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View Poll Results: Reusable nappies.....yes or no
No, I used/will use disposables
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Yes, I used/will use reusables
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Voters: 42. You may not vote on this poll

Reuseable nappies - yes or no?

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Old 17 May 2004 | 09:18 AM
  #32  
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pbee
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One other thing that most people do not know about disposable nappies is the amount of crude oil used to create them.

For biodegradable disposables, and the canadian motherease reusable nappy system take a look at

http://www.earthlets.co.uk/

you have a liner to throw away, a velcro or popper towel part, then a cover.

they work really well, but they look huge when folded up on a small baby. Not sure it works out as financially sound as what the manufacturers claim, ie you do not used 20 disposables a day,

please also remember the cost to the environment to the manufacture of these, and the washing and drying. you would need about 30 of these towels unless you plan to do a daily wash. so they do have a large upfront cost.
Old 17 May 2004 | 09:26 AM
  #33  
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I appreciate that baby poo is not the nicest of substances to deal with, but how did people cope up until 30 years ago (a short time in our evolutionary scale). Has it got mysteriously smellier or dirtier in the last 2 decades?
Yep agree I wonder how people coped as well but there was no alternative and people didnt know any different but yes certainly not fun thats for sure!
Old 17 May 2004 | 02:18 PM
  #34  
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Question no-one's mentioned the ecological cost of re-useables

My newborn gets through at least 12 nappies a day. I would need to run at least an 80-90c boilwash per day to keep these clean, what is the impact of the electricity used by my crap washer and the detergent I'd be using compared to a high efficiency factory production line for pampers?

Joolz

p.s toh (typing one handed) as holding said stinky newborn
Old 17 May 2004 | 02:23 PM
  #35  
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imlach
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Originally Posted by jbryant
My newborn gets through at least 12 nappies a day. I would need to run at least an 80-90c boilwash per day to keep these clean, what is the impact of the electricity used by my crap washer and the detergent I'd be using compared to a high efficiency factory production line for pampers?

Joolz

p.s toh (typing one handed) as holding said stinky newborn
Yes, I was wondering when someone would bring this up

Apparently, if you wash reuseables yourself, the total "ecological footprint" is half that of disposables.

If you go one step further and use a company for washing your reuseables (ie, industrial washing), the "ecological footprint" is a 1/3 of disposables.

By ecological footprint, I imagine that includes energy costs of production of nappy, total lifetime cost of maintaining it, and costs of disposal etc.
Old 17 May 2004 | 04:28 PM
  #36  
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Is it me, or has anyone else noticed how a breast fed babies poo smells quite nice
Old 17 May 2004 | 06:25 PM
  #38  
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Imagine the archaeology in a couple of hundred years time. Digging through pampers strata in landfill sites.... nice
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