Welcome to the 'Just Another Baby' blog!

01/12

Win a fabulous Just Another Baby? prize everyday in our Advent Calendar – Starts Thursday 1st December!

Thursday 1st December 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Advice, Company News

From 1st -24th December you can win a prize from Just Another Baby? in our very first countdown to Christmas Advent Calendar!

Every day from Thursday 1st December to Saturday 24th December, we’ll upload a picture of the prize that can be won to the wall of our Facebook page (which you can find at http://www.facebook.com/JustAnotherBaby). To enter, just Like us on Facebook and leave a comment (just one please!) on the wall post for the prize that is up for grabs that day and we will enter you into the draw for that prize. Each day, we will draw one lucky winner and announce them on Facebook and Twitter the following day.

Also please note that our last order date to guarantee delivery for Christmas is 21st December 2011.  Any orders received after this date cannot be guaranteed delivery before Christmas and won’t be despatched until 28th December.

For full terms and conditions, see the footer of this email.  

Every day a winner will be announced on Facebook and Twitter. Take a sneek peek at some of prizes you could win!
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Terms and Conditions

  • Winners will be notified via the JAB blog, Facebook and Twitter. Entry for the special prize is deemed as acceptance of the rules.
  • Every day a different winner will be drawn.
  • No cash alternative is available
  • The winner agrees to participate in any publicity in connection with the draw.
  • No purchase necessary.
  • Employees of Just Another Baby?, associated companies, family and friends are not eligible to enter.
  • By entering this competition you are agreeing to receive our email newsletters.
23/11

Win a fabulous Flexibath – worth £29.99!

Wednesday 23rd November 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Discussions

Here at Just Another Baby? we are offering all our customers the chance to win a fabulous Flexibath.

This fabulous, easy to store bath is perfect when space is limited and folds up neatly and quicky so can be kept out of the way but close at hand for bath time. Ideal to bath newborns, especially after having a C-Section. Easy to drain with its own bath plug. When baby outgrows it you can use it as a storage box for toys and games!

Simply complete the form below to enter.

Enter Competition

To enter this month’s competition all you need to do is tell us:

What is your baby’s favourite bath time toy?

The winner will be announced via our blog, Facebook and Twitter and the deadline for entering is Wednesday 30th November.

Terms and Conditions

  • Winners will be notified via the JAB blog, Facebook and Twitter. Entry is deemed as acceptance of the rules.
  • No cash alternative is available
  • The winner agrees to participate in any publicity in connection with the draw.
  • No purchase necessary.
  • Employees of Just Another Baby?, assciated companies,family and friends are not eligible to enter.
  • By entering this competition you are agreeing to receive our email newsletters.

ThePrizeFinder – UK Competitions

23/11

Counting down the days…….

Wednesday 23rd November 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Advice, Discussions

Just Another Mummy Blog
By Can – mum to Mimi (aged 5) and pregnant again – 38 weeks (11 days to go…)

This Week I Am Mostly…Counting Down…
…11 days…according to the Baby Bump app on my i-Phone, I have just 11 days before my world turns upside down and I contract what is commonly known as Newborn-itis. Memory recollects that from first time round, symptoms include – sleep deprivation on a tortuous scale, the inability to communicate coherently, sore boobs, unwashed hair, unkempt appearance, hormonal swinging of epic proportions…and all caused by one tiny-yet-incredibly-demanding baby.

Although it sounds (and feels) like a long time, 40 weeks of pregnancy can never prepare you for the overwhelming first few months of Motherhood. You can read all the books in the world and subscribe to as many internet parenting sites as possible. You can take advice from friends, family, midwives and GPs – all will have your best intentions at heart and will want to share their good/bad experiences – most will want you to learn from their mistakes. But sometimes this can only lead to confusion and conflicted opinions on what is best for you and your baby. With my first pregnancy, I didn’t listen to anyone, I certainly didn’t read any books and the only internet sites I visited, were for self-indulgent retail therapy purposes – which was a LOT more fun. Call it denial, call it a cavalier approach, but at the time it worked for me. I was so overwhelmed by the sheer volume of advice on hand that I inadvertently rejected it all and just got on with it, in my own muddled way.

So, my first two weeks as a new mum involved: struggling to correctly fit nappies on my baby, without her looking like an amateur sumo, failing to capture any wee/poo and thereby resulting in 20 outfit changes per day, trying to breastfeed through the burning sensation of nipple torture, thus swearing repeatedly at her in a Tourettes-like manner – then feeling like a total failure for not being a ‘natural mother’. All of this was experienced through a fug of sleep deprivation. I beat myself up repeatedly, mainly during those lonely nights when all I had for company were the dulcit tones of my other half snoring peacefully next door, with a little one staring up at me with those big brown eyes, saying ‘entertain me, for gods sake, it is your job after all…sleep is for wimps…’. It wasn’t until I spoke to my other new mummy friends that I realised that this experience was all NORMAL.

Obviously, there is always one exception to the rule – to this day, I only have admiration for how this woman pulled it off. She kindly volunteered to host the first NCT coffee morning. It coincided with my first trip outside of the flat, the first trip to involve car seats and an impossible-to-fold Bugaboo. Two hours after the planned departure time (and three nappy changes later), I set off in the car and promptly ran over someone on the High St. I don’t know if you can blame sleep-deprivation in a Dangerous Driving case in front of a judge, but that was my only excuse. Luckily for me, the miraculously unscathed victim promptly got up, dusted himself off and ran to catch his bus (not after swearing profusely at me and making odd hand gestures). By the time I got to my friend’s house, I was a nervous wreck. Note then, my dismay when she opened the door, in her size 8 jeans, perfectly coiffured hair, holding a home-made lemon polenta cake. Her return gaze said it all. There I was, standing on her doorstep, looking like I’d stepped from a train-wreck, vomit stains down the front of a pyjama top which I’d forgotten to change out of AND with Russell Brand-style hair, only dirtier. I thought I was going to be violently sick through shame. Although that obviously didn’t stop me wolfing down several slices of the cake.

Ironically, despite that brief feeling of despair, the one lesson I did learn from those early weeks was not to compare myself with anyone – all babies are unique and all mums have a different approach. This time around, I certainly feel more relaxed and confident to trust in my own abilities to cope with a newborn. Forgetting the piles of parenting books available out there for those vulnerable, unsuspecting mums (Gina Ford has a lot to answer for), my ONLY advice to friends who are about to become new mums for the first time is to ‘sleep when baby sleeps’. As much as you will probably be tempted to sate your online shopping addiction/check your friends’ Facebook status updates/do the housework (!?), when your baby is in a milk-induced coma, EVERY minute of shut-eye will count.

Mind you, the sleep deprivation has already commenced here (due to frequent night time loo visits and uncomfortable sleeping positions). Which has only added to the hormonal and emotional outbursts (as if those could get any worse). Last week, I broke down in Laura Ashley over rug samples, debating the merits of natural wool in varying shades of mushroom, with a very patient store manager who silently pleaded with his eyes for me to leave his shop. The week before, I sobbed out loud in the queue at the Flu Jab clinic. Normally, I’d have put that down to my insane phobia of needles. This time, I was just tired beyond belief.

The ONE thing I will be doing differently though is my approach to contractions. Last time, my obsessive love of spreadsheets played a major part during early labour – for 14 hours (I kid you not), I made my darling other half take records of each contraction – it made perfect sense at the time, given that the useless TENS machine was ripped off my back after 10 mins and I felt we needed something to do – I think HE was too scared to argue…in hindsight, watching a movie, getting some sleep or even doing some housework would have been a more productive use of our time and probably a better distraction.

Perhaps I also shouldn’t have admitted the spreadsheet incident to our new NCT friends at the recent Couples session – up until that point, I’m sure they thought I was quite normal – but the look of pity from the other husbands towards my long suffering partner spoke volumes. Anyway, for his sake, I’ve recently discovered a very useful tool – back to the BabyBump iPhone app and its own contraction counter – stop/start, stop/start, etc…recorded all at a touch of a button. I expect we’ll only last about 5 mins on it before either boredom takes over and we switch to a competitive session of Angry Birds, OR I become so ghastly and abusive that I promptly get driven to, dropped off and abandoned at the hospital doors…either way, I am counting down the days to meeting this little one. It’s been an amazing and eventful journey so far and I’m looking forward to sharing the next chapter with you…until next time…x

15/11

Grobags – not just for the cot!

Tuesday 15th November 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Company News, Product reviews

Babies often fall asleep whilst on the move in their car seats or pushchairs, but when you get home from your travels it can be tricky to move them to their cot without waking them.

A clever way around this problem, Travel Grobags have all the design, comfort and safety features of the standard Grobag plus a two-way front zip and small Velcro slit in the back.

This means that a five-point harness can be fitted safely through specific Travel Grobags, ensuring that your baby or toddler is secure and comfortable in their car seat or pushchair. When it’s time to move them from the car/buggy to their cot you simply release the harness (no need to undo the Grobag), creep slowly upstairs and lie them in their cot. Simple as that!

Read the rest of this entry »

08/11

Christie’s due date is nearly upon her and…………..

Tuesday 8th November 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Advice, Discussions

It’s nearly time for the ultimate labour of love…

The weeks are disappearing fast on the calendar and I am starting to waddle. I’ve bought my bumper pack of uber absorbent breast and pant pads, some nipple restoration cream and have newborn nappies waiting to be opened. I’ve started washing teeny articles of clothing and muslins, cleaned the crib and aired the mattress. I have test-driven our baby bjorn carrier with one of my youngest’s dollies. My hospital bag is packed and the emergency chart of friends’ contact details will soon be blue-tacked by the telephone to cover any night excursions. All this can only mean one thing – we will hopefully meet the newest addition to our family very soon.

I’ve already had three labours and experienced very different births. Our first was probably a fairly typical first labour – 36 hours of my cervix opening at a frustratingly slow pace. After hours of contractions at home, arriving at the labour ward expecting to be told that my cervix was fabulously dilated – only to be sent away because it was only 1cm. Returning hours later, again hopeful, to be told it was a pathetic 3cm. Finally being admitted and shuffling up and down the labour corridor for hours listening to other women’s screams whilst my own labour came to a virtual standstill.

Eventually, after many assessments by various midwives (as the shifts changed) the intervention campaign started to get our baby out. Forewaters were broken, hormonal drips fed into me and I was forced to lie down for hours so our laid back babe could be monitored. The naïve vision of my labour – to selected music and a dab of lavender oil – had by now totally vanished. I was talked into having an epidural and mentions of an emergency caesarean began. The thought of having a potent analgesic injected directly into my spine was fairly frightening, but made much better when a most appealing anesthetist strode into the room. Unfortunately, he was greeted by my rotund bod in a gaping hospital gown and my bare arse virtually in his face as he injected me. My husband gently confirmed that the chances of him fancying me were very low.

More hours passed, my everso supportive husband was instructed to sleep and with gratitude passed out on a hospital gym mat on the floor whilst I tried to use telepathy to magically order our baby to sodding well get on with it. More discussions ensued and I was ‘prepared for a caesarean’ – which basically meant I had my pubes shaved into a neater design and was wheeled into the operating theatre. My husband appeared in a hospital gown twinned with comedy shower cap and over-shoe covers. As the knife approached, I suddenly shouted that I felt the urge to push. But, due to total exhaustion, not being able to feel anything below my waist and our son having a blooming enormous head, my pushing efforts completely failed. Out came a glistening pair of forceps and I was dutifully cut so our firstborn could be clamped and yanked out. After a quick hello, I lay there for 45 pride-crushing minutes as a medical student was tutored in embroidery and a catheter fitted. Wow, what a beautiful introduction to labour….not! I escaped hospital as soon as possible, got over the total shock, let my body recover and bonded with our boy.

The births of our subsequent daughters were utterly different. My main fear was enduring an episiotomy and having to be stitched up again. Thankfully, the girls were both born at home in a water pool and their labours were much more straightforward. With both of their births, I actually felt my body’s reflexes in full throttle as I went through the stages of labour. When I held them for the first time, I was able to totally concentrate on them and the wonder of what had just happened and not some head-torched seamstress at my battered rear end.

However, as amazing as a natural birth is, there is still considerable pain involved and you inevitably have to push your baby out. A big head has to come out of a teeny weeny hole. I remember moments after the birth of our third child, I clearly said to my husband and the midwife – “that is the last f…king head I am ever pushing out”.

Yet, here we are again. My husband has begun his d-day hardcore training programme offering unquestioning support to his bloated wife. He is poised to obey all my wishes when contractions kick off – turn the lights on, turn them off, turn the music up, turn the music down, open and close windows, push against my lower back, do not touch me. Ready to reassure me even when the life is being squeezed out of his hand or whilst his back is screaming in pain due to holding me in some weird birth position.

I am hoping that fourth time around, my muscles are so decrepit that the baby just falls out and I only have to push for about two miniscule minutes.

Or that I enter some yogic trance and don’t feel a thing.

Or a stork arrives with a cosily wrapped package for us.

Or even that the anesthetist from 10½ years ago suddenly appears and tells me that he has fantasised about me loads.

But for now, all we can do is………….. wait!

08/11

Win a Fisher Price Bath Tidy worth £17.99!

Tuesday 8th November 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Discussions

Here at Just Another Baby? we are offering all our customers the chance to win one of our Fisher Price Bath Space Savers.

Simply complete the form below to enter.

Enter Competition

To enter this month’s competition all you need to do is tell us:

What would be your ideal gift for a newborn baby!

The winner will be announced via our blog, Facebook and Twitter and the deadline for entering is Monday 14th November.

Terms and Conditions

  • Winners will be notified via the JAB blog, Facebook and Twitter. Entry is deemed as acceptance of the rules.
  • No cash alternative is available
  • The winner agrees to participate in any publicity in connection with the draw.
  • No purchase necessary.
  • Employees of Just Another Baby?, assciated companies,family and friends are not eligible to enter.
  • By entering this competition you are agreeing to receive our email newsletters.
22/10

Babybay Alongside Cot – For a better night’s sleep with your newborn!

Saturday 22nd October 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Discussions

The first few weeks of parenthood is exhausting, there is no two ways about it! Constant disturbed sleep is like ground hog day and the little sleep that you do manage to snatch is interrupted with paranoid thoughts about your new little addition.

Day becomes night and vice versa and for most new parents the worst part is getting up and down out of bed at night to feed and change your baby. The Babybay offers an alternative to this by allowing the cot to attach to the side of the parents bed, still providing a separate space for baby but literally within arms reach so parent and child get all the benefits of sleeping together, thereby reducing the risk of cot death, having easier access to your baby for feeding (especially if you have had a c-section, or are just generally suffering after birth) and helping you to bond with your baby. Research shows that an alongside cot, such as the Babybay provides the safest form of sleeping arrangements for you and your baby.

The Babybay attaches to the side of a frame bed with the use of two fasteners which can be adjusted to any height. This holds it securely in place. The fittings and mattress level adjust independently allowing complete flexibility and height adjustability.

The cot can come with a detachable flat side (purchased separately) to convert the bedside cot into a freestanding cot allowing a baby to be left unattended when sleeping or for use when the baby is older and has started to roll over.

To enlarge the sleeping area of the BabyBay, you can simply add an Extension Panel between the BabyBay and your bed. This will widen your BabyBay so that your baby could, if you prefer sleep at a right angle to you. A separate mattress is also included to cover the Extension Panel and make a larger, seamless sleeping surface for your baby.

Buy the Babybay original or Maxi with the adjoining side bar and mattress and get FREE fitted sheets or casters!

Made In Germany from sustainable natural beech finished with a clear lacquer similar to that used on toys that may be chewed, the Babybay is ideal for use until a baby is around 9 months old and then it is unique in being able to convert to a highchair, playpen, desk, childs chair or bench with the purchase of additional parts. This makes it great value for money.

To View all options and to purchase a Babybay Alongside Cot please CLICK HERE.

Standard Dimensions:
Width: 86cm
Height: 79cm
Depth: 46cm
Weight: 11 kg

20/10

With only a few weeks to go Christie’s latest blog finds her wondering……”If I Could Only Get Some Sleep…….”

Thursday 20th October 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Advice, Discussions

I am rather tired as I write and am surely looking even more haggard than I usually do. Last night was, yet another sleep, interrupted by my bladder being leaned on by some mighty developing force! For a while, I lay there ignoring my need to wee and ungracefully changed position and returned to a contented doze. But alas, bladder to brain signals increased and I was forced to leap (well, not exactly!) out into the chilly air and place my warm bottom cheeks onto a very cold loo seat. As I returned to my cosy bed and lay down again, our forthcoming babe decided to use the newly emptied space to perform an hour-long gymnastics routine.

Much as I revel in our little one’s movements, they are far less appreciated during the early hours of the morning and if one more pregnancy book tells me that this late pregnancy broken sleep pattern will be good preparation for a newborn, I’ll rip out the pages and use it next time I’m woken by my exploding bladder!

Getting ready for sleep is already like something out of Strictly Ballroom – the dance of a million pillows – one under the bump, another under my upper leg, one behind to stop me going on my back and snoring like a not so yummy-mummy! Going to sleep is virtually a miracle in itself.

At the moment, I need to consume as much sleep as humanly possible and store all sleep supplies in the far corners of my body to get me ably through labour and those first few utterly sleep-deprived weeks. No offence to our growing babe, but please leave my bladder alone and let your dear old mum rest.

I am fully aware that once our babe is out, my sleep will be snatched in between feeds, tears and winding sessions. The arrival of our newborn will also see the beginning of the highly competitive battle between my beloved husband and myself of who has had the least amount of sleep. Arguments over whether snoozing counts as full-blown sleep, hours breastfeeding versus time comforting older children and their nightmares etc. Each of us campaigning hard to be let off getting up the next time an older sibling calls out during the night. My secret hope is that as he sleeps on the side nearest the bedroom door our older children will generally continue to nab him first. I even innocently mentioned the other day that he should have the moses basket on his side, unfortunately he laughed heartily and told me to “sod off”! Oh well, was worth a try.

In a few weeks I’ll once again be passing out whilst sitting up breastfeeding and waking up to a creaked neck, trying and failing to breastfeed lying down, being woken up by engorged aching breasts, sleeping in a gigantic bra and industrial strength breast pads weeks and during those initial nights sleeping on a rumpled towel in a pair of old pants with a 12 foot maternity pad securely stuck into them. Thank god I’m not some beauty queen otherwise I think I’d never recover from the shock.

I am doing my best to produce a hefty warrior who learns quickly that 2-hourly feeds are not wise during the dark hours and that sleep really is one of the best things in life! Forever hopeful, I may well yet give birth to the universe’s first baby who sleeps through the night at 3 days old. Well, I might.

Dream on, I hear you say…

20/10

Baby Feeding Equipment

Thursday 20th October 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Discussions

This month we introduce you to a whole new range of colourful baby feeding products onto Just Another Baby’s virtual shelves from the funky, feeding utensil experts at Boon.

Feeding spoons and forks, sippy cups, plates and snack pots, like everything in babies life, should be colourful, engaging and easy to use – after all getting baby’s attention during meal time is half the battle!

All our colourful Boon and Oxo Tot Baby Feeding Equipment is sturdy, durable and will stand the test of time whilst being available at great prices – which all goes to help keeping the smile on your face too!


* We know you are secretly buying these colourful things because you actually want them yourself, but if you don’t tell, neither will we!

Our New Baby Feeding Equipment includes:

As usual we have our free delivery offer on orders over £30, so why not pick up a few christmas gifts and save even more money! Standard delivery starts at just £1.99 for items less than £6.00

Ideas for feeding equipment orders over £30

Full Baby Feeding Equipment Set

Set a colourful and interesting table for your little one:

Clean and Feed Milk Set

Colorful bottles and cleaning equipment:

07/10

Changing Bags – check out our great selection

Friday 7th October 2011 | Posted by Charlie, 'Just Another' Director in Advice, Product reviews

The Best Changing Bag in black

Why is the Bababing Changing Bag and Mat the Best?

Fashionable, functional and affordable the Bababing Maternity and Paternity Changing bag with mat is among the best nag in existence and must have for every new parent when changing babies.

With lots of space for wipes, nappies and dummies, easy to remove compartments for the mucky stuff, insulated bottle warmers and a separate, removable changing mat you will have plenty of room for all your baby’s needs within these deceptively spacious changing bags.

Bababing Changing Bags with Mat

Bababing Changing Bags are waterproof and easily hide what lie within them, with or without baby in tow! Additional shoulder and buggy straps are included.

DayTripper Satchels

The Paternity DayTripper Satchels are available in Black, Mocha or Grey and the more feminine Totally Tote Maternity bags come in Red, Chocolate or Black.

Remember that all orders over £30 are delivered for FREE so why not check out the Bababing Roll Out Travel Mat and Flip Out Changing Mat too!

Click HERE to view all Bababing Changing Bags.