Archive for March, 2010

What color should you paint the nursery?

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

When my 8-year-old daughter told me that her gymnastics teacher, who is pregnant with her first child and due in the summer, was thinking of painting the baby’s nursery cherry red, my first thought was hm…cherry red isn’t a very restful color. In fact, it’s stimulating. And since babies need a lot of sleep, something pastel might be better.

Still, babies can snooze through anything. That’s because infants spend 50 percent of their sleep time in slow-wave sleep, which is the deepest stage of sleep, says Judith Owens, M.D., associate professor of pediatrics at the Warren Alpert School of Medicine at Brown University, in Providence, Rhode Island. (That gradually diminishes, dropping to just 15 percent of the night by young adulthood.)

So a cherry red room isn’t apt to keep most babies awake.  And painting your baby’s room red, or some other non-traditional baby color such as lime or Kelly green, navy, yellow, or lavender might even stretch your decorating dollar. Your baby is less apt to outgrow those colors as quickly as say, babyish pastel pink or blue. All you’ll need to do is change the accessories, such as the artwork, as your little one becomes a toddler, then a big boy or girl, rather than re-do the entire room.

So I’ve changed my mind about nursery colors, especially in this econony.  I still like more muted colors in general, but I say go ahead and paint the nursery cherry red, if you want to, and save yourself the time and expense of a room do-over later.

Eating Habits to Delete from Your Baby’s Diet

Monday, March 29th, 2010

To save time or your sanity, these little habits can easily sneak into your baby’s eating routine. Don’t let them. They can put your baby at risk.

Don’t:

 –Let your baby be a backseat diner. Don’t give him food while he’s in his car seat, which can be a blind spot, especially if he’s still facing rearward. (Radar: Choking hazard.) In other words, always supervise your baby when he’s eating.

Solution: Feed your baby before leaving home or stop for a snack if he gets hungry.

 Don’t:

–Feed your baby from the jar (or yogurt container) and then put the uneaten portion in the refrigerator. Harm­ful bacteria from your baby’s mouth can multiply in the jar. When my first daughter was a baby and I questioned whether it was safe to put a half-eaten-from-the-jar back in the fridge, I remember my mother saying, “But they’re her germs,” as if that made them safe. They’re not.

Solution: If your baby is likely to eat less than a full jar, spoon a portion into a bowl and put the jar in the refrigerator for later. You generally can keep opened jars in the fridge for up to three days in the case of fruits and vegetables, one day for meats, and two days for meat and vegetable combos. Date open jars with a permanent marker. If you feed your baby from the jar and she doesn’t eat it all, toss it.

Baby Toy Tip: Cycle in, Cycle out

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

Toys can be a tripping hazard if you have too many of them, and a chore to keep organized. To contain the chaos, buy fewer toys and set aside some of the bounty from holidays and birthdays to be taken out later. After the first group has lost it luster and you sense that your baby has gotten bored with that batch, bring out the sequestered toys, and so on. Toy cycling helps constantly refresh your baby’s interest so that what’s old seems like new again and can make less seem like more. But remember to play with your baby with the toy. You’re your baby’s favorite toy and the social interaction your baby gets from playing with you bolsters brain development.

Cool Kid Food

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Go Go Squeez sent me some samples of their gourmet (from France) applesauce, which now come in five flavors: apple apple, apple strawberry, apple peach, apple banana and apple cinnamon. My kids loved them and so did my Girl Scout troop and the moms of my troopsters. These space-age resealable pouches of applesauce and applesauce combos make healthy snacking on the go–whether you’re traveling, heading off to swim or soccer practice with your kids or feeding the crowd on play dates–so easy because there’s no spoon or mess. Bonus: GoGo Squeez is 100 percent fruit with no added sugar; one pouch equals one fruit serving. Watch the cap, which reseals the pouch, though. It’s a choking hazard for kids under age 3. You can find GoGo Squeez in major supermarkets or order it from Amazon. A 48-pack, for example, will run you $29.98, or 62 cents per serving. It’s not the cheapest snack around, but it’s definitely a healthy and tasty alternative. Check them out at www.materne.us.