apron towel

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Brrrr!!!!

With the icicles beginning to form on the end of our noses, we think it’s perfect timing for today’s prize! We’ve got a bit of a prize package today, with something for everyone in the family, all kindly donated by the lovely people at Mummy Mitts.

Mummy Mitts are one of those ’simple yet genius’ ideas – they’re lovely warm mittens that fasten to the pushchair, so that you can pop your hands out when you need to, without having to fiddle about or lose your mittens along the way. Clever huh?

So what have we got in the prize bundle? Well, how’s this…

  • One pair of Mummy Mitts (although we’ve been told Daddy is allowed to wear them too)
  • One matching pair of Bubby Mitts, AND
  • A SHolder Kit - an over the shoulder storage solution for kids!

See, we told you this was a great prize didn’t we?

To be in with a chance to win, simply leave a comment on this post, telling us what cosy item of clothing you can’t be without in the winter.

If you want to keep your baby toasty warm at bath time, can we recommend our baby apron towel? They’re double layered, and made from a blend of pure cotton and bamboo fibre that’s silky soft and absorbent – just what you need for wintry bath time cuddles!

Full rules available here.

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Breast or bottle, washable or disposable nappies? As a new parent, the choices you make on a daily basis are seemingly endless and, with thousands of apparently ‘essential’ products available, it can be hard to raise a child whilst maintaining your eco-credentials. Apart from choosing greener products, (like Cuddledry’s organic baby apron towel of course!), there is one eco-friendly product you mustn’t forget – breastmilk!

We are always being told about the positive health effects of breastfeeding – the mantra of ‘breast is best’ is never far from a new mother’s mind – but have you ever considered the environmental benefits of breastfeeding?

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Today on the blog – Helen wonders just how to capture those precious baby moments. In papier mache perhaps??

As I spent an hour hairdrying a papier mache earthworm this afternoon (6 year old’s homework – don’t ask) watched by my bemused baby, it suddenly struck me that he is 3 months old already.  Where on earth has that time gone?  I’m sure three months with my first baby felt like three years, but with number three the time has just flown, the piles of outgrown baby clothes mount up, and before I know it he will be on the move and chomping on his first banana.

precious moments

So how do I capture these moments and treasure them?  How can I remember how amazing it feels right now to just put my face to his soft soft cheek, and breathe in his gorgeous baby smell?  I never want to forget but some things just can’t be put in a treasures box, or caught on film.  The magic of his smile and how it can make a sleepless night entirely irrelevant.  The tiny things like the way his whole body moves when he smiles, or the twinkle in his eye when he is enjoying our antics to entertain him.

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“I hate to say it, but he’s sleeping really well…” – Lesson number one – don’t say it! Today Helen reminds us all of some golden parenting rules…

What an idiot I am.  I said OUT LOUD that my baby was sleeping really well.  You would think I would have learned now that I am on baby number three, that babies have supersonic hearing and a total understanding of the English language, from birth.  And that they are the world regulators when it comes to anyone – especially their parents – being smug in any way, shape or form.

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Today our Marketing Manager Jo Middleton reflects on why you should enjoy every minute of those precious early days – they don’t last! Jo also writes a personal blog – Slummy Single Mummy.

When my second daughter Belle was born, back in the days before the Cuddledry apron towel was even invented (if you can imagine such a time), it would be fair to say I struggled.

My first daughter had been the perfect baby – perfect in the sense that she rarely cried, smiled a lot, and slept 12 hours through the night from six weeks old. (That’s her in the photo – cute isn’t she?).

On reflection, I can see she was a fluke, but I was your typical smug first time parent, preferring to put her calm demeanour down to my ‘laid back parenting style’. What a fool I was…

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Have you ever been to one of the Baby Show’s before? If not, then you’re in for a treat…

It’s new-parent heaven – wall to wall gadgets and gizmos for your new baby, all the latest must-have products and of course plenty of fab freebies! As well as making the most of the exclusive show shopping discounts, you can also get expert advice and top parenting tips  – at the Birmingham show you can enjoy talks from Prima Baby’s sleep expert Jo Tantum, baby nutrition guru Annabel Karmel and breastfeeding expert Clare Byam-Cook.

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Polly Marsh is the other half of the Cuddledry partnership. Polly took back the reins when Helen’s third baby was born this year, even though she has her own six month old! However much hard work is involved though, Helen and Polly seem to thrive on the ‘tag team’ approach to running a business!

Polly will be sharing the blog with Helen, so you can keep track of both mums as they juggle business with, er, baby sick…

As a busy working mum, I’m afraid my own blog posts have not been as regular as I’d like!  I hope everyone has enjoyed our guest bloggers’ posts over the last month though – great to have so much talent writing for us – but shows up the rest of us!

And so to life with my baby – who is now 6 months old!  I can’t believe it.  Time obviously flies when you are having fun – or is it having no sleep that does it?  I’m reading an interesting book on quantum physics about space time  (yeah OK I’ll shut up) – back to DD3…

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This week Helen and her family have been enjoying some smiles from the new baby…

Those first weeks pass with your new baby in a blur – feeling like months in some ways, and like seconds in others – and everyone awaits the big moment.  Baby’s first smile.  Lack of sleep, painful boobs – all of that fades into total insignificance at the moment that titchy face creases slowly into the first smile.  And I don’t just mean those fake ones they do when they fart or whatever is going on, but the first REAL smile when they look at you and you just know they are responding to you.  It only lasts a moment too, but my goodness isn’t it just amazing?!!!!!!

We counted the weeks and waiting patiently for the ‘official first smile age’ of six weeks with our little chap, and then we all started to go totally berserk trying to entertain him and be the one to get THE smile.  Facial contortions, singing, ooo ooo ing, and genuine goo goo gaa gaa-ing paid off, and eventually, with a cheeky sideways glance, his tiny face creased, a little dimple appeared in his cheek, his eyes lit up, and his mouth curled up into the most gorgeous smile.  Wow! Just wonderful!  Worth the morning sickness, worth every pregnancy ache and pain, every contraction, each night time of constant feeding – just magical, nothing quite like it.

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Personally, I loved breastfeeding. Every time I ate one too many chocolate hob nobs I’d just sneak in an extra feed to balance it out – that’s the gist of demand feeding right?

Our guest post today is from Naomi MacKay. Naomi is a freelance writer and editor, blogging at Impractical Parenting, who understands only too well the breastfeeding and cake equation…

One of the benefits of breastfeeding (so they say) is that you burn an extra 500 calories a day, which can help to get rid of your baby weight (or give you an excuse for constantly stuffing your face – the choice is yours).

What nobody warned me about was the fact that 500 calories would be put straight back on by my increased cake consumption. While I was pregnant, my dependence on sugary baked goods had upped slightly. After all, when you can’t reward yourself after a hard day’s work with a chilled glass of Pinot, you’ve got to have something to look forward to haven’t you?

I’m not one for sitting at home (as my long-suffering husband will testify – he’s just waiting for a court date), so while several friends told me they never had a problem finding somewhere to breastfeed because they were always at home, I had a different conundrum.

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We all dream that having babies will be blissful, full of smiles, tiny babygros, and strolls in the park in the sunshine.  Not to mention bath time fun and snuggles in your Cuddledry baby apron towel of course!

The reality though is often far removed from this imagined ideal. Today’s post is from Emily Organ. Emily is a stay at home mum in her mid thirties with three children under five. Emily also writes the popular parenting blog Babyrambles.

It took me a while to get pregnant with my first child. During that time I was desperate to be a mum. And I thought parenthood would be a walk in the park compared to my stressful job. I had firm ideas about what life as a mum would be like. I turned out to be wrong on a few of them.

Misconception 1: Newborn babies sleep most of the time. Whenever I went to see a friend who’d just had a baby, it was asleep. I later found out that newborn babies do sleep quite a lot, but usually for half an hour here and there. The only exception was when people visited, then my babies would be comatose for three hours. My friends would say, “Your baby sleeps a lot doesn’t it?”.

Misconception 2: Mums who complain about baby weight should just exercise. Eat less and move around more, that’s what you do isn’t it? Then I found out that baby weight seems somehow different to normal weight. It has a more stubborn, hormonal nature. And finding the time and energy to do regular workouts when you’ve got a young baby is not easy. Some days with young children can be so tricky that you need cake to get through them. Not conducive to losing that weight.

Misconception 3: Parents who complain about lack of sleep are making a fuss about nothing. After all, you can have a bad night’s sleep when you don’t have children can’t you? I never appreciated the effects of sleep deprivation. And when it happens night after night you become zombified and prone to bursting into tears at nothing. Those nights when the baby woke up for a feed and didn’t go back to sleep again were the worst. And the discovery that you can’t force a baby to go to sleep is not a nice one.

Misconception 4: Fussy eating is caused by parents. Surely if I introduced a wide variety of foods at a young age then my children would be happy to eat them? My son was adamant he didn’t like most foods when he was ten months old. And despite my best efforts, he’s still adamant he doesn’t like most foods at four years old.

Misconception 5: Children under five are incapable of being naughty. I was certain their brains would be too under-developed at this age to carry out mischief. But then I discovered that an eighteen month old will deliberately throw toys at his older brother and laugh at me when I try to tell him off. And run off in the opposite direction when I try to put his coat and shoes on. How do you discipline an eighteen month old? The answer is you can’t really, you just have to live with it.

If I’d known what I know now, would I still have children? The answer is yes. I found out that motherhood is harder than I ever imagined, but I feel lucky and blessed to have my three beautiful children.

Photo credit: maessive

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