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Breastfeeding, baby sleeps with Mum if very small, travel cot and Baby Nitestar from about six months, easy clean plastic high chair from Ikea when older. If you`re bottle feeding and only going for a weekend, use disposable bottles and cartons of formula. Most babies will dring room temperature milk if you`re using one shot cartons...it`s a myth milk needs heated unless it came out the fridge. Jars of food (French babyfood is FANTASTIC if you`re going abroad.) are much easier than trying to make home made, though it`s been done. For bathing, take a large plastic toy box, add a few inches of warm water. My kids adored sitting outside the tent in this on sunny evenings.
It gets a LOT harder when they start to crawl and walk, which is when you need a travel cot. Graeco make a very good compact version which saves precious space in the car. Also for crawlers, a set of walking reins with the long tail threaded onto a spare guyline, which gets pegged down securely at each end.
There`s no substitute for 24/7 vigilence though. Campsites are full of hazards, not least of which are cookers and barbecues out in the open, cars squeezing between tents and dogs. Basically, unless you`re going to tie your child up (see note above!!) they have to have a parent within a few feet at all times.
But kids love camping. And for parents, I think it`s x1000 easier going camping than trying to make them behave when you`re all jammed together in a hotel room. yes, you`ll worry about the noise at night but don`t....99% of your neighbours will understand that it`s natural for a baby to wake for food or a toddler to have the odd bad dream. As long as you`re doing your best (controlled crying techniques are not appreciated in campsites!!) things will be fine. Most parents won`t even wake up for another childs cry, btw. And as for the other 1%, there are adult only campsites, no?
No1 tip...agreed on by 99% of parents. Don`t stress about the baby`s routine. Your child may go down at 7pm on the dot at home, but I can guarantee they won`t on a campsite. There is too much going on by way of activity outside, they can here the lot and all you`ll get is a couple of hours of weeping misery for both of you. Let them stay up till nine pm untill they fall over in their tracks, don`t worry too much about complex bedtime routines and you`ll save yourself a lot of hassle. Or any other routine, for that matter. All my kids have gone camping from a very young age and as soon as they got home...bingo, straight back to their old routines. Babies learn the cues for their routines, which is why they don`t work on campsites. But they will remember when they get home.
They may even sleep later in the morning too. Now this is one thing most campers agree on...letting your kids out to play at 6am is not appreciated. 7am is barely tolerated, 8am is perfectly fine, though there`s always someone that feels they were entitled to a 10am lie-in! But if your child is an easly riser, you`ll have to be prepared with milk, drink, snacks, books and quiet games, story tapes on Walkmans or the DVD player with earphones. No shouting, but quiet talking is OK.
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