Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi


We have the bottom part of the cocoon on our bee but in light of the fact that the seat is moving upwards and the baby's feet are dangling over the end of it, what is the best next thing to get? There always seems to be something to buy!

I can't decide between getting a sheepskin liner, a seatliner or a footmuff. For Winter I will need the footmuff for sure but not sure whather it might be a bit hot for the Summer as the fleece on the cocoon is very thick...the seatliner looks good but not particularly comfortable. Anyone got any experience or suggestions?


Jenny

We recently moved out of the cocoon and just use a seat liner. I got a non-bugaboo branded one from Ebay for ?20 and it is reversable & a bit thicker than the bugaboo one. Will trawl ebay again for footmuff for the winter, I remember seeing lots on there...

mima08 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> We recently moved out of the cocoon and just use a

> seat liner. I got a non-bugaboo branded one from

> Ebay for ?20 and it is reversable & a bit thicker

> than the bugaboo one. Will trawl ebay again for

> footmuff for the winter, I remember seeing lots on

> there...


yes I was thinking of maybe doing that but I wasnt sure that the straps holes matched. Do you mind telling me the make of yours and does it fit onto your bee?


Thanks

Jenny

Hi I have the seat liner as it came as a package with my Bee but wouldn't buy one. It is very thin, I'm not quite sure what it is for really and don't find it very useful. I took it out and just use the cocoon for now but will get a sheep skin liner for winter. (In the meantime I just let the baby's feet dangle!).

Kirsten

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • When I had a property with a basement there would often be a pool of water in the centre. I was told it was related to the fluctuating height of the water table in the area (se22) and would not become a problem and the only way to get rid of it would be to get the whole place completely tanked. 
    • We've got a Victorian coal hole cellar with a mud floor and after a couple of severe water leaks, I've taken more of an interest in the state of the dampness.  I've been running a dehumidifier for the past couple of weeks following a small water pipe leak and whilst most of the floor is now bone dry, there are damp patches along most of the wall adjoining the next house, a large damp patch in the middle of the floor that will not dry even with the dehumidifier right next to it and a patch of wet mud in a small hollow in the middle of the cellar.  An expert that lent us industrial drying equipment following a flood from a burst mains pipe said there will always be damp, but I'm a bit concerned in case there is a fundamental problem - any ideas from anyone with similar?
    • Best you post when you have an idea of dates  - waste  of everyone’s time
    • Hi there,  Looking for 10-12 jars (to start with) of local honey to fill a small section of a deli space in my work canteen. Please get in touch if you know of any community projects/small scale productions Cheers
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...