Anonymous wrote:How is that friendly? Parents need to be in D.C. by 8am and kids are chilly at 7am.Anonymous wrote:Our team reps have been on top of the situation and our pool is offering “camp friendly” AM practices from 7-8. We won’t need it because my kids are older, but I hope it helps other families be able to participate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a ride with an at-home parent, or have an older kid walk yours if its in range. Express sufficient appropriate gratitude.
NO, you don't demand a stay at home parent take your kid daily. Saying thank you is not enough. You need to pay them, or do 1/2 in return or help in other ways. So tired of people like you taking advantage. You find a team that fits your work hours.
In the real world there are plenty of us who have a variety of friends in different working or non-working situations. I was a SAHM for 5 years when my kids were little. I had friends who worked, and we all helped each other out carpooling for summer swim just like afterschool activities.
Anonymous wrote:How is that friendly? Parents need to be in D.C. by 8am and kids are chilly at 7am.Anonymous wrote:Our team reps have been on top of the situation and our pool is offering “camp friendly” AM practices from 7-8. We won’t need it because my kids are older, but I hope it helps other families be able to participate.
Anonymous wrote:How is that friendly? Parents need to be in D.C. by 8am and kids are chilly at 7am.Anonymous wrote:Our team reps have been on top of the situation and our pool is offering “camp friendly” AM practices from 7-8. We won’t need it because my kids are older, but I hope it helps other families be able to participate.
How is that friendly? Parents need to be in D.C. by 8am and kids are chilly at 7am.Anonymous wrote:Our team reps have been on top of the situation and our pool is offering “camp friendly” AM practices from 7-8. We won’t need it because my kids are older, but I hope it helps other families be able to participate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a ride with an at-home parent, or have an older kid walk yours if its in range. Express sufficient appropriate gratitude.
NO, you don't demand a stay at home parent take your kid daily. Saying thank you is not enough. You need to pay them, or do 1/2 in return or help in other ways. So tired of people like you taking advantage. You find a team that fits your work hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:another alternative to "summer nanny" is "hire a teacher your kids may love." we had three great summers with our children's first grade teacher....she was young and looking for a consistent gig and was older, responsible and actually kept them very busy during the day - found county things, camps, free stuff, library book club (which gives out a coupon book with activities/free things and that became an adventure of its own).
What is the going rate for this?
$25-$30. Maybe with a soft job market, there'll be more competition. IDK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:another alternative to "summer nanny" is "hire a teacher your kids may love." we had three great summers with our children's first grade teacher....she was young and looking for a consistent gig and was older, responsible and actually kept them very busy during the day - found county things, camps, free stuff, library book club (which gives out a coupon book with activities/free things and that became an adventure of its own).
What is the going rate for this?
Anonymous wrote:another alternative to "summer nanny" is "hire a teacher your kids may love." we had three great summers with our children's first grade teacher....she was young and looking for a consistent gig and was older, responsible and actually kept them very busy during the day - found county things, camps, free stuff, library book club (which gives out a coupon book with activities/free things and that became an adventure of its own).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've always hired a sitter for the summer instead of doing camps so our kids can do swim team.
There are plenty of teens who don't have summer jobs and would jump at the chance to be a summer sitter.
Disagree. I've done this and it hasn't worked out now for 3 summers with 3 different nannies. Last years was the worst. Despite paying $25 an hour, she kept threatening to quit on us nonstop because she wasn't making enough money. I think maybe they have unrealistic expectations and it was a pretty easy gig with two well behaved girls.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think we'll be able to do summer swim for this reason. It's one of many reasons that my kids are really upset and sad about (couldn't get a puppy and also couldn't do the neat summer camps because they didn't have long enough hours. They're stuck in the boring daycare camps with the babies).
Our main problem with summer swim is that the hours are unpredictable. They won't tell me until June what time the practices are and then my kids often won't have similar times at all. If I don't know what to expect, how can I plan for it? I don't even know what time the afternoon practices will be.