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Professional Brush Making Machine Manufacturer since 1988.CHINA

pair happy with bottom line of...

by:MX machinery      2019-08-27
There\'s 3-Ray Downey-year-
The old man in diapers
That\'s how she likes it. Her 3-year-
Old is a growing business called naked bottom diaper service and is the largest diaper service in Ventura County.
Terre and her husband Tom took the fledgling Camarillo
Based on operations from the beginning
Do business with dozens of customers and a small washing machine to become a mature currency
Do business.
Bare Bottoms employs 8 employees who work almost 24 hours a day in shifts and provide 60,000 diapers per week to 800 customers from Santa Barbara to Pasadena.
The only diaper supplier in Ventura County is a small Simi Valley company called \"cradle diaper service.
\"We made it,\" said Tom Downey . \" He boasted that plastic diapers had never touched his two children.
\"In the three months we started, we had over 100 customers.
It was almost astronomical from the beginning.
\"When Terre and her husband were working in a cleaning industry for the night and saw a daytime TV talk show on the fabric, the Dawney couple began to bare their ass --versus-
Plastic diaper debate
\"That\'s 1990, it\'s Earth Day, and we\'re starting to think about the environmental impact of plastic diapers,\" she said . \".
\"We saw no one in the area offering diaper services.
\"At about the same time, the Simi Valley began to play the ecstasy.
According to one of the partners, although the business is much smaller and is now on sale, it also offers alternatives to disposable supplies, including full-scalein-
A washable diaper and cover.
A spokeswoman for P & G said that since P & G launched its first disposable diaper in 1961, mothers tired of washing diapers in the toilet chose disposable diapers by increasing the number.
By the age of 1970, one of the two babies was wearing disposable items, and today the number is nine out of ten.
But Kathy Moates, a spokeswoman for the National Assn, said the use of diapers is slowly becoming fashionable.
Diaper Service in Philadelphia.
\"They are making a comeback,\" Mautz said . \".
\"Many people are worried about landfill issues and many new parents would rather have something natural for the baby\'s skin than plastic.
\"But the environmental debate is not so compelling, because disposable diaper manufacturers have reduced the size of their products and packaging,\" said Kelly Anchrum, a spokesman for P & G . \".
Disposable diapers make up less than 2% of the country\'s solid waste, she said, and they make less water than they use to clean cloth diapers.
Disposable items are more convenient and do not need to be replaced as often as cloth diapers, she said.
\"But the real bottom line is that they keep the baby dry,\" she said . \".
Allison Maires, a spokeswoman for the health zone in Ventura County, said it was a personal choice.
Cardboard, packaging, yard and construction waste cause more landfill problems than diapers, she said.
\"The main thing is that mothers who choose plastic shouldn\'t feel guilty,\" said Maires, who uses disposable diapers . \".
Terre Donnie countered that plastic diapers still add unnecessary volumes to the country\'s growing landfill.
She said the fabric was as convenient as herself.
Turn off disposable items as the cloth diaper cover is now fixed with Velcro and no pins or plastic pants are required.
In addition, she said that older babies are more likely to feel wet diapers with cloth diapers and are more eager to learn to use the bathroom.
\"Cloth diapers are easier to train out with potty because the child knows when the diapers are wet,\" she said . \".
Barbara Stephens, a registered nurse at the Ventura Community Memorial Hospital nursery, said she prefers the baby fabric there.
\"I raised my two sons with cloth,\" she said . \".
\"This is better than landfill.
She said: \"But after trying the fabric, the hospital has restored disposable diapers for convenience.
The debate is continuing.
Their representative said the diaper service was determined to make it easier for those who chose cloth diapers.
Around $50 a month, the bare bottom delivers a stack of 40 to 50 fresh diapers twice a week and picks up a paper diaper bucket full of dirty diapers.
The cost does not include diapers, the cost per diaper ranges from $3 to $15, and needs to be replaced as the baby grows.
The cradle offers 80 diapers a week for $46 a month.
Customers can also rent an extra $2 diaper set per month, and the cradle will also wash the diaper set. The all-in-
A customer service representative said a diaper was new on the cradle and had not yet determined the price.
Buy the same amount of Pampers or other wells
Diapers cost about $60 a month.
Donnie said customers don\'t need to flush diapers before picking them up, no matter how dirty they are.
New washing machines that can remove solid waste make it unnecessary for home flushing, she said.
The most recent day, Maria Elena Dios, herself a young mother who is working at the Camarillo industrial building with bare bottom
There was a delivery truck in the driveway behind her, the big garage door opened for ventilation, and she stood above a pair of big laundry boxes.
Wearing plastic gloves, she separated the wet and dirty, ignoring the pungent smell around her.
\"Everything is the same for me,\" she said . \".
But the children in her family use Pampers, she says.
It\'s not smell or inconvenience that makes her use disposable diapers, it\'s \"We use Pampers all the time \".
\"After sorting, diapers are loaded into two large pieces --
Capacity washing machine equipped with computer control, add the correct amount of bleach and other chemicals at the right time during 13-13
Step cleaning process.
Diapers then go into the dryer and go to the front desk where they are sorted, counted, and stacked for shipping by size.
Terre Downey this book works for bare ass and offers advice for new momsto-
By phone.
Tom is in charge of delivery.
The service worked well for customers like Milly Arnold in Ventura, who provided five days of day care a week for four babies under 20 months.
Arnold said: \"I insist on using cloth because I can\'t see more disposable diapers in the landfill that just keep growing and growing.
\"I\'m not in favor of having all this between their legs when disposable items swell.
\"Alicia Kaman chose cloth diapers because when she gave birth to her daughter at Ventura\'s Community Memorial Hospital, she received a coupon for a week\'s free diaper service.
She said it was true that the change in cloth diapers made her month easier-month-old Alicia dry.
But she thinks her child is more comfortable with cotton.
She thinks the system is convenient.
\"I just threw them in the paper diaper,\" she said . \".
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