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kelzie_rose
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Topic: Help Settle Our Debate!! Posted: 19 December 2011 at 6:11pm |
At what age was your bubs when you first took him/her on a bus??
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 Started TTC Apr 2008 With PCOS and a bicornuate uterus Our angel babies Jan 2010 <3 Oct 2010 <3 Apr 2011 <3
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pudgy
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 6:27pm |
About a month old I think. My sister lives in Canada and they bussed home from the hospital
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AandCsmum
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 6:32pm |
What is the debate???
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Kel
A = 01.02.04 & C = 16.01.09 & G = 30.03.12
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kelzie_rose
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 6:40pm |
Ah right yes! Sorry!
I'm going back to work when baby is about 6 months old. And I proposed to DH that putting her in daycare near his work would be better than putting her in one near our home. So she wont be there as long during the day, and they can have daddy-daughter time on the bus!
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 Started TTC Apr 2008 With PCOS and a bicornuate uterus Our angel babies Jan 2010 <3 Oct 2010 <3 Apr 2011 <3
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T_Rex
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 7:00pm |
i second having her near work if thats where you/dh will be when she's there. when you get those calls to say she's sick/hurt/eaten poisonous mushrooms etc, you want to be able to get to her quickly.
eta. we live rural so no public transport for us
Edited by T_Rex
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AandCsmum
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 8:35pm |
She'll be fine on the bus.
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Kel
A = 01.02.04 & C = 16.01.09 & G = 30.03.12
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LateStarterLorna
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 9:04pm |
Is it more about whether DH will be fine on the bus with the baby
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MrsH
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Posted: 19 December 2011 at 9:45pm |
Yeah, he'd be fine. A decent baby carrier will make things much easier for him plus a man-size back pack.
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Hayz001
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Posted: 20 December 2011 at 10:50am |
I've taken DD on the bus a few times into the city - first when she was about 5 weeks old in the stroller which was great, but it has to be one of the wheelchair friendly buses and not ideal during peak time. Other times i've taken her in the sling which is great - she LOVES it, and having her in a carrier makes it feel much more secure for if the bus brakes suddenly or something.
On another note - after reading about your tough journey trying for your baby, i'm soooooo happy to see your 34 weeks! Hope everything goes well with the birth and everything
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squoggs
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Posted: 20 December 2011 at 1:36pm |
we haven't bussed, but trained/ferried/flown since both babies were 2wks old, she will be fine - and probably LOVE the attention from everyone on the bus :-)
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MamaLove
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Posted: 21 December 2011 at 5:02pm |
When my baby was born I didn't have a car so I think he was about 1week old when he took his firsts ride
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CrazyCass
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Posted: 21 December 2011 at 10:05pm |
I took my twin nieces when they were 4mths old - my sister was stoked, but peeved I forgot to take a photo of them on the bus!
And agree best to have bubs near a work place so you can get there quicker! And no doubt she'll love the daily ride in with Dad
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Bobchannz
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Posted: 27 December 2011 at 2:37pm |
Actually, commutes with children are very rarely quality time - and they can add time to what can be a long day. If the baby is closer to home then they have much less of a commute. Sometimes kids can find being on a crowded bus quite exhausting - and when you have the baby, their bag of stuff and your stuff and no one gives you a seat it can be really lame.
Not trying to be negative, but I'd rather a daycare close to home than close to a work place - just a little easier on the baby sometimes.
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blossombaby
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Posted: 28 December 2011 at 10:09pm |
I agree with the above - I work in the city and my daughter is about a 20min train ride away , whilst i would LOVE to pop in and see her during the day the opition of traveling with her is a no go. I see people in the morning lookind rather stressed withe kids in tow, pram, bags etc rushing for d/care drop off then having to get to work .. again in the afternoon people are runnign with the pram, bags, kids to try and get on the train which are often delayed, hot and pakced, kids are crying parents are stressed and the commuters without kids looked peeved. and I can't beleive the amount of people who don't offer seats. while it woudl save time her being in d/cay in the city the commute with her would be horrid for us both - shes so grumpy n the afternoon wants to eat, not sit still and normally a bottle.
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kelzie_rose
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Posted: 28 December 2011 at 10:13pm |
Lol thanks everyone.
DH is stoked that two people agree with him!!
Still weighing up pros and cons of each :)
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 Started TTC Apr 2008 With PCOS and a bicornuate uterus Our angel babies Jan 2010 <3 Oct 2010 <3 Apr 2011 <3
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blossombaby
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Posted: 28 December 2011 at 10:17pm |
It does come down to what works for you / your family :)  you can alreayd trail it and if it doesn't work try something different.
edit to say: however i dont think 6 months is to young for a bus ride - i think my girl was about 3 weeks we walked to the drs and i couldn't be bothered walkin back hahah
Edited by blossombaby
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Hibiscus
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Posted: 28 December 2011 at 10:23pm |
We've only taken our twins (now 18 months) on the bus twice so far. It was a pain getting the driver to open the back door one time when we were waiting outside with the double pram. The other time I was by myself and I had a little bit more cooperative bus driver, but the bus clearly wasn't made for a double mountain buggy. While we managed to get on eventually, with help of other passengers (bus driver did not bother to get off his seat) it was a squeeze and after having tried the back door first, we had to lift the pram out again and get in the front door as the back door wouldn't shut with the pram in. Different bus on our first ride, where it was fine in the back. Oh, and it was a hot day and the heater was running under the seat and couldn't be turned off. So overall it was a pretty bad experience, sadly, as I am used to bus rides being really easy from my time in Berlin.
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Mum to 3 girls: identical twins and with a 3 year gap another girl.
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Hopes
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Posted: 29 December 2011 at 7:56am |
After thinking a bit, I'll add a third to your DHs side. I think either would work fine, so whatever you shoose will be a good option, but a regular commute could be very hard work on those miserable days when Bubs is tired and grumpy and in a moody with the world. Also, if she does get sick and need to be collected, despite the convinience of being able to pop round the corner and get her, you'd still have to get a sick baby home on public transport...
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maya22
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Posted: 29 December 2011 at 2:41pm |
Take one baby - who needs to be asleep, or fed, or changed, or cuddled or shoes put on - and add a parent who is running late for work (again) and is stressed and sleep deprived, then add a daycare bag for the child, and a backpack/briefcase for the parent, then add a buggy/stroller/baby carrying device, then add a bus filled with commuters.... yip, rather not, thanks.
No probs with a bus or public transport with a baby when you are not under pressure, but doing it every day in a situation like that would lead to an early grave.
If you have baby close to home, then both parents can work around drop off/pick up and sick days, rather than one parent shouldering the burden every day.
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Puddleduck
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Posted: 04 January 2012 at 9:04pm |
I have to agree with your DH here, sorry - sounds like it would work fine to do the bus thing most days, but there would be that odd day with a grumpy, over tired, hungry thirsty, who know what but that it could be a nightmare. I used to take DS regularly (like twice a week) on the bus from 3 months, but I was always worried he would have an off trip, wouldn't be fun worrying every day
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