Sunday, September 4, 2011

Canning

Can you call it canning if you only had enough fruit for two cans?  I guess so.

I pulled out the nectarines tonight intending to just dehydrate some of them.  It was so hot today the idea of canning was not appealing.  But I realized most of them were not looking great so I just had to do it, even though it was getting a bit late.

My first experience canning was pretty fun for the most part.  Thanks to a friend letting me watch her can last night (thanks Em!) I felt pretty confident that I knew what I was doing.  I was pretty sad by all the very bruised and even rotten fruit I had to throw out - Gabe & Elena were definitely adding fruit off the ground into the bucket when I wasn't looking.  But I managed to get enough for two cans and one tray on my *new* dehydrator (garage sale find!).  I've also got a tray of blueberries in the dehydrator and now that it's after midnight and I'm finally done, I'm off to bed. :)

Friday, September 2, 2011

Picking peachers (errr nectarines)

Today we had a grand adventure, at least a grand adventure for us since we've never attempted picking fruit before.  We had planned on picking peaches but decided to go for the nectarines once we were there.  I wish I had pictures to share but I didn't have enough hands for my camera too.

I could write out our experience in long paragraphs but I thought I'd just give it to you in bullet points. ;)

  • Picking fruit with 3 small children in tow (mine + the one I babsit) is a lot of fun.  It is also very exhausting.
  • If you bring a child under the age of 2, you should bring a backpack carrier - NOT a stroller.  Though the child leash does work in a pinch. ;)
  • Said 15 month old child will probably try to eat a lot of rotten fruit off the ground.  If you keep handing her ripe fruit to eat this helps.
  • Even if it's cold outside when you leave the house, put cooler layers underneath or you will have two kids in microfleece pants and long sleeve shirts sweating in the heat.
  • They should make push carts with buckets for moms with poor upper body strength + kids that aren't strong enough to help.
  • Having older kids who offer to push the stroller you stupidly decided to bring is a ton of help!
  • It's really cute watching the kids run around trying to find the ripe fruit on the trees.
  • Having other moms and their kids with you makes the experience so much fun.
  • When we finished picking and I was packing the fruit into boxes I discovered that the 15 month old and 2 year old were more than likely adding fruit off the ground into the bucket behind my back, given the large number of nectarines that had worm holes and were very very bruised.  It did seem like one minute the bucket was empty and then it was full. ;)
  • McDonald's happy meals can save the day when you completely forget to pack a lunch for the kids and they are starving on the way home.
  • Cloth diapers last a surprisingly long time when you forget to change them...
  • I am definitely doing this again, now that I've learned what I should and shouldn't bring with me.
It was really so much fun.  I enjoyed myself a lot and the kids were so exhausted they slept most of the way home until they woke up hungry.  Gabe is very excited by all the fruit, despite the fact that he won't eat it.  Elena thinks it's a smorgasbord and I have had to hide it all in the fridge for now.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Baby-Led Elena

Lately I've had a few friends and family comment on what a great eater Elena is. And she is. Gabe is quite picky and let me tell you it's pretty stressful at times. Elena on the other hand will eat just about anything you put in front of her. Not that she doesn't have preferences but for the most part she loves all the different food groups.

Now most of this I attribute to personality. Elena is just so much more laid back than Gabe in this area. But I think part of it is how I chose to feed her. After dealing with purees for 15 months with Gabe I was downright sick of them. I didn't want to look at another puree. I had heard of a parenting 'fad' called baby-led weaning and a couple friends that tried it swore up and down that their kids were the best eaters. At the time I thought they were a bit insane. I don't like parenting fads at all. But now faced with feeding another kid, and pretty terrified of having another picky eater, I thought it might be worth looking into. I read up on it and a friend sent me her copy of the book Baby-Led Weaning by Gill Rapley and Tracey Murkett. I read the book and it made a lot of sense to me. I won't sit here and explain every detail involved with Baby-Led Weaning (or a better title would be Baby-Led Solids), you can read the book if you want or checkout the website http://www.babyledweaning.com/.

For the record, I have nothing against purees. Moms have fed their babies purees for many years and it's worked for them. I just didn't like our puree experience and I didn't want to repeat it. Gabe hated most of what I tried to feed him and it was always a crazy game of trying to figure out how to sneak it in his mouth. This was usually done while my own dinner got cold and for well over a year I couldn't remember the last time I ate a warm meal.

The basics of baby-led weaning are pretty simple - wait until baby is 6 months old + can sit up on their own and skip the purees. Purees were first introduced when our parents were babies and it was a common recommendation then to start feeding babies solids by the time they were 2 months old. You can't get solid food into a 2 month old so they had to puree it up. Before this time a lot of parents followed 'baby-led weaning' before it had a name, it was just a natural way of introducing table foods to babies when they were ready for them. By the time babies are 6 months old and can sit up on their own, they can grip food and bring it to their mouth (and in many cases, rip it right off our plates while we are holding them!). So long as it is is given in reasonable sized portions and easy textures for them, they can learn to feed themselves.

Elena took to eating this way beautifully. At first she did a lot of 'munching' on foods and learning how to move them around her mouth. She still ate a decent portion from probably our 3rd time offering her food, but she didn't really start eating 'meals' until she was about 8 months.

Here are some pictures of Elena learning to feed herself. Did I mention that baby-led weaning is quite messy? If you are a parent who is afraid of mess, you might not want to do this. Actually, if you are a parent afraid of mess, I'm not sure why you are a parent. ;)

One of Elena's very first foods, a banana
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Elena gagging on the banana. Gagging in the beginning is really normal as they learn to manipulate food in their mouth. I had to remind myself - repeatedly - that she was not choking and to let her handle it. She did wonderfully of course.
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This is either a banana or an apple slice...I can't tell!
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Figuring out a straw sippy. Not food but Elena learned this skill pretty quickly.
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A pork chop. She ate nearly that whole piece
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Turkey bacon. Yes turkey bacon. She ate a couple of those apple slices on the table too, so I'm not *too* horrible of a parent am I?
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Patiently waiting for food while Gabe plays with his
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Realizing that Gabe has food on his tray...
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She grabbed his tray and pulled him closer to her so she could reach his fork
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And success!
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Pizza crust (I swear we fed her healthy food too, I guess I didn't think those were picture worthy...)
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This is what she thought of the puree I attempted to feed her when I didn't feel like preparing any food
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Toast and peaches and shredded cheese
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Cinnamon-raisin toast with cream cheese and sliced cucumber. She likes veggies but if you put veggies and carbs in front of her at the same time, carbs win every time...
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A quisidilla and steamed bell pepper slices
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Chicken and cut up peaches. By this point Elena started wanting most of her food in small cut up pieces.
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A steamed carrot. Not sure what the rest of it was!
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Learning how to use a spoon
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Which did not last long
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Spaghetti. Ummm...did I mention that baby-led weaning is messy?
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Now Elena is 15 months and she's my great eater. And as if baby-led weaning wasn't fun enough on it's own, I never had to buy a single jar of baby food for Elena which I'd say is pretty cost effective. I also never had to puree up any of my own baby foods (I did with Gabe eventually to save money) which saved me a lot of extra time in the kitchen. I'm looking forward to doing the same thing with this next baby, hopefully he or she likes it just as much.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Commenting

I was told by a friend who follows my blog that she's having issues commenting. I've changed some settings so hopefully it will work now...

Friday, August 12, 2011

Newborn cloth

I have to admit that within just a couple days of finding out I was pregnant I started considering the cloth diapering possibilities.

Yes, please, go ahead and laugh at me. This blog is titled The Cloth Addict for a reason.

While most of our one-size diapers say they will fit from 8 lbs and up I know the reality is that most won't fit until baby is 10 - 12 lbs. Both my kids didn't hit this weight until they were 1.5 - 2 months old. If I want to do cloth I need newborn diapers until baby can fit into our one-size diapers. Since cost is our #1 reason for cloth diapering I had to sit down and do the cost comparison of disposables vs cloth for the first two months. I could bore you to tears by showing you all my math, but the end result I got was that disposables will cost approximately $200 - $220 during that time. Which is actually cheaper than cloth diapering - depending on how you go. Prefolds + covers are cheaper by a good $40 - 60. Just about everything else is more expensive - if you don't consider resale value. A newborn diaper can typically be re-sold for anywhere from 50 - 80% of the retail value (and more often than not closer to 80% because they are often in like new condition after only being used such a short time).

Even with resale value considered I wanted my goal to be to spend less money outright than what I would have spent on disposables. I could just go the disposable route but I love the idea of putting my newborn in fluffy cloth diapers and I am determined to figure out how to do it as cheaply as possible - without using only prefolds and covers. As economical as they are I just don't think I want to use them full time.

I considered for awhile using a newborn rental - up front cost is $225, you get the diapers for 3 months, and then when you return them you get $100 back or $110 for store credit. But one of their rules is that you can only use cloth diaper safe detergent. Since the only thing that has ever worked for me is Tide I'd rather just buy my own.

So far I'm very happy with my purchase decisions. I have spent a little less than 2/3 of my budget and I have nearly all the diapers I need. So far I have:

10 BumGenius XS AIOs
1 FuzziBunz XS pocket with velcro
5 Kissaluvs Size 0 fitteds
1 WAHM (work at home mom) fitted (no link she doesn't have a website)
7 Thirsties XS fitteds (these are discontinued, so no link)
1 Bummis XS cover
1 Small cover (unsure of brand)

All of them were bought on sale or used, some for an absolute steal.

All I have left to buy are half a dozen prefolds (I do want to try them, I just don't want a whole stash of them) and more covers.

My newborn cloth diaper stash so far:
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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Tubes & Talking

This blog has been a month in the making but finding the time to sit down and write it has been hard.

A month ago, on July 7th, Gabe had ear tubes put in to help solve his his issues associated with recurrent ear infections. Watching my boy in pain and needing antibiotics just about every 2 - 3 weeks was rough. I missed seeing the happy boy that I knew was in there. In addition to the never ending fussiness I wondered if a large part of Gabe's delay in speaking well had something to do with the constant fluid in his ears.

Gabe's tube surgery went very well. It was over quickly and he recovered so well. He didn't do that great waking up from the anesthesia but I expected it, thanks to a wonderful friend who warned me that he might become very combative and hard to control. He did, but he did calm down very quickly. After we were discharged he fell asleep in the car on his way home and by the next day he was back to his normal self again. More than that - he was happy. Since his tube surgery we have had maybe two or three major screaming toddler meltdowns. Before the surgery we were seeing those meltdowns several times a day.

Three days after his surgery I heard him running around the house saying, "Nonny! Nonny!" At first I was confused, but then realized that he was referring to - ME! He had always said 'mommy' with a bit of an N sound. It was never clear though, it always sounded slurred, just like every other word he said before the surgery. My attempts to teach him to say Mommy correctly hadn't worked. So I sat him down on the couch and told him, "No Gabe, I'm Mommy, not Nonny." He gave me a huge grin and said, "Mommy!" and my heart just melted. It sure is something when your 2 year old finally calls you Mommy (correctly!) for the first time.

Since then I've seen slow but steady improvement in his speech and it just blows me away all the time. He's learning new word and finally starting to say words he all ready knew correctly. He didn't suddenly start spitting out full sentences overnight but I didn't expect that. We continually work on his speech and he's getting better every day. He has a whole vocabulary of words now. I haven't tried to count them but I know it's a lot. Before his surgery I could count his vocabulary on two hands and now it's exploded. I am so proud of him and I am so happy we had tubes put in his ears. He hasn't had an ear infection since. His 1 month checkup with the ENT is tomorrow so we'll find out how his ears look inside and how everything is healing.

Yesterday Gabe was playing with Elena and she started trying to poke him in the eye (ahhhh siblings!). Gabe got all excited and told Elena, "It's an eye!" Excuse me while I tear up a bit. He said a full sentence and was also trying to teach Elena. Since then I've seen him doing such wonderful 'big brother' things with her. He shows her how to use toys and he's trying to teach her words. I can't believe it. My baby boy is growing up.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

A new addition

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Not much of a blog update, but the picture about sums it up. ;) We are expecting our third child in February and we couldn't be more thrilled.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Penicillin Allergy

A little over a week ago Gabe was diagnosed with double ear infections. This would be infection number 5 (6 I guess if you count that it's both ears this time) and we are headed for tubes on July 7th.

On Friday (day 8 of his antibiotics) Gabe woke up from his nap with a crazy looking rash on his bottom. I thought it looked like bug bites and actually tore his sheets up looking for bed bugs. Nothing to be found and then I noticed over the next 30 minutes that the bumps were spreading. My first thought was that he had chicken pox, though he has been vaccinated against it. But as the rash spread it became clear it was more like hives. I put in a call to the ped's office office and the doctor on call told me it was likely a reaction to his antibiotic - Augmentin - and that we should discontinue it immediately. Sooth with oatmeal or baking soda baths, use calamine lotion, etc. We had planned on going out to my parent's house and Gabe seemed pretty happy despite being a little itchy so out we went. We got there late in the evening. And that's when it all 'broke lose' really for lack of a better phrase. Gabe's hives went from minimal to a crazy rash covering his entire body:

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(the white stuff is calamine lotion)

He was clearly unhappy and so uncomfortable. In the morning we ground up oatmeal and bathed him in it and gave him benedryl, neither of which seemed to help him. We covered him in calamine lotion which might as well have been water. He cried non-stop and just itched and itched and while he itched the hives just got worse (yes worse than what you see above). I called the on-call doctor again and she said that since it was getting wore, despite discontinuing the antibiotic, I should take him in to a local ER or urgent care. When we got to the urgent care they said it was definitely hives, probably from the medication, and prescribed an oral steroid.

That really seemed to work and that night his rash went away considerably and he was happy (and hyper!) as a clam. I left him at my parent's house with Nathan and took Elena with me to go out to eat with my parents, brother, and the rest of our extended family in the area to celebrate my brother's graduation. When I got home we finally got Gabe in bed and it was the same as the night before. Crazy itching, very uncomfortable, lots of crying, and no one slept. We gave up around 3am and then at 5am decided we should just head home. He was covered in new hives on top of the ones that had been fading. He finally slept in the car (and so did I) and when we got home we tried another baking soda bath. That only seemed to make things worse and then I started to get pretty worried because the spots that had been there from the first outbreak had turned into bruises. We decided to head into the ER.

Thankfully Gabe is going to be just fine, he just has a very severe penicillin allergy. The ER doctor said that with the way our bodies fight allergens we can expect the hives to come and go for the next two weeks. He gave Gabe a stronger steroid in the hospital and sent us home with a prescription for the same steroid the urgent care clinic gave us, but at a stronger dosage. We are just to continue as before - steroids, benedryl, zyrtec (which he takes daily for seasonal allergies anyway) and calamine lotion and oatmeal or baking soda baths. But for the most part, we just have to wait it out. It will likely be a very long two weeks, but I'm so glad we know now that he has this allergy and I'm thankful that his first reaction was not a life-threatening one. They said that if he's ever exposed again it could be.

So that was my weekend. How was yours?

Thursday, June 9, 2011

The OCM fail

Two blogs in one day? I must be on a roll.

Or just avoiding folding my mound of laundry on the couch.

I am just updating to say I couldn't make it another month on the OCM. It just did.not.work. I wanted it to work. I tried to will it to work. But it simply does not. Maybe it works for people who don't have bad skin problems to begin with, but it definitely did not work for me. I could have experimented with different oils or with different levels of concentration of the castor oil vs. carrier oil but let's face it - that's a lot of work for something that probably wasn't going to help anyway. I'm glad I tried it because it was kind of a fun experiment, but overall it was a sad disappointment. Mostly because it would have been the most inexpensive face wash solution I can imagine.

Instead I have picked up a natural face cleanser from the grocery store called Kiss My Face. It smells nummy and so far it's helping my face to clear up so I couldn't be happier.

A nice diaper deal

I am subscribed to a few 'deal of the day' type websites, most of them are child/mothering related. They send me updates in my email for what is on sale that day. The deals are usually pretty nice - anywhere from 35 to 75% off depending on the item - but it's rare I actually buy anything.

A couple days ago though one of the sites had up a deal for 2 one-size Fuzzi Bunz diapers and a pair of babylegs (baby leggings - essentially designed to show off their diapers while still keeping their legs warm haha) for 50% off. It was pretty perfect timing since we just sold our treadmill and I will admit I was just about salivating over them. Most of the treadmill money is allotted to buy a sleeper sofa for our new guestroom / kid's play room (we are converting the study - updates on that to come soon) but I asked Nathan and he agreed we could use some of it for a couple more diapers. I currently have 26 diapers total. This will sometimes get us through 2 days, sometimes not quite depending on how many diapers I change a day. I have been hoping to expand our stash just a little so that I can get through 3 days but it will have to come in bits and pieces.

And because I never buy anything online without visiting retailmenot.com to look for coupon codes, I stopped in there before I checked out and got myself an additional 10% off.

I also got a used Goodmama fitted diaper off diaper swappers a few days ago for a whopping $5. I am feeling like quite the bargain hunger right now.

Can't wait for the diapers to get here.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

A Cloth Article

I haven't had anything cloth diaper related in awhile. I read this article today and thought I would share. I found it to be very true and it made me smile.

http://www.theclothdiaperwhisperer.com/2011/05/cloth-diapering-addicts-rules.html

Sorry this reads more like a facebook update than a blog entry, but enjoy.

The Oil Cleansing Method part 2

Well I've been slow at getting this update up.

I'm not really all that thrilled with the oil-cleansing method, as much as I would love to be.

I keep telling myself - it gets worse before it gets better...right?

I've broken out quite a bit. It is getting a bit better the last few days, though. I was going to try to get a pic but the kids won't let me so it'll have to happen later. :)

I also changed the oil type I was using. I just could not bear to continue to put cooking oil on my face. It felt wrong. So I changed it to coconut oil/castor oil and also added a drop of tea tree oil which has natural antiseptic qualities, plus I love the smell. I will give it a month and if I see no improvement then I'm going to give up on this and try something else.

I am not going back to proactive though so if anyone has a better solution (that's inexpensive) I would love to hear it.

Friday, April 22, 2011

The Oil Cleansing Method

Sometime ago I came across a facebook post that really piqued my interest. It was a lady talking about how she used oil - yes oil - to clean her face.

My first reaction was negative. I thought that's just crazy - hello acne and blemishes! There is just no way that works. But out of pure curiosity I clicked on the link and started reading about it. Instead of explaining it all to you, I'll just provide the link:

http://www.theoilcleansingmethod.com/

For those who don't want to read it, the very basics behind the idea is that our face needs oil. And that by repeatedly stripping our face of oil with harsh chemicals we are only making the whole issue worse in the long run. We wash all the oil off our face, our face freaks out and produces more to try and replace it, which is why an hour or two after washing our face we get that yucky feeling oil slick all over again.

So theoretically I can see why this makes sense and I admit to being more than a bit curious. But I'm having a bit of an issue getting passed the idea of putting oil on my face. On the other hand I have been trying to find something to replace my Proactiv and have been unsuccessful. I am tired of paying for it. Yes, it does work, but only if I remember to use it twice a day. Anyone with young kids knows that face washing often ends up last on the list. According to the oil cleansing method you only need to do this once a day, in the evening before bed. First thing in the morning you only need to wipe down your face with a warm washcloth.

So I decided to make this an experiment and find out if this really works or not. Last night I made up my first batch - 20% caster oil to 80% safflower oil for normal skin. It took me all of 30 seconds to mix it up and store it in a small Gladware container. I went into the bathroom and took my 'before' picture which I guess I'll reluctantly share with you all now. Yes, I look exhausted. I'm a mom. I'm always exhausted.

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The lighting is not very good, it was the best I could manage last night. Will try for something better tomorrow I think. But anyway, that is my face pre-oil cleansing. I've had quite a breakout of tiny pimples on my forehead and the sides of my face which happens when I get lazy with the Proactiv like I have been recently.

After I mixed up the oil I took it to the bathroom and followed the directions. I spread it on my face and spent about 10 minutes massaging it in. At first it was uncomfortable, I didn't like the feeling of the oil on my skin. I became more used to it and almost found it relaxing by the time I was done. Then I took the washcloth with really hot water and put it on my face. Ahhhh now that is like getting my own personal facial! No I did not 'feel' the impurities being drawn out of my pores. Can I inset a big eye roll here? I didn't feel anything like that. What I did feel was very relaxed thanks to the hot wash cloth 'facials'. I had to repeat 4 times to get all the oil off my face and by the time I was done I felt just great. I tend to struggle with falling asleep (I think most women can relate to this) and it was the best pre-bedtime relaxation method I've ever tried even if that wasn't the intended purpose.

Just for good measure, here is me afterword. Makeup removed, exhausted and ready for bed. There is not at all a difference in my skin but I didn't expect it to work that fast. For the record, I plan to remove eye makeup beforehand next time. The oil works just fine but I like my Clinique eye makeup remover better.

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The only difference I have noticed today is that my skin is quite dry. If that keeps up I'll reduce the castor oil in the mixture per the website's instructions. Stayed tuned for my update in a week. I've read that it is supposed to get worse before it gets better. Eek.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

A Change of Blog

I have been contemplating changing the title of my blog for quite some time now and today I finally did it. Decaf addict doesn't really fit me anymore and I think my new title is much more appropriate. :)

Anyone know where I find cute new backgrounds and such? The boringness of my current blog is getting to me.

Never understimate the power of a moldy washer...

I learned this weekend just how bad a washer can be once it gets mold in it. Or to clarify, just how bad a front loading washer can be. I'm not sure if top loading machines suffer from the same potential problem.

After struggling to clean my diapers in my front loading machine for 5 months I decided to scrap it and get a top loader. I tried every detergent and wash routine under the sun and came to the eventual conclusion that it was simply my washer's inability to clean properly. Now when I first brought the idea of replacing it up to Nathan he looked at me like I'd grown a second head. Replace our washer just so we can continue to use cloth diapers? I could tell it was on the tip of his tongue to tell me to go back to using disposables. But he held himself in check, knowing that I've developed a bit of a strange addiction (maybe obsession would be a better term) with cloth diapers. They have become a hobby for me. I love everything cloth diaper related. I find them cute and fun. Putting a cute color or print cloth diaper on one of my kids just makes my day and as any mom of two little ones can appreciate, I change diapers all day long. Go ahead and laugh at me for my cloth addiction, I'm fine with it. I know I'm a bit strange.

So we started looking around for washers on craigslist. Nathan became 100% on board with replacing the washer when it started having some serious issues - like freezing on me in the middle of a load and refusing to give me my clothes back. Then when I attempted to wash some 'muddy' clothes of Gabe's (i.e. really wet with a bit of mud on them) they came out of the washer still dingy and stinking of dirt. It was clearly not cleaning clothes properly anymore and we were afraid it was going to die on us any day. We found a 12 year old Kenmore 90s series on craigslist that had been completely updated by an older gentleman who fixies up washers and dryers as hobby. Inside the washer is almost brand new. I will be happy if it lasts us a few years until we can afford to buy a nicer washer. If it lasts longer than that, it would be a bonus!

So how does the title of my blog work into this? On Saturday we took our front-loading washer out and put it in the shed and then hooked up the Kenmore. I noticed immediately a major difference in the laundry room when I would walk in. I told Nathan that our laundry room smelled so amazing and then I realized why - it didn't 'smell' like anything. It simply smelled like clean clothes and water. I didn't know how badly our washer stunk of mold until it was gone. I kept the door open when not in use since we bought it like recommended and ran the 'clean washer' cycle once a month as well.

The biggest impact of this difference hit me yesterday. I told Nathan in the morning over the phone that I was so glad my cold was finally leaving. That I hadn't felt this amazing in so long I couldn't even remember. It wasn't until much later in the afternoon that I started to make the connection. We've been fighting the never ending cold from h-e double hockey sticks for over 2 months now. But long before the cold started, I haven't felt like 'myself' in so long I didn't even realize I wasn't feeling like myself (hmm hope that made sense...). I have told Nathan a few times that I thought I might be developing allergies. Sometimes I felt better, sometimes I was just downright miserable not being able to breathe properly out of my nose and feeling like my head was in a complete fog. I just became used to it, because in truth I have felt like this since before Gabe was born at least.

I didn't realize how good I could feel when my head isn't completely full. The only thing that has changed is that the washer is gone and my laundry room smells wonderful again. It was quite a revelation. I know I'm allergic to mold and I know there was mold in the rubber seal of the washer (I tried everything under the sun to remove it, even straight bleach...) but I didn't realize how bad the mold really was. The amount in the rubber seal is not enough to cause the kind of smell that was in the laundry room so I suspect the entire inside of the machine is full of the stuff. The washer is in our shed while we figure out what to do with it and in the meantime I am just enjoying being able to fully breathe & think clearly again.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Adventures in Cloth Diapering: Part 6 - The Good, the good and the...well good!

I really have to say that I love cloth diapers. A lot. I didn't think I would love cloth quite this much. If you had told me say a year ago that I would start cloth diapering not only out of a desire to save money but also because I LOVED it and preferred it over disposables then I would have told you that you were a bit crazy.

But it's true. I do prefer cloth diapers over disposables any day. Getting our washing routine worked out properly was hard and there were a few times there that we almost switched back, but I was not about to give up without a very good try. I couldn't bear to let the diapers that we've spent good money on go to waste. After I was told to start using more detergent all my stinky issues changed drastically. Add to that switching to Rockin Green's detergent that is formulated specifically for soft water and our washing is now going so well. I still have to add water to my washer for the wash cycle but I've gotten used to it and it only takes me an extra 5 minutes. Now that we're using the Soft Rock formula I also don't have to do a bizillion rinses to get all the detergent out of the diapers and my wash time has gone down a lot.

Now that the stinkies are (hopefully!) gone, I've had time to just enjoy the diapers themselves! I've discovered better overnight options for both kids. My favorite by far is our new Softbums diaper - it is their new Omni system (the other Softbums diapers we have are their Echo system). It's like a pocket diaper + an AI2 diaper. For nighttime on Gabe I stuff it with a doubler and then snap in an insert and we are good to go. In fact he was doing so well with it (the doubler was hardly even damp) I've started experimenting with putting him in just a regular Softbums diaper at night with no doubler. It's worked great the two nights we've tried it.

For Elena we recently got a few FuzziBunz pocket diapers. They are not a one-size diaper, they are in medium size. An online friend didn't like the fit on her daughter so she sold them to me. They fit Elena great and if they are double stuffed they will last her all night. They are great daytime diapers too. I'm sad that they are sized diapers, though. She should still fit in them for awhile but when she does grow out of them I will be sorry to see them go.

I've been snapping some pictures of the kids in cloth diapers and had to show off the cuteness:

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This is a diaper that I found on etsy. Like the Softbums diapers the insert snaps into the cover. It's not really the greatest fit - okay I can barely get it around her waist - but the insert is very absorbent and it's so cute I keep putting it on her anyway.

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Snapping pictures of Gabe is near impossible these days but I did manage to grab a few. This is him in a BumGenius 4.0 one size diaper I picked up for half off at a big second's sale they were having. Apparently there is something wrong with this diaper that made it unacceptable to sell for full price, but whatever it is I can't figure it out. It's been working great.

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Gabe in a pocket diaper we bought a set of off ebay. These pocket diapers work pretty well for only being $5 each.

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And the two of them together. Gabe in the BumGenius and Elena in a Softbums. My chunky monkey baby and my skinny mini toddler. :) I love em!

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And just for fun, Elena showing off her mad standing skills. About half a second after I snapped this picture she fell over backward but she did manage to stand for a good 5 seconds all on her own. :D

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Saturday, January 8, 2011

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Adventures in Cloth Diapering: Part 4 - How to destroy your waterproof diaper covers

If, like me, you have a desire totally destroy the waterproofing on your diaper covers, just follow my simple instructions!

1. Don't buy a diaper sprayer and instead just dunk your diapers in the toilet to get the solid poop off.
2. Before guests arrive, drop a bleach tablet in the toilet tank.
3. Flush. Ahhh that clean bleach smell.
4. Dunk 3 or 4 diapers on the toilet over the weekend, throw them in the wet bag and let sit with all the other diapers.
5. Wash all your diapers together, including the ones soaked in bleach water.
6. Only now recall that bleach + waterproof PUL fabrics generally do not mix unless the bleach is highly dilluted.

And then you will have successfully dissolved all the waterproofing on your beautiful brand new diapers.

Be thankful they are still fairly water resistant and seem to be holding up just fine.