Archive for June, 2011
June 27th, 2011 by amanda
I was looking for the new plastic pants, but couldn’t find them so I made some myself.
Using Baby Dry Pul Fabric
and a pretty cotton fabric, all you need is some elastic and there you have a pretty waterproof covers, which don’t add a lot of bulk.
The yellow lining is the waterproof Poly Urethane Laminate layer, just turn over the edges at legs and waist to make a tube, and thread swimwear elastic through them. I like to use the overlocker to sew the PUL layer to the cotton layer first, with the laminate side of the PUL against the wrong side of the pretty cotton layer, then treat it as a single piece of fabric. Sew up the side seams, and then turn over the edges.
To make the pattern I bought the old style plastic pants which are something like $2 for 3, and cut the elastic out so it would lay flat, then cut down the outside of the leg to open it up to trace around. Normally you set it out so that the pattern is the right way up over the bum, so it is upside down at the front.
The plastic pants come in all sizes (eg. 000, 00, 1, 2) so you can make a couple of each size as your baby grows. Or you can make one to match every dress if that’s the way you roll
June 26th, 2011 by amanda
It is just past mid winter, the shortest day of the year, and this is how my garden is looking.

The Beetroot is doing really well, as you can see at the front, just behind them is the broccoli.

The strawberries are also doing well, both in the hanging bag and the pot. And a loverly shot of some flat nappies drying in the background.

Yes, that is shredded paper that I am mulching with. Just like straw, once it is wet the paper felts down and so will not blow away. It is just as good at keeping the moisture in.
Yes, I probably should have waited until the sun was a little bit higher, or lower before taking these photos
but live and learn…
June 8th, 2011 by amanda
I have a few covers to go over my cloth nappies, for the flats I find the Thirsties Duo Wrap covers to be best. I had 2 size ones, and am currently using 4 size twos. 3 with velcro, and 1 with snaps. My 5-month-old is currently in the size 2s with all the snaps done up. The size 2s are supposed to go all the way to 3 years so I will see.
They are:


Rose


Orchid


Mango


Blackbird
I also have some Gen Y Covers in various sizes as they do not have the snaps down the front to change the fit dramatically, and some homemade plastic pants type ones.
June 7th, 2011 by amanda
This is the best fold for a newborn, as it is the smallest. It is very easy and exactly as it sounds.
Take your flat square nappy and fold in half, corner to corner to make a triangle.

Fold in half again to form a smaller triangle.

add a baby and fasten with a snappi, add a water proof cover if you like.
June 5th, 2011 by amanda
The number one reason that has me reaching for the cloth nappy over the disposable nappy, is the thought that with every cloth one I use there is more room in the garbage bin for things other than nappies.
Other reasons I use cloth are:
- Environment - not sending extra contaminated waste to land fill. There are a host of arguments about if the washing of nappies is more resource hungry than the disposable manufacturing process, however there is the incontestable truth that the disposables do not break down in land fill for decades. True there are now compostable, and eco-friendly nappy brands, but the plastic that makes them lovely and waterproof also keeps them together in land fill.
- Health – I discovered with LittleBug, and again with BabyBug, that they get LESS nappy rash using the cloth nappies than the disposable. counterintuitive I know!
- Cost – Disposable nappies work out somewhere between 30 and 50 cents each. Currently I use bamboo flats and covers, one of the cheapest combinations as the setup cost for 12-18 nappies and 4-5 covers is around the price of 2 boxes of huggies. When you think how long the boxes will last (month or two at the most) and how long the cloth ones (couple of years – to toilet training and beyond), then there is no argument about which is more cost-effective. I also have some All-In-Ones that I got for LittleBug which I’m still using 3 years later
- Effectiveness – again counter-intuitively I have had less leakage, and poo explosions from the cloth nappies than from the disposables.
- Cute factor – They are just so cute!
June 4th, 2011 by amanda

My new strawberries and hanging strawberry bag came in the mail today from the
diggers club.
I am very excited to plant them out as my old strawberries died over that hot, hot, hot summer that we just had. I probably should have watered them. Those old strawberries gave me a good service, at least 5 years of juicy berries. I have gone with the Aromas variety this time. My old strawberries were Alpine berries, it will be interesting to see if there are any differences in taste and how long it fruits.
AROMAS HANGING GARDEN
Fragaria x ananassa
Create a column of fragrant sweet strawberries perfect for a sunny balcony or verandah. Includes one strawberry bag which can hold 10 strawberries and 10 Aromas strawberries for planting. Can produce 5 kilos of strawberries or up to 20 punnets! Water regularly in hot and/or windy weather.
June 3rd, 2011 by amanda


Snappies are the new nappy pins. They are made from rubber with plastic teeth on the bottom which snag and hold the loops from the terry fabric. They are great as you can’t jab the baby, but do watch out as the teeth can be sharp, I have managed to slice my finger open on them.

June 2nd, 2011 by amanda
What is currently on LittleBug’s Bottom:
Flat Bamboo Nappy in a Bat Fold with a Thirsty Blackbird cover


June 1st, 2011 by amanda
There may soon be one less reason for feeling guilty about using disposable nappies. Mexican scientists have discovered that mushrooms, especially oyster mushrooms can completely break down a nappy in 4 months. If left untreated these nappies can remain in land fill for generations – one of the telling arguments against disposable nappies.
Just as well my number one reason for using cloth over disposable is room in my bin rather than environmental. But now I can stop feeling guilty for using them overnight and on long trips
For more info check out http://www.economist.com/node/18584104