Jump to content

Recommended Posts

So my 9 month old has started nursery 2.5 days a week and has settled in great. My one worry is that she hardly drinks any milk when she is there. At home she is still breastfed and would have maybe 3 x BF during the day, but at nursery she will have 60 ml max milk from a sippy cup (bottle refuser) during the whole day. Is this OK - it doesn't seem enough? She eats really well, drinks water and still feeds at night, I was planning to try and cut down on the night feeds but maybe I shouldn't. Any experiences / advice would be great! Thanks.
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/48874-milk-at-nursery/
Share on other sites

My 11mo has just started 3 days a week and until she started settling in she was still feeding through the night and two or 3 times in day. She also doesn't really drink milk at nursery (a bit occasionally from a grippy cup) but seems to be doing fine. It's also coincided with her suddenly sleeping through the night *hallelujah* so I was really worried she was going to starve but nope, seems absolutely fine... Have been feeding her as normal on non-nursery days
My son hardly drank any milk from about 8 months. He ate really well including cream cheese, milk on cereal and yoghurts. He still had2 breast feeds per day but wasn't interested in milk. He was/is fine! At nearly 3 he quite likes the odd drink of milk now but it's not part of his every day routine. My daughter didn't drink much milk either but I breast fed her at night for ages. I'm sure she'll be fine!

Am in fairly similar position - DS has took 200mls from hubbie once when I deliberately went out to "test"

him, but generally 60-80mls is as much as I expect him to take. Have nights varying from sleeping for 10 hr stretches to waking every few hours (consistency is highly over rated!).


He has his first full day at the CM's this wk so am nervous as to what it and the coming weeks will bring, but know that he won't fade away. Remember having similar worries with DD & suddenly everything clicked into place (plus milk became less important).


By this age, they only need around 500ml a day which includes milk in food which isn't much.


Maybe stick out the night feeds until you feel she's properly settled at nursery - might be she drops them herself once the dust settles (fingers crossed)

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

    • Girls In Your City - No Selfie - Anonymous Casual Dating https://SecreLocal.com [url=https://SecreLocal.com] Girls In Your City [/url] - Anonymous Casual Dating - No Selfie New Girls [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/vanessa-100.html]Vanessa[/url] [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/vanessa-100.html]Vanessa[/url] [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/molly-15.html]Molly[/url] [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/cheryl-blossom-48.html]Cheryl Blossom[/url] [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/carola-conymegan-116.html]Carola Conymegan[/url] [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/pupa-41.html]Pupa[/url] [url=https://secrelocal.com/girl/mia-candy-43.html]Mia Candy[/url]
    • This is a remarkable interpretation of history. Wikipedia (with more footnotes and citations than you could shake a shitty stick at sez: The austerity programme was initiated in 2010 by the Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government. In his June 2010 budget speech, Osborne identified two goals. The first was that the structural current budget deficit would be eliminated to "achieve [a] cyclically-adjusted current balance by the end of the rolling, five-year forecast period". The second was that national debt as a percentage of GDP would fall. The government intended to achieve both of its goals through substantial reductions in public expenditure.[21] This was to be achieved by a combination of public spending cuts and tax increases amounting to £110 billion.[26] Between 2010 and 2013, the Coalition government said that it had reduced public spending by £14.3 billion compared with 2009–10.[27] Growth remained low, while unemployment rose. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_government_austerity_programme From memory, last time around they were against the LTNs and competing with the Tories to pick up backlash votes - both failed. They had no counterproposals or ideas about how to manage congestion or pollution. This time around they're simply silent on the matter: https://www.southwark-libdems.org.uk/your-local-lib-dem-team/goosegreen Also, as we have seen from Mr Barber's comments on the new development on the old Jewsons yard, "leading campaigns to protect the character of East Dulwich and Goose Green" is code for "blocking new housing".
    • @Insuflo NO, please no, please don't encourage him to post more often! 😒
    • Revealing of what, exactly? I resurrected this thread, after a year, to highlight the foolishness of the OP’s op. And how posturing would be sagacity is quickly undermined by events, dear boy, events. The thread is about Mandelson. I knew he was a wrong ‘un all along, we all did; the Epstein shit just proves it. In reality, Kinnock, Blair, Brown, Starmer et all knew as well but accepted it, because they found him useful. As did a large proportion of the 2024 intake of Labour MPs who were personally vetted and approved by Mandelson.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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