Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the baby's mother have to say?! She should be the one drawing up the feeding schedule and not you.
FYI, lots of mothers expect the nanny to figure it out. You must have just fallen off the turnip truck, huh?
Anonymous wrote:What does the baby's mother have to say?! She should be the one drawing up the feeding schedule and not you.
Anonymous wrote:Is that really the baby's last feed for the day at 6:30? One solid though at this age is fine and babies can absolutely overeat on solids so ignore that PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am assuming the "milk" is breast milk? I would continue to increase her solids. A baby will not allow you to "over feed" them with solids.
MB here.
I've seen plenty of overweight babies.
Overweight is NOT overfed.
Come on, are you all first time nannies on this thread this morning?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the baby's mother have to say?! She should be the one drawing up the feeding schedule and not you.
What an unnecessary and unhelpful thing to say. Shocking. The baby's mother might not know herself and is asking for the input of the person who implements the schedule more regularly.
Baby should still be taking 19-30 oz of milk a day. At this point, solids are really just to expose the baby to new things and develop the associated motor skills...this isn't an area you should be counting on a significant portion of his/her nutrition from. It is different for each baby but I would go with PP's suggestion and try to add another solid during the day and keep your other schedule the same.
No, I am sorry but I disagree. The mother should have had this discussion with the baby's pediatrician. And I do believe that it should be the mother's decision. I'm sorry if you found my response unnecessary and unhelpful but that is my opinion and I stand by it. This is not for the nanny to decide -- especially when she hasn't enough experience to know the answer without posting on a nanny forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am assuming the "milk" is breast milk? I would continue to increase her solids. A baby will not allow you to "over feed" them with solids.
MB here.
I've seen plenty of overweight babies.
Anonymous wrote:I am assuming the "milk" is breast milk? I would continue to increase her solids. A baby will not allow you to "over feed" them with solids.
MB here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the baby's mother have to say?! She should be the one drawing up the feeding schedule and not you.
What an unnecessary and unhelpful thing to say. Shocking. The baby's mother might not know herself and is asking for the input of the person who implements the schedule more regularly.
Baby should still be taking 19-30 oz of milk a day. At this point, solids are really just to expose the baby to new things and develop the associated motor skills...this isn't an area you should be counting on a significant portion of his/her nutrition from. It is different for each baby but I would go with PP's suggestion and try to add another solid during the day and keep your other schedule the same.
Anonymous wrote:What does the baby's mother have to say?! She should be the one drawing up the feeding schedule and not you.