Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Short version:


How to stop giving 3 bottles of formula a day to a nearly 16 month old?


Long version:


With our first we stopped giving formula at about 12 months, she happily went straight to cow's milk in a straw cup. She didn't need "feeding to sleep" as she was such a dummy addict that knowing that the dummy was waiting for her in her cot was enough to happily get her to bed.


With our second, who is almost 16 months now, things have been a bit different. She's not keen on cow's milk and it's not great timing to switch now as she's had a few bugs and currently doesn't tolerate cheese very well so I'm not too keen on milk. I know milk isn't as great as we used to think anyway, organic or not.


She still has 3 bottles (2 full and 2 halves spread over the day) per 24 hours. I'm not against formula but it's expensive (we use ready formula from Hipp... too lazy to do the water boiling, mixing etc ritual) and I know it's not good for the palate to drink from a bottle for too long.


What's the best strategy? We'll cut the daytime ones out first and wait a bit with the bedtime one. Also not sure how to get her to nap in her cot without the bottle. We don't literally feed her to sleep, she goes to bed mostly awake but the bottle in a dark bedroom is such a part of the ritual. She doesn't need it when she naps in the buggy Mon-Thur.


And what to replace it with. She nearly gags on Rice Dream, pushes Oatly away and doesn't care for cow's milk.


Maybe formula in a straw cup during the day, mix it with one of the above "milks" and slowly reduce the amount of formula? And do the same with the bedtime feed but give it in a bottle for another while?


And which product would you pick, milk, rice dream or oatly? Or just give water? I'm not keen on soy in large amounts especially for kids. I have the idea she needs some kind of white drink for the calcium. She doesn't like yoghurt much but she'd eat a pound of cheese a day if we let her (currently cut out due to wet poos).


Any tips for a smooth transition welcome!

I would mix the formula with water, gradually increasing the amount of water, and give it in a different cup like a straw cup or sippy cup. When we did that with our LO she lost interest as the milkiness decreased, but it wasn't too major a change to cause all out terror at night. Maybe change the cup in the day first, so it's more familiar. And perhaps give the drink while doing something else like reading or singing - so gradually that becomes the focus of the time rather than the milk.


It does mean that you need to consider how to replace the calcium but there are other sources. You could even keep a cup of formula during the day if your LO likes it and then you know she's getting some easy calcium - but from a sippy cup perhaps rather than a bottle.

Good idea, I think we'll start by cutting out the morning (immediately after waking up) bottle entirely because that's just our habit, not something she asks for. So she'll have more breakfast.


Then at lunch time, give formula in a sippy cup.


At bedtime, formula in a bottle. And one night just try giving it in a straw cup. I would prefer not giving anything at bedtime because of the sugars on her teeth. I'd like to move to formula or liquid porridge after bath time, then tooth brushing, and then some way to get her to bed happily without the bottle. Maybe it's worth diluting the bedtime bottle so it becomes less interesting but she still has the association for a while. Hm.


Thanks for the feedback, all other/complimentary ideas welcome, we'll take the best of all worlds :)

I don't have any advice, just wanted to say that we have seen the dietician at kings for a different reason, and she said that rice milk is not recommended for child under 5. My son who is three drinks oatly. He also drinks the chocolate oatly occasionally, which he loves. As said above, you need to watch the calcium intake. My son also has a glass of the tropicana enriched with calcium every day.

Um just a thought, but why focus on milk as a drink at all now? My daughter had a fairly serious cows milk protein allergy from 8 months to 2yrs old. She was breastfed until 16 months but in all honesty, from 12 months, it was one small feed a day, and she wouldn't tolerate any formula at all (including the non-dairy ones). So she gained all her nutritional needs that she would have got from milk from other foods instead - calcium from pulses like lentils, iron from green veg and meat etc etc. There's tonnes of information on t'internet.


Dietly speaking, there's very little that cows milk gives you that you can't get from solid foods. People continue to want children to drink lots of milk because it's an 'easy transition' from bottle/breast feeding but in fact, according to our dietician at Kings, there's no loss if you don't have it in your diet at all, as long as you ensure the rest of the diet has what it needs.


Just a thought. I know we HAD to avoid milk, but my daughter has missed nothing and indeed is 98% centile for height and 75% for weight. And she seems fairly normal, mentally!!!

Great feedback thanks so much Fidgetsmum and Fuchsia. I'm pretty obsessed with tooth brushing so it would make me very happy to know her teeth are clean when she goes to bed ;)


S loves cheese so much that she will almost certainly get enough from pulses/veg and cheese if we skip milk altogether but do give cheese. I'm tempted to only do goat's cheese for a while as she's had wet poos for a few weeks now and neither GP nor paediatrician could find anything wrong - they suspected a temporary lactose intolerance as a result of a few consecutive bugs and teething.


Hm, so... just water and a bread based breakfast or oatly-based porridge in the morning, then a cup of formula with lunch, slowly mixed in with and then replaced by oatly or even water. Then water with dinner and a bottle of formula at night, diluted at the same rate as the lunchtime cup so she doesn't find us out heheh and then tooth brushing, and one day replace the bedtime bottle with a bedtime straw cup and then.. one day... a straw cup after bathtime and no more bottle at night. By then she'll be 12 and telling me she doesn't need a bedtime story anymore either ;)


Seriously this should be doable over the course of a month or maybe two. I hope.


Still open to more input, but nice to have a bit of a plan already!

My 22 mth daughter is also addicted to formula milk in bottles. I had cut it right back, but was unable to breastfeed younger brother (7 mths) for long and now she either steals his bottles or throws a huge tantrum if she can't have one too. Sigh.

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

    • I've never got Christmas pudding. The only times I've managed to make it vaguely acceptable to people is thus: Buy a really tiny one when it's remaindered in Tesco's. They confound carbon dating, so the yellow labelled stuff at 75% off on Boxing Day will keep you going for years. Chop it up and soak it in Stones Ginger Wine and left over Scotch. Mix it in with a decent vanilla ice cream. It's like a festive Rum 'n' Raisin. Or: Stick a couple in a demijohn of Aldi vodka and serve it to guests, accompanied by 'The Party's Over' by Johnny Mathis when people simply won't leave your flat.
    • Not miserable at all! I feel the same and also want to complain to the council but not sure who or where best to aim it at? I have flagged it with our local MP and one Southwark councillor previously but only verbally when discussing other things and didn’t get anywhere other than them agreeing it was very frustrating etc. but would love to do something on paper. I think they’ve been pretty much every night for the last couple of weeks and my cat is hating it! As am I !
    • That is also a Young's pub, like The Cherry Tree. However fantastic the menu looks, you might want to ask exactly who will cook the food on the day, and how. Also, if  there is Christmas pudding on the menu, you might want to ask how that will be cooked, and whether it will look and/or taste anything like the Christmas puddings you have had in the past.
    • This reminds me of a situation a few years ago when a mate's Dad was coming down and fancied Franklin's for Christmas Day. He'd been there once, in September, and loved it. Obviously, they're far too tuned in to do it, so having looked around, £100 per head was pretty standard for fairly average pubs around here. That is ridiculous. I'd go with Penguin's idea; one of the best Christmas Day lunches I've ever had was at the Lahore Kebab House in Whitechapel. And it was BYO. After a couple of Guinness outside Franklin's, we decided £100 for four people was the absolute maximum, but it had to be done in the style of Franklin's and sourced within walking distance of The Gowlett. All the supermarkets knock themselves out on veg as a loss leader - particularly anything festive - and the Afghani lads on Rye Lane are brilliant for more esoteric stuff and spices, so it really doesn't need to be pricey. Here's what we came up with. It was considerably less than £100 for four. Bread & Butter (Lidl & Lurpak on offer at Iceland) Mersea Oysters (Sopers) Parsnip & Potato Soup ( I think they were both less than 20 pence a kilo at Morrisons) Smoked mackerel, Jerseys, watercress & radish (Sopers) Rolled turkey breast joint (£7.95 from Iceland) Roast Duck (two for £12 at Lidl) Mash  Carrots, star anise, butter emulsion. Stir-fried Brussels, bacon, chestnuts and Worcestershire sauce.(Lidl) Clementine and limoncello granita (all from Lidl) Stollen (Lidl) Stichelton, Cornish Cruncher, Stinking Bishop. (Marks & Sparks) There was a couple of lessons to learn: Don't freeze mash. It breaks down the cellular structure and ends up more like a French pomme purée. I renamed it 'Pomme Mikael Silvestre' after my favourite French centre-half cum left back and got away with it, but if you're not amongst football fans you may not be so lucky. Tasted great, looked like shit. Don't take the clementine granita out of the freezer too early, particularly if you've overdone it on the limoncello. It melts quickly and someone will suggest snorting it. The sugar really sticks your nostrils together on Boxing Day. Speaking of 'lost' Christmases past, John Lewis have hijacked Alison Limerick's 'Where Love Lives' for their new advert. Bastards. But not a bad ad.   Beansprout, I have a massive steel pot I bought from a Nigerian place on Choumert Road many years ago. It could do with a work out. I'm quite prepared to make a huge, spicy parsnip soup for anyone who fancies it and a few carols.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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