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Bobbyca

Baby Banker 2018
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About Bobbyca

Previous Fields

  • Diapers
    Adult Baby
  • I Am a...
    Boy
  • Age Play Age
    3

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Toronto
  • Real Age
    72

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  1. Thoroughly enjoying the story and all of the twists and turns Union organizer in Gdansk; Lech Wałęsa
  2. Haven't tried a disposable booster pad with the protective briefs. They have a fabric booster to add behind the snap in pad which works well. I suggest you try disposable pad to see how it works for yourself. Adult diaper wearing involves a lot of experimentation to see what works for your situation.
  3. I buy the old fashioned "Dritz" style pins from Rearz or Babykins whenever i can find them. Not as cute as the animal pins, but work for day-in day-out service. Often they come on a card written in Spanish for the South and Central American market. Mexico too? https://rearz.ca/steel-locking-head-diaper-pins-4-clearance/
  4. I haven't tried to do anything specific to my diet to accomadate my diapered lifestyle, just trying in general to maintain a good diet for my overall health. My experience has been that any changes need to be made slowly to establish a new habit, otherwise it's easy to slip back to the old ways. I have one, maybe two movements a day and I eat lots of fiber. Having four or more movements a day and then adding fiber, I suspect would lead to continuous pooping. Something to consider is reducing the amount of fast food and synthetic sweeteners for improved gut health.
  5. I have several pairs of the nightime undies and the protective briefs. They certainly don't have the capacity of a diaper, but they're good for couple of hours out and about and very comfortable for walking. I really like some of the coloured and print fabrics offerred. The nightime undies are great for a longer period of time at home, but it can be difficult to tell how wet they are until I discover they're leaking. If i wear the nightime undies to bed, i add the stuffer and a pair of plastic pants to prevent leaking. All in all they're a fun alternative to cloth and disposible diapers
  6. Once upon a time long ago, i worked in the vinyl industry (PVC) making sheet vinyl products. it's surprising, but the only significant difference between rigid vinyl products such as pipe or siding and sheet vinyl products is the percentage of vinyl plasticizer oil (DIDP Phalates). Sheet vinyl products are almost 50% by weight plasticizer oil. Mineral oil is not the same as plasticizer oil and will in fact remove the plasticizer oil from the vinyl. Phalates are a nasty class of chemicals so don't do as i once saw someone posting about sourcing phalates and spraying them on his plastic pants. I agree with CodHero24, wash your pants with gentle soap at low termperature and hang to dry or air dry at low temperature in the dryer. And to Little Christine's point, buy quality pants with a better grade of vinyl plastic. Myself, i primarily use Gary Active briefs and wash them in my morning shower and hang to dry. Turn them right side out mid-day and they're dry later in the day or next AM.
  7. here in the frozen North, I dry my cloth diapers in the furnace room with the fan running continuously. This works well for much of the year, in the winter with humidity at 30% or so diapers dry overnight. In the dog days of summer, i have a dehumidifier in the furnace room or if things get really bad i run the central air which brings the humidity back to a tolerable level. It's important to dry the diapers quickly lest the cloth develops moldy smells
  8. Article today In Washington Post "A highway paved with recycled diapers may change the cloth vs. disposables debate" This is a pilot project with intriguing environmental implications. A proliferation of diaper highways could reduce landfill waste — and influence parents around the globe weighing the vexingly difficult decision between cloth vs. disposables. These particular diapers were rinsed — thoroughly, don’t worry. Then shredded into fibrous gray pellets and mixed with asphalt that a work crew clad in bright orange slathered over a 1.5-mile stretch of winding highway this week. https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2022/02/18/diaper-highway-nappy-recycling/
  9. Not your typical diaper fiction, but i really enjoyed it for the glimpse into another mind contemplating end of life. We don't know what's beyond death but we imagine it's lonely and terrifying stepping into the unknown. This is a different and entirely more hopeful version of rebirth and friendly accompaniment.
  10. I like it, clever animation
  11. I'm wearing mostly cloth diapers in my 24/7 experiment inspired by Sherri and OZNL, but when I do wear disposables, I have had very good success with flushing the contents of the diapers down the toilet, This is yucky due to contact with bodily fluids and the toilet, but it does considerably reduce the volume of waste to the garbage and eliminates the smelly aspects and the weight of the diaper in the trash
  12. Sandpiper, I would caution you about using lube from a tube. I beleive that bacteria can grow in the cap and lubricant inside the tube. My experience was that I got UTIs until I started using lube from single use sachets.
  13. Internal rostate massage is very enjoyable and may well lead to reduced prostate problems from congestion and blockage of the ducts. I also believe that cycling once thought to cause erectile disfunction, is benefical to the function of the prostate due to the external massage while cycling
  14. I believe that separating the fluff from the diaper and flushing it down the toilet is reasonable way of eleiminating much of the bulk from landfill. As long as you're carefull to add it slowly and mix it into the water so that there's not a large blob which could clog the toilet, but nothing a plunger can't handle. The fluff will go the sewage plant and be separted with all of the other solids and then go to be composted. The only thing to throw into landfill is the leftover plastic. The only toilets AFIK that can't handle this are the toilets in south and central america which don't have a lot of pressure, so much so that you're not supposed to flush the tiolet paper.
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