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Organic Diapers or Disposable Diapers

By: Taswell Maneveld

All that changed with the introduction of disposable diapers. Even the unfitted, flat, uncomfortable first generation disposable diapers were worlds above the usual organic cloth diapers for convenience and ease of use. Just unfold the back, pull the plastic up between the baby's legs and smooth it against his stomach, and tape the rear to the front. Voila! Split second diaper. And there was no need for time consuming washing!. No soiled disposable diapers soaking in a container of borax. No smell, no fuss, no washing service - just un-tape, wrap the diaper up and throw it in the trash.

For my generation, disposable diapers was the dividing line between 'back then' and now. I can't count the number of mothers, grandmothers, aunts and older female relatives who started off a tale with 'Of course, we never had Pampers, WE had to..."

There were numerous advantages: disposables were cleaner, more sanitary, more convenient. They did away with hours and hours of laundering and drying, for a mother these hours were particularly welcome!. If you were the least bit conscious of disposal, you could totally eliminate the dirty-diaper odor - just wrap it up tight in a plastic bag in put it in the OUTSIDE rubbish. Gone were the fears of jabbing poor infant with those big diaper pins, or having the diaper slide off because you misplaced the diaper pin.

Most were not aware of the disadvantages, but they were nonetheless valid. The major point against disposable disposable diapers is a potent one: The convenience of disposable disposable diapers have an huge effect on our natural environment. Some facts:

* Rubbish dumps are filling up with over 19 billions disposable diapers every year and this number is increasing! - and they do not breakdown for thousands of years..
* Disposable disposable diapers are a major deforestation concern - the manufacturing method involves over a million tons of wood pulp every year in the US alone!
* Harmful posions, metals and solvents are a by-product of disposable diaper production - a large amount of which ends up in our oceans and rivers.

In a world with limited resources, disposable diapers consume resources and produce pollutants and harmful chemicals. The convenience of disposable disposable diapers are jeopardizing the futures of the very children we are using them on.

But there's yet an additional side to the debate - disposable diaper manufacturers have countered with arguments that organic cloth diapers aren't all that gentle to Mother Earth either. They cite the usage of harsh chemicals in cleaning - bleach, borax and other detergents, the consumption of water, and the energy (and fuels) needed to heat water to temperatures that can disinfect disposable diapers as being just as damaging to the Earth as
disposables.

That is why cloth diapers are once again popping up mother's shopping lists. Certified organic organic cloth diapers have a much lower impact on resources in their manufacturing process. Due to no pesticides or poisonous chemicals being used in the manufacturing process it is much healthier for both the child and the Earth!

What about chemicals and bleaches being used when doing the laundry? Well, an eco-conscious mother who buys organic organic cloth diapers will no doubt also pay attention to that. There are a number of organic cleaning products existing that you can utilize to clean the diapers and this will render the organic diaper option even more eco-friendly.

In the end, the choice to use disposable diapers or organic cloth diapers is a judgment call. Which is better for baby? Which is better for mom? Which is least harmful to our planet?

Once you have considered all the alternatives I think you will discover that organic disposable diapers are the only way to go, but it will take some changes on your part!

Article Source: http://www.onlinearticlessite.com

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