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Cloth diapers are every bit as convenient as disposable diapers

 

Gone are the days of pins, dunking diapers in the toilet, and bulky rubber covers.  Today’s cloth diapers are often more effective at containing messes than disposables.



  • Modern cloth diapers are very easy to use

  • NO PINS!!!! NO RINSING!!!

  • Modern cloth diapering combines a soft, three-panel diaper (the center panel is extra- thick and absorbent) and a Velcro fastening diaper cover.

  • You just fold the diaper in thirds and place in the cover.  That’s ALL!

  • Happi Bunz will give you a full demonstration of the different ways to fold a cloth diaper to help you find the way that works best for you and your baby.

  • No more late runs to the supermarket.  No more rash creams to buy for diaper rash.  And most importantly, no more raking, rinsing, or fuss: just toss the soiled diaper into the diaper hamper and we do the rest.
  • Happi Bunz delivers right to your door

  • All you do is place the used diaper, WITHOUT RINSING, in the hamper provided for your use.

  • Our service comes to your home once a week to take the used diapers, and leave a fresh supply of soft, clean cotton diapers.

  • Our service also supplies a freshener that goes in the hamper to keep your home smelling fresh.

  • Cloth diapered children potty train, on average, one year earlier.

  • Toilet training is an important step on the way to increased competence, confidence, and sense of self.

  • Columnist and best- selling author John Rosemond says late potty training delays the switch from parents as caretakers to parents as authority figures.

  • According to the Wall Street Journal, in 1957, 92% of children were toilet trained by 18 months.  Cloth diaper usage at this time was 100%.  Today, only 25% of kids are toilet trained by 18 months.  More than half of kids (60%) train at 36 months.  There are about 2% who aren’t trained by 48 months.

  • Cloth Diapers allow a child to feel when they are wet.  It allows them to associate wetness with the feelings of elimination.  Kids in disposables can’t feel when they are wet and so they don’t learn to associate these feelings until much later.

  • Many parents who use disposable diapers think nothing of spending $15 or $20 on diapers when they shop for groceries, which quickly gets hidden in the total grocery bill.  When the hidden cost is revealed, the cost of additional diapering because of delayed potty training, it becomes immediately apparent that cloth diapering is far less costly than the total cost of disposable diapers.