Did you know a disposable diaper makes a fabulous hot or cold pack? To use hot, simply pour hot water into a new disposable diaper and let it soak in. You can use hot tap water or heat some water on the stove. You can also reheat your diaper hot pack in the microwave when it cools off. The diaper pack retains heat much longer than a hot washrag or towel, and the shape wraps nicely around joints or curvy parts of your body. Squeeze out any excess water before applying and make sure to check the heat level–you don’t want to burn yourself!
To use your disposable diaper as an ice pack, pour ice cold water in the diaper (from the tap, pitcher, or local outdoor cold water source), OR to get it even colder, pour water in your diaper and put it in the freezer. If you’re using water from a stream or other unfiltered source, make sure the cold pack is not being used on open wounds to prevent any infection.
These are considered “wet” heat and cold packs, although the water doesn’t leak out and get everything all wet, just the place where you have it applied will get some moisture.
Because it is the micro beads in the disposable diapers that absorb and hold the moisture, this doesn’t work with swim diapers or cloth diapers. I took the liberty of tearing my diaper open so you could see the beads–don’t tear yours open, it makes a mess!
Keep preparing! Angela
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Paladin says
Awesome tip! We have some leftover diapers from before the grandbaby was toilet trained that I’ll hang on to, now that I have a use for them.
Practical Parsimony says
I suppose that the menstrual pads that advertise super-duper absorbency and retention of moisture would work as would incontinence pads or adult diapers. I don’t have either or have used them, but they seem to work on the same absorbency principle. Just a thought!
Jeff Wise says
This is one of the best ideas I’ve heard in a while. Maybe I think that because we have so many left over diapers in the house. It seems like it would be more comfortable that way versus using a normal cold pack with a towel over it.
GoneWithTheWind says
Looking at the picture it occured to me that I could cut out the center portion of a diaper (without cutting into where the beeds are) and put this in the bottom of a flower pot to hold water and keep the plant from dying if I’m gone for a week or two.
Kim says
The water absorbing beads inside the diapers are also great for adding to soil mixtures put into potted plants. This will help to conserve water and keep plants from drying out as fast in the hottest parts of the summer. It will also cut down on the frequency in which you have to water them.