Anonymous wrote:I honestly in that moment forgot about it because she was running fast out the door. I can't remember if I went back and paid for it later-It was years ago. I do remember thinking "oh, shit, the milk" at some point, but my child's safety was what had me more concerned.
I used the jogging stroller as our walking around our neighborhood stroller. Those walks occasionally included stops at the grocery store, or the Starbucks, or the restaurants in the shopping center. My umbrella stroller generally stayed on my car and I only used it for trips to the mall or anyplace I had to take my car to. This really isn't that unusual. Do people who live in the city park their stroller out front and always grab a cart? I doubt it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know this is a non sequitur, but FTM, I never owned a stroller and we use a granny cart + baby wearing (Moby, mei tai, Ergo, sling, whatever). Really, really easy.
Of course, you can also baby wear and use the regular grocery cart, but I add this because I'm always hearing people who live in the city say they have a giant, expensive stroller because it doubles as a shopping cart/food transportation system for urban pedestrians, per the OP. I don't know why the Ergo-etc./granny cart combo (cheaper, more flexible) isn't more popular with city-dwellers without back problems.
I had a big stroller and an ergo because I options. Also, the reality lugging a baby/toddler in an ergo (15-20 pounds) plus a couple bags of groceries, plus all the crap you carry with a baby for 1-2 miles is not as convienant or flexible as it sounds.
Anonymous wrote:Did this all the time when we lived in Europe when my daughter was a baby. People live out of their strollers - have all their baby stuff plus toys etc for older walking kids and roll around town with it all. Shopping is no big thing. Some people, myself included, would sometimes use the stroller to haul groceries even when the kid wasn't in it
Anonymous wrote:I know this is a non sequitur, but FTM, I never owned a stroller and we use a granny cart + baby wearing (Moby, mei tai, Ergo, sling, whatever). Really, really easy.
Of course, you can also baby wear and use the regular grocery cart, but I add this because I'm always hearing people who live in the city say they have a giant, expensive stroller because it doubles as a shopping cart/food transportation system for urban pedestrians, per the OP. I don't know why the Ergo-etc./granny cart combo (cheaper, more flexible) isn't more popular with city-dwellers without back problems.