Regular disposable diapers are made of plastic (yup, even the brown ones), and they can take 500 years to break down. gDiapers gRefills are the only diaper that is certified 100% biodegradable. See how they compare…
Regular disposable diapers are made of plastic (yup, even the brown ones), and they can take 500 years to break down. gDiapers gRefills are the only diaper that is certified 100% biodegradable. See how they compare…
We’ll say it until the cows come home: the most earth-friendly way to dispose of your gRefills is by home composting (wet-only please). Not everyone is set up for home composting, and if you’re not, don’t stress it. You have options. Ultimately, even if the only way you have to get rid of baby’s gRefills is by tossing, you can still breathe easy knowing that on the upstream side of things, gRefills don’t require petroleum, unlike disposable diapers. Thank goodness, right?
When you compost your yard debris, food scraps and wet gRefills (not the poopy ones), you’re keeping a lot of stuff out of the landfill. At the same time you’re creating a rich soil amendment plants love. And that reduces the need for fertilizers. Choose a compost method, whichever works for your home, your lifestyle, etc.
Now, find a spot to set up your composting system. Choose a shady spot, near a water source if possible.
Finding the perfect balance of nitrogen or green matter and carbon or brown matter is the key to well-performing composter.
Green comes from grass clippings, disease-free weeds and fruit scraps. Chicken manure and rotted manure also fall under this category. Brown comes from dried leaves, hay, sawdust and wood chips (and other similar stuff).
Begin by throwing in a layer of dried leaves (brown matter) about eight inches thick. Dampen them a bit with water. Then add some grass (green matter). Mix well, so everything is evenly distributed and damp but not soaked. For an added boost, sprinkle in some rich soil. A shovel-full is too much. Then add whatever else you have around. Check your compost regularly to make sure your pile is shrinking. If you have a tumbler, be sure to turn everything over with a pitchfork or rake regularly. After a few weeks, you should have compost for your garden.
A wet gRefill should break down in your home compost in 55 – 150 days. Though depending on your compost, it could be even faster. See the pics in this guy’s blog. It’s amazing! No disposable diaper ever did this. http://chadcomeault.wordpress.com/2011/06/15/gdiaper-gone/
Open the gRefill to reveal the inner core. While this isn’t necessary, it will speed up the composting process by providing more surface areas for the bugs and enzymes to do their job. You can either drop the gRefill into your compost or put it in the tub or bucket you use to collect scraps in your kitchen.
Problem: The compost pile does not heat up or appear to be decomposing.
There are several things that can stall or slow down the composting process.
Problem: Critters are living in or near your compost pile.
Remove fatty food and excess kitchen scraps, turn to increase temperature and balance the carbon (brown) nitrogen (green) ratio. Consider using an animal-proof bin like a tumbler.
Problem: Compost smells rotten.
Your compost is too wet and needs more air. It’s rotting not decomposing. Turn compost and add dry material to help absorb moisture.
Compost! Growing Gardens from Your Garbage, by Linda Glaser
Planting a Rainbow, by Lois Ehlert
Jack’s Garden, by Henry Cole
Wonderful Worm’s, by Linda Glaser
Spring, by Gerda Muller
There are lots of ways to describe gRefills. Here are a few: biodegradable, compostable, flushable and plastic-free. Bottom line, they’re a disposable diaper done better. And by better we mean better for baby and better for the planet. At the end of the day they don’t have to end up in a landfill. Could they? Will they? Some very well may. But it’s not a requirement.
Regular disposable diapers have no option other than this trashcan or that trashcan. They can’t be composted (please don’t try), they can’t be flushed (that’s pretty obvious) and they will never biodegrade. So the option for disposal is….well, there isn’t one.
So, what if a gRefill does get thrown away? What then? The EPA is pretty adamant about how nothing biodegrades in a landfill. And we’re not going to argue. But what we can tell you is that even if you do throw away your gRefills, you can breathe easy knowing that on the upstream side of things (the production phase) the environmental footprint of a gRefill is teeny tiny. It takes about a cup of oil to make each disposable diaper. That’s a hefty footprint for such a little product. gRefills are plastic free and so don’t require petroleum in the production.
Want to keep diapers completely out of landfills? Compost the wet ones, flush the poopy ones. And if you have no other option but to toss them, don’t sweat it. You’re doing an incredible thing regardless. Your baby thanks you. We thank you. And if the earth could talk, we’re positive it would thank you, too.