Wednesday, June 9, 2010

g-Wiz

Welcome to month 8!

Catching up on a few things.

Firstly, we have some poops acquiring the consistency of tomato paste. Whippersnapper has been eating "solids" - which are actually purees, plus whatever biscuit bits migrate into his stomach after copious slobbery gnaws. He's mostly breastfed still, but eats this stuff daily. We get poops every 2-4 days.

I throw the poopy pants into the dry diaper bucket and throw everything in the wash - still on cold, still with vinegar, and it comes out fine. I did do a hot wash of a bunch of diapers I suspected of diaper cream buildup, but it was more for psychological reasons than rational ones: the diapers were still performing more or less the same. I've read of "breaking down" the diapers every three months with a hot wash or two - diapers that had become essentially waterproof.

I don't know what those folks are using for diaper cream (axle grease?) but I haven't encountered any pee beading up on the cloth...

Number 2...hahahahaha....

Jocoseriously, I got some gDiapers. We're on the verge of going up a size from the Thirsties Duos Size 1, which work great - but being an epic dabbler, I had to try out the gDiapers.

On the whole, it's a toss up. If you're using Duos and you like them, I can't recommend switching unless you're just dying for a change of scene. On the upside, you don't need as many g covers because they have snap-in "liners" or pockets that actually take the diaper. I have 7 Little gPants and about 15 liners. I bought some extras, and some two-packs of the gPants had an extra pocket/liner each in them.

The gDiaper has a good disposable liner which I can recommend. It's biodegradable, and flushable - if you follow the instructions, and you're not on septic...and if you have relatively modern plumbing. If you're on septic, you'll just fill it up, and if your house is prone to clogs, you'll certainly have trouble flushing these blobbies - but in a new home on sewer, they're fine. You have to break them apart with a little swishy-stick.

I haven't had the opportunity to try out the flushability firsthand - I'm on septic AND I have old plumbing.

The gDiaper disposable liner does seem to cut down generally on waste if you're working back and forth between cloth and disposable. Added benefit: you can preload a snap-in pocket with a disposable liner and take it on the road with you for easy change. Functionally, the benefit over the Duo is that the gPocket thing constrains the diaper on all sides, front and back - the Duo only loads in the front, leaving some creative folding and stuffing to be done while fastening and fending off arms and legs.

The gPants cover has some nice comfort features - wider waistband comfy thigh gussets. They also cleverly fasten around the side toward the back - timely if your tyke is getting grabby with the front-fastening diapers (which is everything else on the market - including all disposables).

The Duo has a narrow elastic waist, and generally tends to bunch down in the front in a way the appears a little uncomfortable. On the upside, the general construction of the Duo seems to breathe better, and we're still using some Thirsties Small covers for nighttime use with a great wad of diaper to keep the butt dry (we've been having rash problems).

The snap-in pocket/liner of the gDiaper is really pretty much plastic as far as I can tell - great for dry outside, but no breathing inside. The Duo is polyester lined with neoprene, so it breathes pretty well and stays dry outside. The gDiaper restricts the diapering function to the "hot zones" and leaves more area not needing absorbency generally open to the world - which is good for those parts.

The gDiaper constitutes a system, including the disposable liner, and a custom cloth liner made of polyfleece and cotton. These are pretty nice, soft on the baby side, but are a little light-weight when it comes to absorbency, and tend to wad (not quite wide enough). I should mention that were using "Medium" gPants and "Medium/Large" liners. The disposable liner looks big enough to size up, but I'm skeptical of the custom cloth liner - it's only just big enough to fill the Medium gPants. I mostly use a folded up cotton prefold that stays in place better and absorbs more than the custom liner. We use custom liners for times in the morning when we know we'll change him again soon - maybe he likes a break with the softer ployfleece.

(Probably it's all in my head - the kid eats carpet and sits in his own excrement without batting an eye. Studies have proven that sad babies don't care if they're wet or dry - they'd rather just be picked up and held.)

The Duos promise to get your kid out of diapers in two sizes - which is a big cost benefit. If you started out with a small kid and end up with a big one, you could be into 4 sizes of gPants. On the other hand, you'll need at least 8, and preferably 10-12 Duos in each size, whereas you could get maybe 6 gPants and 6 extra snap-in pockets in each size of gDiaper.

Laundering is the same for both. I'm curious about how the pockets will hold up after repeated washings, but I imagine they'll do fine. The gPants do take longer to line-dry. They're double-layered poly-cotton. The Duos dry really fast, even indoors - maybe a few hours at most inside and an hour or less outside on the line. The gPants take about as long to dry as a t-shirt.

If you're brand conscious and you want a stylish baby, the gPants clean up. Other than that, it's probably just preference. I would recommend getting a gDiaper rig to try - and if you're a gDiaper user and you need to go up a size, try out a Duo. Go with what you like. I don't know about anything else because I haven't used it. I guess you could pack a paper bag with straw...

Tuesday, June 8, 2010