Anonymous wrote:Nannies, does it bother you to clean up breakfast or dinner dishes if your MB preps a meal and gets the kids started eating before you got there? Lately, I have been noticing our date night babysitter is not cleaning up the dinner dishes, and I am wondering if it bothers our regular nanny as well that she has to clean up after the breakfast that I made.
It's not like I am expecting anyone to scrub pots and pans. It's typically spaghetti or pizza for dinner and cereal or yogurt and fruit for breakfast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a nanny forum where nannies rule. So yeah, the answer you get is "you are terrible person, not fit to have a nanny, how dare you!"
Truth is, yeah, typically nannies don't do that but depending on how much you are paying, kids' ages, and other aspects of the job environment, there are plenty of nannies happily cleaning dinner dishes for job safety.
Do you think it's taking advantage somehow? I mean, the other option is just to have the nanny make dinner or breakfast. I am not going to wake the kids up early/take off work early so they can eat breakfast/dinner and I can have the dishes done by the time the nanny gets there. I always felt like I was making her job easier by prepping the meals myself, but maybe not.
The kids ages are 1, 3, 5, and 7. I don't live in DC, so the rate is hard to compare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nannies, does it bother you to clean up breakfast or dinner dishes if your MB preps a meal and gets the kids started eating before you got there? Lately, I have been noticing our date night babysitter is not cleaning up the dinner dishes, and I am wondering if it bothers our regular nanny as well that she has to clean up after the breakfast that I made.
It's not like I am expecting anyone to scrub pots and pans. It's typically spaghetti or pizza for dinner and cereal or yogurt and fruit for breakfast.
If the children are eating the meal when I arrive, of course I do the dishes. It is part of my job. I will not, however, last long in any job where there are dishes or any mess left over from the day or meal before.
Anonymous wrote:Nannies, does it bother you to clean up breakfast or dinner dishes if your MB preps a meal and gets the kids started eating before you got there? Lately, I have been noticing our date night babysitter is not cleaning up the dinner dishes, and I am wondering if it bothers our regular nanny as well that she has to clean up after the breakfast that I made.
It's not like I am expecting anyone to scrub pots and pans. It's typically spaghetti or pizza for dinner and cereal or yogurt and fruit for breakfast.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a nanny and don't mind cleaning up the kids breakfast, I usually come in while their eating and take over.
Sometimes I'll put the parents studs away of it was a busy morning.
I don't do dinner dishes. When I come in in the morning, I do not want to do anyone's dinner dishes. I find that very respectful.
Anonymous wrote:One of my friends cooks in such a way that she makes a huge mess in her kitchen. She splatters things all over, she cuts up a garlic only to use half and leaves the other half out, poorly judges how big of a bowl she needs and dirties one before switching to another, etc. When I cook, I clean as I go, so for example, after I put a pan of baked ziti in the oven, immediately all the prep dishes get cleaned. So I wouldn't ever want to clean up my friend's kitchen. But if someone had to clean up my kitchen it'd be a very different experience.
Regardless, it seems a common courtesy to always leave another person a clean kitchen and clean bathroom.
Anonymous wrote:This is a nanny forum where nannies rule. So yeah, the answer you get is "you are terrible person, not fit to have a nanny, how dare you!"
Truth is, yeah, typically nannies don't do that but depending on how much you are paying, kids' ages, and other aspects of the job environment, there are plenty of nannies happily cleaning dinner dishes for job safety.