Tuesday, July 21, 2009
The Agronomy Of Baby
Friday, July 10, 2009
Preparing to Harvest

DISCLAIMER: There is a huge debate over whether cloth diapering or using disposables is superior. This is similar to asking would you rather buy organic produce shipped all the way from Mexico, or local produce grown under the pesticidal fumery that allows many farms to be more cost effective. Which orange, the Floridian or the organic Mexican, is better for the environment, which one should be cheaper, which one tastes better? The Washington apple, or the ones that taste better out of season - from on our parallel but across the world. We baby farmers ask these same questions about diapers. One argument is fiscally minded and assumes that CD’ing is cheaper than using DD’s because of the re-use factor. This can easily be true if you stick to a modest budget. However, Cosco sells a pack of 233 diapers for about 50 dollars. That’s a good deal. And with fancy cloth diapers, laundry investments and refitting your baby when he/she grows, DD can become the cheaper option. With cloth diapers you have more flexibility over your spending ($250- hundreds to outfit a child from newborn to toddler). We will most likely spend less than if we were to use DD’s. The other argument is environmental. DD’s are hardly biodegradable. Here in Washington, somewhere between one to 2/3rds of our landfill waste is composed of DD’s. They take hundreds of years to decompose. The very pricey biodegradable ones take only 50-100yrs (seriously!!) and a newborn baby will go through 2,000-3,000 diapers in their first year. But as disturbing as that is, I have to scale both sides. Cloth diapers are a huge drain on resources. Yet similar to the necessity of growing food there is the absolute necessity of diapering your child. The amount of laundry that goes into each child is enormous even without estimating the cost and worth of water when adding CD’ing into the mix. Laundry every day - and that’s CD’ing for us home-washing farmers. Using a diaper service? Then add the environmental impact of carbon emissions. For me the debate is nearly null and without a clear winner, especially if you take the most expensive and consumer driven approach to CD'ing. If you don't, then I think there is something to be said about being thoughtful about where your ecological, environmental and social impacts lie and CD’ing offers a family more opportunity to be less wasteful and more accommodating to their environs and to the comfort needs of their child, which vary from babe to babe. If this were a grocery store, CDing would allow you to buy organic and local at the same time. My belly is growing everyday. We love to just watch the baby punch and kick inside, creating wee fleshy tremors on my skin. Every jerk and wriggle is worth any discomfort that pregnancy has brought. I have yet been so achy that I can’t hike or make it to the gym a few times a week, with the exception being after any extra long days at work. Also, a little prenatal massage has been helping!!! I love getting massages, so much that I fell asleep with a creek of drool running off my lip during the last one. On the fourth, we went on a 7.5 mile hike (see photos), where I was applauded by passersby for being the token pregnant lady on the trail. Adam, exclaimed that he felt like chopped liver. Wait until the baby is born, we’ll both be lampshades. But despite our impending transition into parenthood, where people will only come visit us to see our child, we have more excitement than worry, more happiness than stress and more love for this unborn baby than we know what to do with. We are truly enjoying this pregnancy despite our lack of preparedness at the moment. I’ll assume that most parents feel slightly under prepared from the moment their child is born and onward. Right? Anyway, staying in shape and relaxed has really saved me mentally and physically during these months. I hope I can keep it up through August and September! Our baby is in his or her most active few weeks as uterine space becomes a premium. Baby weighs about two pounds and could now survive outside the womb if it became necessary. Right now, although the brain is functioning, it is transforming from smooth to a more wrinkled organ to mark its developmental achievements. Simultaneously, the rest of her body is carrying out the opposite transition - her wrinkles are being smoothed out by cute pudges of baby fat - I'd like to think I'm helping this process along nicely! Baby is losing her lanugo-lamb like fuzz and growing the hair she will be born with. She is also practicing breathing and swallowing and gaining a sense of gravity. Baby loves to listen to Clair De Lune via head phones that hug my bump and enjoys Shel Silverstein poems, especially the The Yippiyuck.
