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Just a little puzzle.


The new mums in East Dulwich seem to be affluent enough to buy designer buggies.


If affluent, why buy a buggy which places the child at the level of nasty motor vehicle exhaust fumes, rather than a pram which would lessen the pollution the child breathes in?


Status symbol more important than child health?

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Plus kids only stay lying flat in their prams until they are about 6 - 9 months old. You then still have another couple of years or so of slogging them about in the buggy.


Maybe we should stop them breathing in the pollution by driving them about in 4x4s from shop door to shop door thus not exposing them to street level?


Or get those ginormous Silver Cross prams like in the old days?

I think I would have problems pushing a pram through the streets of East Dulwich. There just is no room. Perhaps we could solve more problems by narrowing the roads and therefore widening the pavements. Then there would be no room for the 4x4s to drive on the roads.
Macroban are you confusing us with the second hand, 2005 buggy models in Brockley?. In ED 90% of exhaust fumes are from electric hybrids and yummy mummies pedaling to SMBS on their bikes. You'll find the heavy metal tinged CO2 more prevalent in West Dulwich.

The last time I push-chaired the streets of East Dulwich was in the 1950s. I've never attempted a 21st century designer buggy. Then there were very few motor vehicles, and exhaust fumes in the baby's face was not a consideration.


I'm just surprised that none of the mums with buggies are concerned now.

modern life kalamitykel, it takes 5 minutes to get from the swing to the slide, so walking to the shops would take most of the day I'm afraid.


there was a buggy that was designed to keep kids high up out of way of fumes. it looked most odd and ungainly and they didn't seem to have any evidence that the air quality 3 foot up is any better that that found at about 1.5 feet high.

blinder is right, they dont need much, but IMHO they do need a buggy. worth spending a few (maybe not ?550) quid if you work out how long you'll be using it for. you dont want one that gets knackered after repeated folding.

3 years? every day? how many miles a day? then maybe another child?


some things that babies really dont need:

shoes. tricky one this.....they cant walk.

their own channel on satellite tv devoted to bright shiny colours

video monitor so you can watch them sleep from another room.....um, just go into the room and look at them

special rocking chair to be fed in. unless maybe you dont have any chairs already

keef you're a civil servant aren't you - i'd recommend postcard on the work/office social noticeboard [or whatever the e-quivalent is] to fill most of your child equipment needs.


many of your colleagues will have boxes of blankets, rattles, bouncers and prams they will be very happy to pass on. lowers the cost and you get to see how haggard real parents are.


we got rid of all our baby gear on freecycle, but it seems to have less baby stuff for offer these days.


Ultraconsultancy

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