorry I wasn't more help, you have tried most of what I would have done already!
Labels:
kissaluvs,
little beetle,
Mailbox Mondays,
mobums,
stinky,
washing,
wool
30 August, 2010
Mailbox Mondays 8/30/10
Every Monday I will answer user submitted questions. They don't have to be about cloth diapering! I'll always answer questions via email, but if you would like your question to be answered in a Mailbox Mondays post, send an email with the subject "Mailbox Mondays" to Maria at change-diapers dot com!
Please note: My intent is to get a queue of questions for the next several months, so it may be some time before your submission is posted. If you would like me to email my response so you don't have to wait until your question is posted, let me know!
Please note: My intent is to get a queue of questions for the next several months, so it may be some time before your submission is posted. If you would like me to email my response so you don't have to wait until your question is posted, let me know!
Kelly says:
Detergent question- i'm sure you get tons of these, but i've been wondering... I was using RnG hard rock but still had stinky microfiber so i decided to save myself some $ and use tide. our local stores only have original tide in the HE formula, but I have an older top loader (def. not high efficiency!) Can i still use this on my diapers? If so, any idea how much i should use?
wahm question- I've started getting into buying diapers from wahm on hyenacart. Do you ever do reviews or giveaways of those kinds of diapers? I'm always hesitant to try out a new brand w/o having heard an honest review. :)
Love your blog, thanks! ~Kelly
Check us out at http://www.dariusandkelly.blogspot.com/!
First Question:
Microfiber just tends to get the stinkies! If your Rockin' Green is otherwise working for you, try "Rockin' a soak" followed by lots of extra rinses. If the stink remains, try adding 1/4 cup of bleach to a full load of inserts (not the diapers, just the inserts!) Once I found a detergent that worked for me, I rarely had any issues. If I start to get a whiff of the weird microfiber stink, or ammonia, I will do a dab of bleach with the inserts. It knocks it out before it gets bad; I do this about one per month.
As far as Tide goes yes, you can use HE detergent in a regular machine. Use the same amount you normally would. You will notice less suds than usual; that's the main difference between HE detergent and regular detergent.
I have an HE machine and soft water, and even using 1/4-1/2 of the LOWEST load line (1) of powdered Tide, I have to do some additional rinses to get it all out. If you decide to try it, be very conservative in the amount you use. If you need a bunch of extra rinses, cut it back even more. If you don't think your diapers are getting clean, add a little extra!
Second Question:
I love WAHMs! I have done some reviews of diapers sold on HyenaCart. Check out my Review Archive Page. I think there are at least 10+ HyenaCart sellers there however, email me any time if you have a specific seller/product in mind that you'd like me to review. Not all WAHMs are able or willing to do free or discounted products for reviews, but I will see what I can do for you!
Labels:
detergent,
hyenacart,
Mailbox Mondays,
microfiber,
stinky,
wahms,
washing
26 July, 2010
Mailbox Mondays 7/26/10

Here's the second installment of "Mailbox Mondays." I will always answer any questions you have via email, but if you would like to have your question answered on a Mailbox Mondays post, please email me at change.diapers.change.the.world at gmail dot com and put "Mailbox Mondays" in your subject. Questions don't have to be diaper related!

I wanted to quickly tell you that I'm going to be a regular writer on The Village of Moms, which is where I guest posted my Cloth 101 posts. I'll be posting the first Monday of every month! I'll write about cloth diapering, babywearing, kid's activities and crafts, frugal tips and more.

I wanted to quickly tell you that I'm going to be a regular writer on The Village of Moms, which is where I guest posted my Cloth 101 posts. I'll be posting the first Monday of every month! I'll write about cloth diapering, babywearing, kid's activities and crafts, frugal tips and more.
The first question is from Heather. My answer is long winded as usual, but would you expect any less from me? :-)
I had a question about stripping my micro fiber inserts. I have a horrible time with ammonia stink and have been told I should strip them because I have buildup issues (we have hard water). Every time I wash my diapers I soak them overnight in my washer with a cloth diaper detergent and them I wash them in the morning. My wash routine is like this:
Double rinse and spin
8+ hour soak
Heavy duty wash, heavy soil level, extra rinse
Hang dry in the sun
So what exactly should I do to get rid of my ammonia stink? Strip? Change my wash routine? Any help would be appreciated!
Heather A.
Oh Heather, I so feel your pain. While I do not have hard water, I did battle the stinkies. I tried so many things, I ran my washer 24/7 for at least two weeks I swear. The good news is, I doubt we run any risk of ever running our well dry!
Wash routines are to me, the most confusing part of cloth diapering. If you ask a room full of cloth diaperers this question, you would get twice as many opinions as people in the room!
Stink usually comes from buildup as you know, but the hard part is, buildup of what? It could be a buildup of detergent, a buildup of the minerals from your water, or a buildup of, ahem, "deposits" made in the diaper.
I find that the simpler you keep things, the better off you'll be. Since you have hard water, it's not going to be as simple as most. I don't know what kind of detergent you are using now, but once you get the stink under control, consider trying Rockin' Green's hard rock detergent, or adding Calgon water softener to the load. With hard water, your detergent is working so hard to take care of the minerals in your water, there's no oomph left to clean the laundry!
Now back to the buildup. If you run the diapers through with no detergent, do you see any suds? If so, you may have a detergent buildup. Try rinsing until there's no suds, without adding any detergent.
No suds? I commonly hear people say to use dish soap to strip diapers (original blue dawn.) This caused more problems for me. Lot of people have had luck with soaking diapers with Rockin' Green, then rinsing a ton.
What worked for me was RLR. RLR is a laundry treatment that you can use once a month or so to remove buildup for diapers and other laundry. (Worked wonders on our towels & sheets too!) I have an HE washer, well water and a softener, so I did not use a whole packet for a load. You might need to. Run a heavy duty wash with a soak, then rinse rinse rinse until you don't see any trace of suds. Then, I took the diapers out to dry and ran just the inserts through with a dab of bleach, then several extra rinses. I know a lot of people will not use bleach, but it worked for me!
This really took care of things for me, and now if I start smelling some ammonia, I will use a bit of RLR, some extra rinses and a dab of bleach on the inserts.
Once you get the current issue taken care of, you of course want to keep it at bay as long as possible. If you have a top loading washer, use the largest load size, regardless of the actual size of the load you're washing. Try not to wash more than 20 diapers at a time. If your issue was detergent buildup, use a little bit less. If it wasn't, you may need to use a little more. If you're using a detergent that is formulated for cloth diapers, use the recommended amount, not 1/4 or 1/2 like you often hear. I've also found that I need to rotate detergents. One will work fine for a while, then suddenly doesn't anymore.
I had such a hard time with this! I like things organized and I like hard and fast rules (I'm weird.) So it was hard for me that there wasn't a list to follow that said use this amount of this type of detergent and do this wash cycle and you'll be all set. It depends so much on your water, your washer etc.
In conclusion, don't fret! Be patient and you will figure things out.
Next, a question from Alexis:
What do you use at night? Do you change in the middle of the night?
I'm going to answer these in reverse.
Night time changes
Now, at 14 months, my son sleeps 10-12 hours most nights. When he occasionally wakes, he has a quick "snack" and goes back to bed without a change. When he was really little, nights went like they do for most parents of young babies. Sleep a little while, wake up, nurse, change diaper, then the circus routine of getting him back to sleep, then repeat. Most of the times he woke, his diaper was changed.
In between there, he started to sleep a bit longer, and I had to up my night time diapering game. Then came the tricky time period. My son wasn't waking as often, and he was starting to drift off to sleep after nursing.
This won't win me any mother of the year awards but neither of my children have been great sleepers. If my son happened to drift off while nursing, I would at least try to lay him back down. If he stayed asleep, I would sneak out of the room, crawl into bed and pray he would stay asleep for a while! I suppose I probably should have woken him to change his diaper but uhhh, not gonna happen. If I tried to change his diaper first, before nursing him, he would have woken the whole household to express his disapproval.
What I use at night
During that in-between stage where my son was really drinking quite a bit at night, but not necessarily being changed every time, he was quite the heavy wetter. I spent a lot of time and money trying different things, and for a while, I really had no choice but to wake him to change his diaper.
Right now, I wash every other day and I have 4 diapers specifially for night time use. I'm still stuffing them the same, though I really don't need as much in them anymore.
Two of my "night time" diapers are Bumgenius 3.0s. Initially, I had them so overstuffed that I had a leg gap that made the diaper useless if he was on his side! Now, each one has two full size inserts with a hemp doubler in between.
The third is a combo of two of my night time diapering desperation purchases. It's a Dypes by Dixon Sweet Slumber fleece diaper, stuffed with a Knickernappies Superdo insert. If you are having night time issues, I highly recommend trying a Superdo. It's incredibly absorbent, but much thinner than multiple inserts (still thick though!)
The last one in my night time rotation is again a purchase made during my desperate search for a night solution. It's a Guerilla Fluff Utilitarian fitted topped with a Mobums night night wool soaker. My GF diaper has: 3 layers to the diaper, 2 soakers with 3 layers each, a doubler with 2 layers plus a layer of wool and optional zorb added. That sucker is absorbent!
In the thick (har har) of things, I decided to be redundantly redundant and top even the waterproof diapers with a Kissaluvs Wool Lover soaker, and I favored fleece PJ pants also.
He may have looked a bit like a snowman, but it was worth it! Just a few hours in a disposable diaper gives my little guy an awful rash, but I know lots of people who use a single disposable at night. I won't tell anyone if that's what you decide works best for you. ;-) We won't throw you off Fluff Island.
Labels:
hard water,
Mailbox Mondays,
night time diapers,
rlr,
stinky,
stripping,
washing
03 February, 2010
The Last Resort
My last resort to fix these stinky diapers was going to be bleach. I don't have the dislike of bleach that some others do, but it was my last resort nonetheless.
Worked like a charm. I bleached only the inserts, since bleach can damage PUL, and I only used a few tablespoons in the washer's bleach dispenser.
The diapers are good as new. PHEW! I only wish I had tried it sooner. From now on, I'll bleach at the first sign of stink!
I washed my new ones separately so the stink wouldn't spread. My new ones aren't really bleachable, so hopefully they won't get stinky. They don't have microfiber, so I don't expect them to!
Labels:
bleach,
microfiber,
stinky,
washing
21 January, 2010
Yes, I'm still here.
I'm still here, and I'm still rinsing diapers!
I got my RLR laundry treatment. I can't keep my kiddo in disposables, even a few hours leaves his hiney with raised, red welts. So I bought two packets and washed the diapers in two batches. Then I rinsed, rinsed and rinsed some more.
The result was noticeable. I still smelled ammonia after the diaper was wet, but I actually had to sniff it. Before that, I could tell the diaper was wet because my eyes would start watering while I was holding him!
Encouraged, I ordered more RLR. Someone pointed me to Banana Peels Diapers. They have a great price on the RLR. I was able to order 16 packets at $1.50 each and shipping was only $2.50.
While waiting for it to arrive, I continued to rinse like crazy. Every time I had a diaper to wash, I threw it in the washer instead of the wet bag. Each time I added a diaper, I ran a cycle on the washer. If there was time between a cycle ending and the next diaper addition, I ran a cycle with no detergent.
I got the RLR today. I washed the diapers and inserts and hung the diapers to dry. I put the inserts in the washer with a whole packet of RLR and added boiling water.
My plan now is to just continue rinsing until I don't see suds. If they still smell like ammonia, they will get RLR'ed again. When I've eventually knocked the smell out, I plan to use the RLR once a month or so to keep any buildup or stinkies at bay. In fact, I really want to try some RLR on our towels!
I got quite a few other goodies today and I am washing them separately!! So watch out for some posts over the next week or so!
Labels:
banana peels diapers,
rlr,
stinky,
stripping,
washing
12 January, 2010
It's on now!
Yesterday I decided to declare war. It's full fledged warfare, me vs. the diapers.
I started by soaking them in bac out and lil outlaws most of the day. Then I did a cold heavy duty wash with a 3 hour soak and extra rinse. I followed that up with a hot heavy duty wash with an extra warm rinse.
Then, it was just me and the inserts. My diapers hung over the washing machine and the inserts gave them a panicked look. They should know better than to mess with me!
Next...yeah, I did it. I heard tiny, stinky screams as I plunged the inserts into boiling water. (Don't try this at home kiddos!)
I filled the washer with hot water, lil outlaws, and bac out (put in the liquid pre-treat dispenser). I added the inserts and boiling water, plus an extra 7 quarts of boiling water. I closed the lid and gave one more loathsome and triumphant look at the washing machine before turning off the light and heading upstairs.
As the inserts lay stewing and thinking about what they did, I lay thinking about my HE washer. I love it, except for those cases where I want to be able to add more water. I heard some people say they tried to dump additional water in, but the washer sensed it and drained it out. Mine doesn't do that, but it's a pain to try to fill a pot and dump it in the washer.
Then, it hit me!
Aha!
This morning, I ran another heavy duty cycle with an extra warm rinse and added extra water from the utility sink. In the last rinse, I still noticed some residue on the surface of the water, so I did ANOTHER heavy duty wash with a double warm rinse, and I added extra water to the wash and the rinse. I didn't add any detergent or additive, just water, water and more water!
After all that, I'm still noticing sudsy-ish residue on the surface of the water during agitation (I think I was able to capture it in a photo). So, another cycle.
The only problem is that I'm down to my last clean diaper. The diapers are all dry, so if this wash does it, I can have the inserts dry in time for the next diaper change. If I have to wash any more, I will have to put him in a disposable. Ick. (Had to do it since he pooped as soon as I put the last clean one on him. *sigh*)
I've tossed around the idea of bleaching them to really kill all the ickies, but I think as long as I'm still getting stuff out of the inserts with hot water, they are still going to stink.
I think I'm just going to continue rinsing until I see NO residue, or until I run our well dry. Whichever comes first, hee-hee.
I've been rinsing all day, I'm going to let them soak overnight and rinse some more tomorrow. I did discover that more water does not equal better though. Adding enough extra to completely cover the diapers is good, but adding too much means the agitator dealie at the bottom of the washer doesn't draw the stuff at the top of the washer down as much.
I hope I get this resolved soon because his hiney is so red with raised welts from the sposies.
P.S. I did try one on him this afternoon about 4 rinses ago (LOL) and it still smelled like ammonia, but not in the make your eyes water way it did before.
P.P.S. Please learn from my mistake and be very cautious with stripping if you have an HE washer/soft water. It totally slipped my mind that if I have trouble getting shampoo out of my hair in our soft water, the soap may leave residue instead of removing it.
Labels:
bac out,
lil outlaws,
microfiber,
stinky,
stripping,
washing
11 January, 2010
Not that kind of stripping
Well. I'd hoped that since I've been using Lil Outlaws detergent and cloth safe diaper cream, I wouldn't have to strip my diapers. I've finally succumbed to the microfiber stink! They weren't particularly offensive, just rather musty smelling. This particular smell appears to be very common with BumGenius diapers.
To strip diapers, you use the classic blue dawn, or plain ivory dish soap, suds the diapers up, then rinse until there are no more suds. This can be a lot of rinsing, so I did only 5-7 at a time, since I only have 15.
The rule is, if your diapers smell like anything other than "clean," they're not. My guess is that since I have an HE washing machine, the diapers just weren't quite getting rinsed clean. Extra warm rinses can get rid of residue.
If you're fortunate enough to have space and money for a second washing machine, a regular old washing machine seems to be best for washing diapers. If you're in the market for a new machine, it's something to keep in mind.
For the record, you are not supposed to use any sudsing "stuff" in an HE machine, so if you have an HE, do this in a sink or laundry tub until the majority of the suds are gone.
After stripping, my diapers smelled great. I didn't even notice any "stinkies" in a fully soaked nighttime diaper.
It really wasn't that big of a deal or that much work, so I'm planning on stripping diapers anytime I notice more than a little stink!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OK it's been maybe two days since I've written this and I am going crazy! Yesterday morning I opened up his diaper and I almost fell over from the strong ammonia smell. I thought maybe it was just because he had been ill the night before, so maybe he was dehydrated & his urine was concentrated. Later that day I had another eye watering ammonia diaper, and his diaper this morning was the same way.
It seems to only be the bumgenius diapers. They are my favorite diapers, but these inserts are horrible!
Moms in my cloth diaper group suggested RLR Laundry treatment, so I am going to try it.
It irritates me that it's just the BG inserts, especially since they are otherwise my favorite diapers. If I had the funds, I would buy some Blueberry Combination One Size inserts to use in them, along with a few hemp inserts or bamboo doublers to use at night. The O/S insert came with the Blueberry Minky diaper I have. The microfiber quickly absorbs, while the hemp locks the moisture in, away from baby. It's all one piece to make stuffing easier, but it has a loop design (vs. being "sandwiched" together) for more effective washing and faster drying. Synthetic fibers supposedly stink more than natural ones, but I've had no trouble with any other microfiber, just the BG.
In my dream world, I'd have a laundry room big enough to house my HE washer & dryer, as well as a cheap, mega capacity, standard washer. I want to be able to fill my washer to the brim for diapers and other loads as I see fit. I'd love my HE washer so much if only it had some sort of manual override to add more water.
To strip diapers, you use the classic blue dawn, or plain ivory dish soap, suds the diapers up, then rinse until there are no more suds. This can be a lot of rinsing, so I did only 5-7 at a time, since I only have 15.
If you're fortunate enough to have space and money for a second washing machine, a regular old washing machine seems to be best for washing diapers. If you're in the market for a new machine, it's something to keep in mind.
For the record, you are not supposed to use any sudsing "stuff" in an HE machine, so if you have an HE, do this in a sink or laundry tub until the majority of the suds are gone.
After stripping, my diapers smelled great. I didn't even notice any "stinkies" in a fully soaked nighttime diaper.
It really wasn't that big of a deal or that much work, so I'm planning on stripping diapers anytime I notice more than a little stink!
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OK it's been maybe two days since I've written this and I am going crazy! Yesterday morning I opened up his diaper and I almost fell over from the strong ammonia smell. I thought maybe it was just because he had been ill the night before, so maybe he was dehydrated & his urine was concentrated. Later that day I had another eye watering ammonia diaper, and his diaper this morning was the same way.
It seems to only be the bumgenius diapers. They are my favorite diapers, but these inserts are horrible!
Moms in my cloth diaper group suggested RLR Laundry treatment, so I am going to try it.
It irritates me that it's just the BG inserts, especially since they are otherwise my favorite diapers. If I had the funds, I would buy some Blueberry Combination One Size inserts to use in them, along with a few hemp inserts or bamboo doublers to use at night. The O/S insert came with the Blueberry Minky diaper I have. The microfiber quickly absorbs, while the hemp locks the moisture in, away from baby. It's all one piece to make stuffing easier, but it has a loop design (vs. being "sandwiched" together) for more effective washing and faster drying. Synthetic fibers supposedly stink more than natural ones, but I've had no trouble with any other microfiber, just the BG.
In my dream world, I'd have a laundry room big enough to house my HE washer & dryer, as well as a cheap, mega capacity, standard washer. I want to be able to fill my washer to the brim for diapers and other loads as I see fit. I'd love my HE washer so much if only it had some sort of manual override to add more water.
Labels:
bamboo,
blueberry,
bumgenius,
hemp,
lil outlaws,
microfiber,
rlr,
stinky,
stripping,
swaddlebees,
washing
11 December, 2009
Biokleen Bac Out
I had noticed that some of my diapers, specifically the BumGenius, had a stinky smell to them. It seems that "microfiber stink" is fairly common, but the stink I was experiencing wasn't an ammonia or urine smell, it's more of a musty, wet towel smell.
Enter Biokleen Bac Out Stain & Odor eliminator.
I had read up on it online and found it at my local organic market. It was $7.99 plus tax for a 32 oz concentrated bottle. The same size bottle without the sprayer was $1.00 less.
Here is the info as listed on the container:
I have to wait & see if it does the trick on the diapers!
Edit August 2010: As of today, the only thing I've found that truly takes the ammonia smell out of my microfiber inserts is a dab of bleach.
Enter Biokleen Bac Out Stain & Odor eliminator.
I had read up on it online and found it at my local organic market. It was $7.99 plus tax for a 32 oz concentrated bottle. The same size bottle without the sprayer was $1.00 less.
Here is the info as listed on the container:
Bac-Out Stain & Odor Eliminator
with Live Enzyme Cultures:
It seems everyone has a Bac-Out story. Bac-Out’s live enzyme-producing cultures attack pet, food and beverage stains, organic waste, and odors until they are gone, digesting them back to nature, safely and naturally. Bac-Out is safe to use around children and pets, even birds.
• Lime Peel Extract cleaning power
• Destroys the toughest odors so they are gone for good
• Excellent for mold and mildew
• Preferred by commercial carpet cleaners nationwide
It seemed a little spendy, but it is a concentrated bottle and it foams when you spray it. I wish I could capture that in a photo, but I haven't been able to. I figured if it saved my inserts from stink, it would be well worth it, being cheaper than new inserts!
I sprayed each diaper and insert quite liberally and used a good bit of the bottle.
I didn't initially realize that I was supposed to soak the diapers after spraying, I washed them right away. The spray smelled wonderful, a fresh, lime scent, and left the diapers simply smelling clean.
I didn't initially realize that I was supposed to soak the diapers after spraying, I washed them right away. The spray smelled wonderful, a fresh, lime scent, and left the diapers simply smelling clean.
I even sprayed the washing machine itself, hoping it might help with some of the mustiness I've noticed.
I've got my shower curtain liner soaking now, and I hear it is great for pet odors. I had used Odo Ban for pet odors in the past, but I'm not a big fan of the eucalyptus scent.
I have to wait & see if it does the trick on the diapers!
Edit August 2010: As of today, the only thing I've found that truly takes the ammonia smell out of my microfiber inserts is a dab of bleach.
Labels:
bac out,
biokleen,
cloth diapers,
inserts,
laundry,
microfiber,
natural cleaners,
stinky
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