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I'm staying out of the juice debate. We actually tried it a couple times for constipation and found our older baby wasn't into it at all.
Some babies are snackers when it comes to their bottles. You should try increasing the nipple flow, but mine was only drinking four ounces at a time at time at 7 months. She just ended up with more bottles and more breastfeeding over the course of the day. |
| I love a PPs idea of making your own juice!! |
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I gave my daughter water mixed 50-50 with fruit/vegetable juice. We used the V8 brand, b/c that's all there was at the time, but now there are several companies marketing it.
I used to call it "juicy water," because that sounds a lot more appetizing than "watery juice." It's not ideal, but it's better than a box of apple juice. For the record, she's 6 now, and so far she's healthy as can be, not overweight, doesn't have any cavities, etc. etc. She's also happy drinking plain water most of the time, so it hasn't spoiled her palate. |
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Buster loves juice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvwwydLiS-k |
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if you really think she needs it, try mixing in just a squirt of juice with the water. but really, a little water should be fine at that age. breastmilk or formula will meet the needs for most kids, though some develop constipation problems with the solid foods.
(my DD was about 7 months when the temperatures got superhot last summer and she started demanding sips from my water bottle instead of nursing whenever we went outside even for a few minutes in the heat. i swear that kid knew what she needed.) |
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If the baby's not interested in formula/BM as much, then it's time for more solid foods. Not juice.
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| I wouldn't introduce juice because the baby isnt interested in BM/ Formula, but I think people go a little overboard on the no juice thing. I was totally anti-juice when my son was born and my husband thought I was crazy and rediculous. It was not the battle I chose to fight. He first had a sip of juice at like 7 months or something. Sometime after 1 he started having juice boxes as a treat, probably once a month. He's now two and he gets way more juice with my MIL and husband than he does with me, but still loves milk and water. He probably has juice twice a week. |
You missed the point. |
That's how we grew up. In a third world country eating from the trees on our backyard. Here I buy stuff in season and freeze it I. Small cut up pieces. It blends in seconds. |
| The only time we gave our baby juice was for chronic constipation, and we gave diluted prune or pear juice just until things were regular again. Otherwise, she drank only BM or water, and now as a toddler drinks only milk or water. No need for juice--it's all the sugar of fruit, but without the fiber. I don't think Juice is Evil, but kids don't really need it, and it's better for them to have whole fruit. |
The most disgusting thing we ever fed our son when he was around 6 -7 months old was formula mixed with prune juice. The smell, the color, the whole thing. So gross. He sucked it right down. |
All the juice rules go out the window when you have a chronically constipated kid despite a heathy diet with loads of natural fiber. Unfortunately, we reached that point with both kids recently and, per dr's recommendation, they both get juice (and Miralax) daily. Sometimes you have no choice, unfortunately. And this is coming from a previously anti-juice mom. |
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I read the first couple of pages then jumped to the end, so forgive me if this has been said. Your child will drink less milk as you introduce solids because he doesn't need the extra calories/nutrition. Unless you have reason to suspect dehydration, you should not be worried about liquid intake. Your child should learn to drink water and introducing an alternative sweet solution before water may mean he will never want water. I recommend that you keep introducing water and forget the juice until a water habit is established. Use different kids of cups. Try a sippy cup, a doidy cup or a straw cup (Playtex makes a nice handled one that you can apply pressure if you child doesn't yet know how to drink from a straw). FYI, I am huge straw cup fan. Neither of my kids ever were very successfull with sippy cups (and I hate all the valve parts!).
FYI, I am not anti-juice, but I only offered watered down juice until my kids were over 2 and then only after a water habit has been established. |