Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Does anyone else have the problem of finding stairgates to fit irregular sized stairs? I never thought our's were but on measuring, they fall betwixt and between every combination i've looked at. I've seen some that are like roller blinds - retractable - anyone got any experience of those or any advice on stairgates generally? little one is now crawling so keen to make the house safer asap.

We have the retractable ones made by Lindam and they work really well. We had to put a baton on the wall for the top to be secured to as the bottom was bolted to our skirting board otherwise it would have been wonky. It also took a bit of getting used to opening and closing the gate, but they work really well and the children cannot climb on them.


Hope that helps.

Not sure if this helps Belle, but what we've done is have a typical white stairgate at the top (no ideal of make, but it has pads that screw in or at at the top and bottom and I've managed to make it fit very securely between a door frame and wall at the top of the stairs.


At the bottom, rather than have a stairgate (because I do hate them so much), we have a Baby Dan playpen, opened up to create a barrier with a door in it, so baby can't get get near to the bottom of the stairs at all. I appreciate this does depend on the layout of your house/room configuration though.


At 11 and a bit months she's now able to crawl up the stairs, and general advice seems to be once they are capable of it, let them do it as much as you can (with you escourting them of course) so they master it ASAP, plus it helps to wear them out, which is all good! The next step is helping her to master how to get back down safely on her tummy, which she's just beginning to show signs of 'getting'.


Hope you manage to sort something, the pull out ones do seem like a good idea, as no trip bar across the bottom when open.


Molly

Sitting on their bum on the step and going down one step at a time is what I make my 2 year old do. It's arduous, but I think it's safer for her as she's quite a big toddler.


She once did the tummy method and body surfed (backwards) down the whole length of the stairs until she hit the bottom.

Going down on their bottom is OK once they are older - 2 ish as Candj says, but whilst little the danger is they can tip forward and go down head first.


So - go down feet first on tummy, and if you can hold their legs and encourage them to move legs down one at a time, controlling the descent that's perfect....my little one has just learnt to roll onto her tummy and get down off the settee etc. so natural progression is to start to do the same on the stairs. I'm told the sooner you can get them to master it the better from a safety point of view.


Molly

when I was young (about 5)I got one of mums big dinner trays and slid down the stairs on that, (I had seen my older brother do it with some success) however I went so fast I couldn't stop and went through the pain of glass to the side of the front door, I suggest you don't teach your kids this technique though, it's a bit dangerous until they get to an age when they can use there feet as brakes on the skirting boardon either side of the staircase. Luckily I was un injured till mum gave me a clip round the ear for doing it, and my brother a bl**dy good wallop for showing me how.:))


funny what reading a bit of sunday morning forum can remind you of.


Hugs as ever

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

    • Personally can’t stand carpets however where I am renting has carpet in  bedroom and hall. Not great quality and certainly not cleaned. Was  in B & M recently and looking at carpet shampoo -wow got a can costing £2.99 to test.. No scrubbing as others seemed to imply. Spray, leave and poof - smells great, no dabbing or scrubbing and c leaving rubbish. First to admit is only temp solution but no need to hire carpet cleaner instantly  or pay for a company to come and deal with professionally. For 3/6 months happy to have used this - Have a carpet cleaner and in a month or so plan to use it.    Buy a steam cleaner for floors - not expensive - much better than mop and bucket and more hygienic all round. Can pick up second hand ones on e bay.
    • Is this a true story? What protein powder causes kidney damage? Why didn't you cite an article? I shop at H&B, mostly to buy their castor oil, however, I would recommend researching any product beforehand. They do have very informative articles on their website. To be honest, I don't see the point of this post. You could have just taken the product back for a refund or complained in store and in writing.
    • Well the Italian on Lordship Lane  recommended here was delicious.  Thank you so very much -my party were extremely pleased with ambience, location and lovely food plus puddings to die for. They are also on Deliveroo.  Will certainly be back when I am back in 6 weeks time. Went past Love Dulwich at lunchtime on my way to Italian - only a party of 2 - food might be excellent but decided to give it a miss - wasn’t impressed with manager who admitted he had only been there 2 weeks. Might be being totally unfair but doubt it, as no comments since about a month ago from Pugwash.  
    • Thanks for the tip! I did a quick search and I’m thinking of grabbing a Bissell one. Looks like it’d be really handy for crumbs and pet hair without dragging the hoover out all the time — and especially at night when I don’t want to wake the kids 😅. For me the flat microfiber mops with the bottle attached has been game changing. No more lugging a bucket about, the thought would put me off at times 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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