Uncategorized

The Gallery – Nature

24

This post is this weeks entry for The Gallery over at Sticky Fingers

The prompt this week is Nature and having thought long and hard about it, I’m going to cheat a little this week as the photographs were taken of Zara and myself by my sister Sonia – you can see more of the photos HERE but I’ve had visitors this week and I’ve not had much time to put this post together. I hope you enjoy them anyway :)

Nature

A seed is planted in the earth and slowly starts to grow, slowly at first and then gathering pace. You can’t see it but you know it’s there. Growing on a daily basis, in the dark, safe and protected. A miracle of nature…

After a long time developing from that little seed, the seedling eventually bursts out into the light, to soak up the love and light which will help it to continue to grow…

With lots of loving care, feeding and careful monitoring, the seedling grows from strength to strength. Basking in the light, at last they open their petals to the sun, and their true flowering beauty is revealed.

The 1st photo was taken when I was 36 weeks pregnant, the 2nd when Zara was 10 days old and the 3rd when Zara was almost 6 months old :) Check out my sisters photography website HERE

Things I’ve learnt since becoming a mum (part 2)

1

OK so a few more gems I have learnt over the last few weeks :)

1) Nappy wars – oh I long for the days when Zara just used to lie on her back happily and change her nappy. Her new found independence however means that this is a thing of the past. Changing nappies has turned into a battle most days with each day becoming a new trial to keep her occupied for 5 minutes whilst I change her. Sods law says that she is at her worst when it is a particularly messy nappy to clean up. It is pretty much impossible to hold onto a wriggling baby, wipe up a lot of mess and apply clean nappy with just 2 arms!

2) No matter how much I hoover and clean, if there is a speck of dust or cat hair on the floor Zara will undoubtably find it and try to eat it. I’m forever getting up to remove something inedible from her grasping little hands nowadays.

3) The length of her daytime naps are now inversly proportional to how tired I am. If I’m exhausted and really need a break then you can guarantee she will nap for about 20 minutes as opposed to her usual 2 hour nap. I’m still not quite sure how this works as if I’m tired and in need of a nap then surely she must be tired too?

4) No matter how many fancy toys I buy her, she is at her happiest when playing with a babywipes packet, a cardboard box of just chasing the cats in her babywalker. And her obsession with remote controls, mobile phones and ipods is getting ridiculous but it’s guaranteed if I buy her a toy mobile phone of her own she won’t be interested.

Share

Childhood Memories – Writing Workshop

7

This post is this weeks entry for the writing workshop over at Sleep Is For The Weak

This week I chose this prompt:

“Share a powerful memory, or memories, from your childhood.

Thinking back to my childhood, one of my earliest memories is bathtime with my little brother and sister and then getting dressed in these horrible blue nylon nighties. I think the nighties must have initally been our big sisters as looking back they seen old fashioned even for the late 70′s/early 80′s. We used to all want mum to towel dry our hair as dad was too rough with the towel. I don’t remember us having a hairdryer back then. We’d all be sat on the carpet in front of the fire downstairs whilst mum and dad got us ready for bed, we then got a glass of milk and packed off upstairs. If mum was working which I remember she sometimes was then dad only gave us tiny glasses of milk. I remember me and Sonia laughing at how little he gave us one night, there must have been about an inch of milk. Occasionally we’d all be propped up on the sideboard for a quick photo like this…

That’s me on the right by the way :)

Oooh and then there was the haircuts. Do you remember the pageboy haircut? you know the one where it looks like somebody had just put a bowl over your head and cut around it? Awful weren’t they? Well take a look at these fine examples. Remind me never ever ever to cut Zara’s hair like this :) I apologise now to my little sister for posting these photos but I’m sure she will remember all of this too!

 

That’s me on the left this time :)

I have a few sad memories of childhood, our dogs Kim and Tammy dying, when my big sister moved out, listening to my parents arguing and planning with my little sister which one of us was going to live with each one of them and look after them. I have to say my parents are due to celebrate their 45th wedding anniversary this year so we never had to put our plans into action. :)

I remember my sister waking me up in the middle of the night telling me there was something in her bed. After an investigation we found my brothers hamster curled up in bed with her. Of course this brought about much laughter and giggles and we took the hamster back downstairs to his cage. I remember my dad came marching through telling us to be quiet and not believing us when we told him we’d found the hamster in Sonia’s bed.

I remember me and Sonia spending hours playing with make up and dressing each other up and taking photos of each other, I remember our little gangs and the dens we used to build in the local wood. I remember roller-skating for miles and skateboarding down the bank. I remember playing out until it went dark nearly every night with the other children which lived in our street. I remember recording tapes pretending we were radio DJ’s. I remember going cycling with the whole family on the old railway line between Buxton and Asbourne. We biked for miles every weekend and even after falling off and grazing all my knees and having a nose bleed we just got back on and kept on biking. I remember climbing trees, climbing them so high that the branches could barely hold our weight, swimming in the dams down at the local river, exploring the caves, collecting snails, building snowmen. I don’t think we ever had time to watch television back then :)

I remember getting our milk from the “milk lady”, a farmer that my dad knew. We’d meet her at a layby on the A6 every so often and get a great big supply of fresh milk from the farm. I remember Christmas’s – oh how can I forget christmas’s. With a big family, we weren’t very rich but I remember christmas mornings running downstairs to find the whole living room filled with piles of presents, nice shiney bikes, dolls, selection boxes, pretty much everything we ever asked for. Looking back I still don’t know quite how my parents managed to afford everything they bought us.

I could go on for hours and hours. 99% of my memories are fantastic. We had so much fun, so many laughs, lots of arguement – well with the youngest 3 of us all within 3 years of age it was guaranteed really. I’m getting quite emotional just thinking back to it all.

Finally one last photo to share with you

The youngest 3 of us at primary school. I’m in the middle. Don’t we look a cheeky bunch – can you just imagine the trouble that we all got into :)

Share

The Gallery – It’s a Novel Idea

22

This post is this weeks entry for The Gallery over at Sticky Fingers

The prompt this week is “It’s a Novel Idea” and we have to choose photos which represent a novel or childrens story. At first this got me really thinking but then I realised it’s actually not as hard as I thought and the ideas came flooding in. So this week I’m presenting you with 5 photographs – can you guess which book each photo represents?

Book 1 – ok so this is an easy one to start you off :)

Book 2 – a bit more difficult but still a childrens book

Book 3 – Also a childrens book

OK and this is where it gets even harder

Book 4 – an adults book also made into a tv series

and finally Book 5 also an adults book

And seeing as I’m feeling in a particularly good this mood I’ve decided I will send a small prize of a chocolate nature to the either the first person to get all the answers right or gets most of them right :)

Share

Success at last! Tommee Tippee Tip-It-Up Cup

20

Ever since we started weaning I have been hunting high and low for a sippy cup that works. Now we’ve always used Tommee Tippee Closer to Nature bottles with Zara as she was able to switch between breast and bottle easily with them and so when it came to looking for a sippy cup we naturally looked at Tommee Tippee options first.

I have to admit we were pretty disappointed at first when we tried their First Sips cup as Zara just couldn’t figure out how it worked. We then moved onto a Boots free flow cup which for some bizarre reason Zara couldn’t get to work either. Then a few weeks ago I came across the Tommee Tip-It-Up cup and decided to give it a try. At only £3.49 it wasn’t going to be a huge waste of money if it was another failure and I did have to get Zara drinking at some point by herself! She is such an independent little madam that if we try to help her she just becomes more fustrated (so much like her mum already!)

This cup looked different to most of the other cups on offer as it has a clever spout thing which doesn’t leak water but releases it as soon as the lips are put over it. Surely even Zara couldn’t fail to get water out of that!

The fact that the cup is also BPA free, a bright & funky colour, easy to hold and non-spill are other huge bonuses! It is suitable for babies from 4+ months :)

Check out Tommee Tippee’s Website to see this and their other products :)

It took Zara all of 30 seconds to figure out how to use this cup and now happily uses it all the time :)

After I contacted Tommee Tippee to let them know about how great the cup is, they have kindly sent me a couple of cups, one of course I will keep as a spare one for Zara but I feel like sharing the love so I’m going to give away the other one to somebody who comments on this post.

To enter please let me know whether you would like to win the blue or pink tip it up cup and also what age the cup is suitable from (it says in this post!). If you are on twitter also please leave your twitter name so that I can contact you should you win.

Closing date 31st July 2010.

Share

Guest Blog – My Gorgeous Nappy Cake – A Little Review

2

Hi there this is Dawn’s sister Sonia. Dawn asked me to do a little review on this beautiful Nappy Cake that she won from www.bestbabyshower.co.uk and had delivered to me as I am having a baby in a couple of weeks!  I wasn’t really sure what to expect but was very pleasantly surprised with the quality and amount of products hidden inside!!! I would definately recommend them to anyone and will more than likely buy one for family/friends! Here are a few photos!!

Beautifully packaged and presented! I didn’t want to unwrap it!!

Gorgeous floppy bunny rabbit!!

Stuffed full of wonderful baby products!!

The little bunny won my daughters heart!! I have given her the special job of bringing him to the hospital to meet her baby brother/sister!

Finally get over to Best Baby Shower and snap up some totally gorgeous goodies for yourself!!!

Share

The Gallery – Revealed

2

OK I won’t leave you in suspense any longer.

There were some great guesses – my favourite being:

“a banana leaf hanging over a piece of paper and the bottom of a saucepan” by OwainDodo which I thought was an inspired guess!

2 people did guess correctly, these people were:
Matt
and
Jumblymummy

It was of course:

My Kitchen Clock :)

Share

Running

4

This post is this weeks entry for the writing workshop over at Sleep Is For The Weak

There were some pretty tough prompts so I opted to choose running.

Running was something I only really started doing when I met my husband. My chosen form of activity has always been horse riding and the thought of going to a gym was enough to bring me out in a cold sweat. Why on earth would I want to surround myself with sweaty people, give me a sweaty horse anyday. But seeing as my husband was keen on going to the gym, he talked me into membership and so my running began.

Now I’m not a very fit person at all, ok so I’m thin and look like I should be a great runner but I have mild asthma and find I get very wheezy with prolonged exercise. To start off with just 5 minutes on the treadmill left me gasping for breath, but as the weeks progressed this increased to 10, then 20, then 30 and within a couple of months I managed my first 10km run on a treadmill – OK so it took me 1 hour and 21 minutes (I’m like a tortoise – slow and steady) but my running slowly means I don’t get out of breath and although the other people in the gym were wondering whether I was planning on running a marathon on there I just kept going waiting for that magic 10km. I was so proud of myself for that.

As my running slowly progressed I moved on to running outdoors, now this was where the real challenge began, no more air conditioned gyms, no more being able to stop and go the showers when I’m tired, no I have to get home, no more flat terrain. This time I was running properly, running against the wind, running up hills, running where other people beside sweaty gym goers could see me. We lived in York back then and most evenings my husband and I would go for a nice hour long jog down by the river and back home. He was so patient, running at my pace just to keep me company and keeping me going.

We started entering 10km races, not with any hope of winning, just because it was nice to run in other places, run with other people and take home a competitors medal at the end of the day. In these events my husband ran at his pace, usually getting home in about 45 minutes and I usually managed just over an hour. My personal best at a race was 1 hour 2 minutes – again, not fast but I was happy with it :)

The big challenge came when we relocated to the North East, home of the Great North Run. We both entered and both got places and so the training began in earnest. I did a few 10km races over the summer coming in around the hour mark and feeling quite happy with my fitness and then we started upping our weekend runs, first an hour, then 75 mins, then 90 mins until a few weeks before the GNR I could manage running for 2 hours quite easily. I felt great and was loving setting off for our runs, watching the world go by as we ran across the countryside, nodding to fellow runners and cyclists we met along the way and getting home feeling healthy, fit and charged ready for the weekend. I never believed it when they said running could get addictive but it’s true, I loved running, looked forward to it.

And so with the GNR just one week away I set off on my last training run by myself, aiming for about 12/13 miles. My husband had set off earlier and was running at his pace as he was aiming for a sub 2 hour half marathon whilst I was aiming for 2:30. 5 miles in I was feeling fantastic, 8 miles in I was still feeling great and enjoying the scenery, 11 miles in and I stumbled, went over on my ankle. I tried to continue as I was still 2 miles from home but everytime I put my foot down the pain shot through me and so I stopped :( It took me 40 minutes to limp my way home and by the time I got there my ankle had ballooned. A trip to the doctors the next day confirmed that I had torn the ligaments in my ankle and there would be no Great North Run for me. So unfair, I’d managed 11 miles in 2 hours and 10 minutes and I could easily have managed the next 2 miles home, I was fit enough to do a half-marathon. All that hard work and it was ruined by one stupid stumble. I was gutted. The next weekend I dropped my husband off in Newcastle for the start of the run and I drove to the finish line, found a place to sit and waited for him to finish which he did in 1 hour and 58 minutes. I smiled at him and was so proud of him but I hurt so much on the inside watching the clock tick by wondering what time I would have made.

Last year I was pregnant so running was sidelined and this year I haven’t entered as I’m secretly hoping to be pregnant again by the time the run comes by. Running is something I currently dream of doing. Whenever Zara is having a bad day I would love to just put my running clothes on and run but I can’t. Running with my husband isn’t something we can do anymore as we have no baby sitters and by the time the baby is in bed, I’m usually so exhausted going for a run is the last thing on my mind.

I love running and I miss it :(

Share

The Gallery – Can You See What It Is Yet?

25

This post is this weeks entry for The Gallery over at Sticky Fingers

The prompt this week is Can You See What It Is Yet? and basically involves taking a photo of an everyday object from a different angle. So here is my photo for you all to puzzle over – no clues as I think it should be easy enough to work this one out :)

OK so one small clue – the item is located in my kitchen :)

Answer will be revealed when I feel you’ve all given up guessing lol :)

Share

Quinny Buzz Review

2

When it came to deciding on a pram for Zara, we had a few essential items on our list which needed to be met.

1) It had to have an adjustable handle as I’m 5’10″ and my husband is 6’3″ and neither of us want to be stooping down to reach the handles or baby all the time. The QB was about the only pram we tried (and we tried dozens) which felt comfortable for us both to push.

2) It had to be convenient, we love the QB for this. We teamed the QB with a Maxi-Cosi Cabriofix car seat and an Easybase so we were able to fasten the car seat to the QB frame if Zara was asleep and push her around the supermarket etc. She loved sleeping in the Dreami Carrycot – in fact she preferred this to her moses basket. Now Zara has outgrown the carrycot we now use the memory foam seat which she loves. It can be parent facing or outwards facing and has various recline positions which makes it so adaptable. It also fits in my Ford Fusion quite easily.

3) It has to be stylish. Now I admit some of the prams considered stylish at the moment are becoming a bit too “common” for my liking and wherever you go people seem to have them but the QB still looks great and isn’t being used by every parent within a 50 mile radius.

4) It has to be good on most terrains. We like to go for walks down country lanes and here in Durham we have lots of cobblestones to steer over so a pram that can handle relatively rough terrain is a huge bonus.

5) It has to be easy to use. This is where the QB really beats the rest of the market hands down. It has a rather nifty self opening facility and so there is no fiddling around with pushing and pulling buttons and levers, you just pop off the fold latch and voila the frame is up and then you just pop in the seat. So easy even my husband could master it.

There are a couple of downsides to the QB but I think these are far outweighed by the advantages. The back wheels on the QB are quite wide which can sometimes make negotiating small shop aisle a bit tricky. I’ve never found myself unable to fit down them but it can sometimes take a bit of careful moving. The QB can also be quite heavy to push – this only really applies when going uphill and again I’m not really sure how this compares to other prams and it certainly doesn’t put me off using it.

Overall I love my Quinny Buzz – we’ve had almost 8 months use out of it so far and when Zara eventually outgrows the memory foam seat we can switch to the XL seat which also comes with it so we can carry on using it for even longer. This is probably one of my best baby buys so far :)

Photos show us both using the QB on Christmas Day 2009 in the Snow

Share
Go to Top