Thursday, July 30, 2009

How To Have Your Baby While On A Budget


Any of us cannot turn around presently without all the forms of the media screaming about the global financial crisis and how hard things are for all of us. But without doubt, a slow news arrives, and the media begin tallying up exactly how many hundreds of thousands of dollars it’s going to cost us to raise our children.. However how much does it really cost to have a baby?

The answer is completely in your hands. You can buy a new Bugaboo, or a pram on Ebay for a 1/10 of the cost. You can buy the latest baby seat and capsule, or you can buy second hand one from your best friend.

Having a baby costs as much as you want it to. If you want a new nursery in your home think about ways to lower the costs involved - beg and borrow.

As with a lot things in life, there is a big difference relating to desires and requirements. Babies are truly very straightforward creatures and require little more than love, somewhere warm to live, food, someone to change them and a lot of love - that is the easy part.

As a result if you’re planning a baby, or perhaps a new one, plus your budget could do with a little bit of help, below some guidelines that may help ease the financial pressure of a baby.

Borrow, Beg but don't steal

You might have friends that may have a baby that has outgrown the cot or bassinette it has been using, make use of it for the few months that your baby will need it. Do any of your relations have a spare cot? Possibly even the cot you slept in while a baby? Always check that baby equipment is secure and complies with the Australian Standards, but using second-hand items makes excellent monetary and environmental sense - that is it will lower your carbon imprint. Save your money for a new cot mattress, a reasonable stroller and a new baby car seat.

Buy only what you require and no more.

It can be so enticing to dream away the pregnant days thinking of things you might need then spending time at the shops purchasing masses of gorgeous things that your baby won’t ever actually use. If this is your first baby, try and restrict yourself to just buying plain things like singlets and jumpsuits. You may well be shocked with the amount of hand-outs you will receive for your baby. More often than not babies grow too fast to be dressed in all the outfits they are given, as a result it makes sense to limit yourself and then see what you really do need to buy.

Swap parties & toy libraries

Ask your buddies who have had babies what baby things, products or items they suggest and what they rarely used. Swap parties are a really great idea. If friends have babies that are slightly older or younger than yours, arrange to swap clothes with each other. Go ‘shopping’ at a girlfriend’s house for your baby’s new sized wardrobe and return the favour. Swap or lend maternity clothes once you do not want them anymore. When your baby is older, keep toys clean and stimulating by trading with all your friends once a month, or try a toy library which are increasing in recognition and are a brilliant idea.

Breastfeed!

Breastfeeding is the cheapest means to feed your baby. The health benefits are well-known, however from a monetary view point, making your baby’s milk yourself is the ultimate as it’s totally free.

Modern cloth nappies (MCNs) and wipes

Reusable nappies save money and the environment. Modern cloth nappies are a world away from old fashioned terry-towling squares that countless parents were subjected to when they were babies, made from renewable fabrics like bamboo. Now in marvellous colours and designs, they are more like disposables in fit and purpose.

Making use of cloth nappies and baby wipes for subsequent babies make it even cheaper. And hey, what’s one more load of washing every two or three days compared to buying a pack of disposable nappies every week? But if cloth is not your thing, try using a less expensive disposable nappy in the day-time when you are changing baby regularly, and saving the more absorbent/expensive nappies for night-time use.

Cook or make your own baby food

It could sound like difficult work, but it doesn’t have to be any more hassle than regular cooking. Cook up some extra vegetables with the family meal, then puree or mash the vegetables as baby requires. Spoon them into an ice-cube tray, pop on the lid, and you have a week’s worth of baby food in your freezer!

If you have any leftovers left after you have served dinner for the family, spoon into a little container and freeze. Your baby can eat a array of family meals without any additional effort or cost on your behalf.

Get Dad to make some toys

Make your own toys. Little babies like to grab an orange bag filled with loud paper. Crush up some newspaper and let them play with it. Pack a little Tupperware container with rice and tape shut to make a shaker. Fill a soft drink bottle with water and bits of coloured sponge and food colouring and watch them roll it around the floor for hours.


Make use of park - swing the days away.

Go to your local park, play on the swings, dabble at the beach, read a few books, have a picnic in your backyard. They are all free!

Monday, June 15, 2009

The Cost Of Baby Bottles That Are BPA Free

Those of you who are now knowledgeable in everything bisphanol A (BPA), who own baby bottles that contain BPA, and are at the present considering a switch to BPA free baby bottles are perhaps looking at all the bottles on the market and are shocked at the prices - given that a low-priced BPA free baby bottle is $16 and a usual baby bottle can be bought for as low as $4.00 I am not surprised.

The fact is that most BPA free baby bottles are made from either polypropylene of PES plastic and both these plastic are simply more costly the polycarbonate. The main reason for this price dissimilarity is that polycarbonate is more abundant, thus making it less expensive.

The second reason, and maybe one not mentioned earlier than, is that PES plastic is still in it's childhood and a little on the boutique side and less frequent. Also, the main brands that have determined to manufacture BPA free baby bottles are still producing polycarbonate baby bottles, if not in the U.S certainly for the remainder of the globe. To demonstrate this I apply the parallel that when Ford develops a new concept car, the cost to build could be millions of dollars, but it's not until it goes to bulk manufacture that the price comes downward to a figure that the bulk of people can afford. Meaning, one day, BPA free baby bottles will turn out to be cheaper to create.

This means that, for the time being, BPA free baby bottles will stay a little on the dear side. One thing to deliberate, though, is that BPA free baby bottles will last a good deal longer than a polycarbonate baby bottle and it's probable that if you have more than one child that you will be able to pass this bottle on.

The other issue to think about is this; what cost should you pay for your baby's safety and peace of mind?

Friday, March 20, 2009

Smart Baby Bottle Review


General:


Smart Baby Bottles are made from BPA free PES plastic which has been deemed the safest for making baby bottles, PES plastic also gives the smart baby bottle it's golden glow. Smart Baby Bottles come in a 300ml size and the company in Australian owned.


Smart Baby Bottles come with a patented anti-colic teat which will no doubt give parents hours more sleep - thank you Smart Baby.


Pros:


  • PES plastic

  • BPA, lead, pvc & phthalate free

  • Standard anti-colic teats

  • Australian owned

Cons:



  • New company

  • Hard to find

RRP: 18.70

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Nuby Natural Flex Pacifier/Dummy


Nuby Natural Flex Dummy range is a brilliant and safe (BPA free) new innovation by Nuby. Nuby Natural Flex Dummies have been especially designed to stretch and flex to resemble breast movements. This flex and stretch by the Nuby Natural Flex Dummy also encourages a natural sucking action by your baby.

If you would like to learn more about the Nuby Natural Flex Dummy see here. Or perhaps you would like to see our entire range of BPA free dummies and teethers.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Weaning from the breast or bottle to the cup

Most parents out there usually offer a cup to their baby as a first step to weaing from a baby bottle or breast. For this to work most effectively is should be done slowly, over many months. The easiest way to start is by replacing your baby's worst feed of the day, the one she likes the least, whith a small cup of baby formula or breast milk.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

How To Have Your Baby While On A Budget


Any of us cannot turn around presently without all the forms of the media screaming about the global financial crisis and how hard things are for all of us. But without doubt, a slow news arrives, and the media begin tallying up exactly how many hundreds of thousands of dollars it’s going to cost us to raise our children.. However how much does it really cost to have a baby?

The answer is completely in your hands. You can buy a new Bugaboo, or a pram on Ebay for a 1/10 of the cost. You can buy the latest baby seat and capsule, or you can buy second hand one from your best friend.

Having a baby costs as much as you want it to. If you want a new nursery in your home think about ways to lower the costs involved - beg and borrow.

As with a lot things in life, there is a big difference relating to desires and requirements. Babies are truly very straightforward creatures and require little more than love, somewhere warm to live, food, someone to change them and a lot of love - that is the easy part.

As a result if you’re planning a baby, or perhaps a new one, plus your budget could do with a little bit of help, below some guidelines that may help ease the financial pressure of a baby.

Borrow, Beg but don't steal

You might have friends that may have a baby that has outgrown the cot or bassinette it has been using, make use of it for the few months that your baby will need it. Do any of your relations have a spare cot? Possibly even the cot you slept in while a baby? Always check that baby equipment is secure and complies with the Australian Standards, but using second-hand items makes excellent monetary and environmental sense - that is it will lower your carbon imprint. Save your money for a new cot mattress, a reasonable stroller and a new baby car seat.

Buy only what you require and no more.

It can be so enticing to dream away the pregnant days thinking of things you might need then spending time at the shops purchasing masses of gorgeous things that your baby won’t ever actually use. If this is your first baby, try and restrict yourself to just buying plain things like singlets and jumpsuits. You may well be shocked with the amount of hand-outs you will receive for your baby. More often than not babies grow too fast to be dressed in all the outfits they are given, as a result it makes sense to limit yourself and then see what you really do need to buy.

Swap parties & toy libraries

Ask your buddies who have had babies what baby things, products or items they suggest and what they rarely used. Swap parties are a really great idea. If friends have babies that are slightly older or younger than yours, arrange to swap clothes with each other. Go ‘shopping’ at a girlfriend’s house for your baby’s new sized wardrobe and return the favour. Swap or lend maternity clothes once you do not want them anymore. When your baby is older, keep toys clean and stimulating by trading with all your friends once a month, or try a toy library which are increasing in recognition and are a brilliant idea.

Breastfeed!

Breastfeeding is the cheapest means to feed your baby. The health benefits are well-known, however from a monetary view point, making your baby’s milk yourself is the ultimate as it’s totally free.

Modern cloth nappies (MCNs) and wipes

Reusable nappies save money and the environment. Modern cloth nappies are a world away from old fashioned terry-towling squares that countless parents were subjected to when they were babies, made from renewable fabrics like bamboo. Now in marvellous colours and designs, they are more like disposables in fit and purpose.

Making use of cloth nappies and baby wipes for subsequent babies make it even cheaper. And hey, what’s one more load of washing every two or three days compared to buying a pack of disposable nappies every week? But if cloth is not your thing, try using a less expensive disposable nappy in the day-time when you are changing baby regularly, and saving the more absorbent/expensive nappies for night-time use.

Cook or make your own baby food

It could sound like difficult work, but it doesn’t have to be any more hassle than regular cooking. Cook up some extra vegetables with the family meal, then puree or mash the vegetables as baby requires. Spoon them into an ice-cube tray, pop on the lid, and you have a week’s worth of baby food in your freezer!

If you have any leftovers left after you have served dinner for the family, spoon into a little container and freeze. Your baby can eat a array of family meals without any additional effort or cost on your behalf.

Get Dad to make some toys

Make your own toys. Little babies like to grab an orange bag filled with loud paper. Crush up some newspaper and let them play with it. Pack a little Tupperware container with rice and tape shut to make a shaker. Fill a soft drink bottle with water and bits of coloured sponge and food colouring and watch them roll it around the floor for hours.


Make use of park - swing the days away.

Go to your local park, play on the swings, dabble at the beach, read a few books, have a picnic in your backyard. They are all free!

Monday, June 15, 2009

The Cost Of Baby Bottles That Are BPA Free

Those of you who are now knowledgeable in everything bisphanol A (BPA), who own baby bottles that contain BPA, and are at the present considering a switch to BPA free baby bottles are perhaps looking at all the bottles on the market and are shocked at the prices - given that a low-priced BPA free baby bottle is $16 and a usual baby bottle can be bought for as low as $4.00 I am not surprised.

The fact is that most BPA free baby bottles are made from either polypropylene of PES plastic and both these plastic are simply more costly the polycarbonate. The main reason for this price dissimilarity is that polycarbonate is more abundant, thus making it less expensive.

The second reason, and maybe one not mentioned earlier than, is that PES plastic is still in it's childhood and a little on the boutique side and less frequent. Also, the main brands that have determined to manufacture BPA free baby bottles are still producing polycarbonate baby bottles, if not in the U.S certainly for the remainder of the globe. To demonstrate this I apply the parallel that when Ford develops a new concept car, the cost to build could be millions of dollars, but it's not until it goes to bulk manufacture that the price comes downward to a figure that the bulk of people can afford. Meaning, one day, BPA free baby bottles will turn out to be cheaper to create.

This means that, for the time being, BPA free baby bottles will stay a little on the dear side. One thing to deliberate, though, is that BPA free baby bottles will last a good deal longer than a polycarbonate baby bottle and it's probable that if you have more than one child that you will be able to pass this bottle on.

The other issue to think about is this; what cost should you pay for your baby's safety and peace of mind?

Friday, March 20, 2009

Smart Baby Bottle Review


General:


Smart Baby Bottles are made from BPA free PES plastic which has been deemed the safest for making baby bottles, PES plastic also gives the smart baby bottle it's golden glow. Smart Baby Bottles come in a 300ml size and the company in Australian owned.


Smart Baby Bottles come with a patented anti-colic teat which will no doubt give parents hours more sleep - thank you Smart Baby.


Pros:


  • PES plastic

  • BPA, lead, pvc & phthalate free

  • Standard anti-colic teats

  • Australian owned

Cons:



  • New company

  • Hard to find

RRP: 18.70

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Nuby Natural Flex Pacifier/Dummy


Nuby Natural Flex Dummy range is a brilliant and safe (BPA free) new innovation by Nuby. Nuby Natural Flex Dummies have been especially designed to stretch and flex to resemble breast movements. This flex and stretch by the Nuby Natural Flex Dummy also encourages a natural sucking action by your baby.

If you would like to learn more about the Nuby Natural Flex Dummy see here. Or perhaps you would like to see our entire range of BPA free dummies and teethers.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Weaning from the breast or bottle to the cup

Most parents out there usually offer a cup to their baby as a first step to weaing from a baby bottle or breast. For this to work most effectively is should be done slowly, over many months. The easiest way to start is by replacing your baby's worst feed of the day, the one she likes the least, whith a small cup of baby formula or breast milk.