Johnson’s baby bedtime challenge

This is a sponsored post

So a few weeks ago, the folks over at Johnson’s approached me and asked if I’d participate in the Johnson’s baby bedtime challenge with Greer.

One of the most magical moments of motherhood is watching your baby sleeping … but we all know that getting to that moment is not always an easy process. Fraught bath times, overly-tired little ones and an irregular routine can all contribute to a stressful sleeping experience for both mother and baby. And parents know that better sleep for baby, means better sleep for the whole family!

That’s why the makers of JOHNSON’S® Baby want to help by encouraging mums to take the JOHNSON’S® Baby Sleep Challenge and see how much difference bathing with JOHNSON’S® Baby Bedtime products for seven nights, used as part of a clinically proven routine*, makes to your baby’s bedtime.

And I hummed and hawwed over it before agreeing, albeit with minor concerns. Why did I have concerns? Because this is what Greer does every time we put her in the bath.

Uh-oh

I was intrigued by the sleep challenge though, as I am one of these terrible parents who *gasp* doesn’t have a set routine – mostly in part due to me spending so much time at work lately – but a routine is something I thought would possibly help little Miss Gingernut here who is frequently to be found doing this to her bedroom at 9pm.

Greer did this in under 10 minutes.

So for the challenge week, this was my brief:

1. Bath
Bath time is a key first step in the bedtime routine. Follow the online guidance and use a product like JOHNSON’S® Baby Bedtime Bath®, which contains NaturalCalm™, a patented blend of relaxing aromas proven to relax better than lavender.

2. Massage
Massaging with a product like JOHNSON’S® Baby Bedtime Lotion can help you recognise and respond to Greer’s body language and is a wonderful way to make Greer feel safe, secure and relaxed. There’s no one way to massage your baby – provided you know how to do it safely, but guidance, hints and tips to get you started are available at www.sleepchallenge.info to make the most of massage time with Greer.

3. Off to sleep
After giving Greer a warm bath and massage enjoy quiet time together and help her wind-down further by reading, singing softly, or feeding her. Avoid active play at this time so that Greer goes to bed sleepy, but still awake.

Johnson's Baby Bedtime Challenge

LOL at going to bed sleepy. Hm. So, every night Greer was to have a nice warm bath using the Johnson’s Baby Bedtime Bath (which smells amazing!), have a little massage using Johnson’s Baby Bedtime Lotion then off to bed with a story. Sounds easy as pie really. Erm…

At the start of the week, I got in the bath with her in the vague hope that she’d settle down and not scream for the entire duration of the bath. What you can’t see in this photo is that her left hand was firmly clamped on my right nipple and she was horrified at the prospect of being dunked in water. Ho hum. Struggling to wash her quickly, in a very small bath and lots of dunking meant that by the time she came out the bath she was furious with me and wouldn’t talk to me. Bob took over at this point, wrapping her up and taking her away for the massage and book element. By the time I got out the bath all I could hear was peals of laughter and Greer yelling, “DING DONG!” as she pressed her belly button. Not quite the relaxed massage we’d been encouraged to perform. One story, a nappy change and a hot water bottle later she was out for the count less than 20 minutes after bathtime.

WHAT?!!

On top of that, it was past 7am – a solid hour later than her usual wake-up time – before we could hear her stomping about, terrorising the cats and destroying her bedroom again. Of course the entire week wasn’t like that, we did have one 9pm+ bedtime on day 3 but in fairness she’d slept for 3 hours at nursery and was probably over this whole bed thing anyway.

So, three days in and so far so good. I will be back tomorrow with an overview of the last 4 days and some hilarious photographs for you but in the MEANTIME!

Johnson’s have very kindly offered up not one, not two but FIVE Baby Bedtime hampers for my lovely readerbase. To be in with a chance of winning one of these kits, you can do each of the following for ONE entry (so, do all of these and you’ll have 4 entries into the competition.)

1. Leave a comment below
2. In your comment, tell me a challenge you’ve faced as a parent and how you overcame it.
2. Retweet this (and leave a comment telling me you’ve retweeted)
3. Be a fan on Facebook (and leave a comment telling me you’re a fan)

This competition will be open until Sunday 14th November at 9pm.

Posted under for the kids, reviews

This post was written by Vonnie on November 11, 2010

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Holiday! Celebrate!

This is a review post.

A few weeks ago, the wonderful people at Eurocamp kindly sent us on a much-needed holiday to their Château Lez Eaux campsite in Normandy. Having done a Eurocamp holiday in 2008 – staying here, in a tent – we thought we knew what was coming. We really didn’t.

I had made the executive decision for us to sail from Portsmouth to Caen rather than Dover to Calais. For us, the driving distance on the UK side was the same but it was going to save me roughly 5 hours driving at the other side whilst also giving me 6 hours on the ferry to recuperate. As our children are so young (Findlay is 9, Nairn is 4, Erica is 3 and Greer is only 1) when we drive down South we tend to leave late evening and drive through the night so that the kids aren’t bored the whole trip home. Generally speaking it’s a win-win situation as doing it this way means we miss any heavy traffic normally encountered around Manchester, Birmingham and London and the total driving time is vastly reduced and indeed we did our 440 mile trip in 7.5 hours.

I have to admit that with four young children who had slept almost all night, Bob and I were dreading the ferry trip. We were pleasantly surprised to discover that not only was there a small soft-play area, playroom with colouring-in station & kids DVDs playing but there was also a full entertainment programme for older children including a very energetic quiz and a magician. As I had work to do, I paid for WiFi and got on with that whilst the children played. All in all, a surprisingly relaxing way to travel.

We docked in Caen in the early afternoon and set off towards Saint Pair-Sur-Mer, getting hopelessly lost circumnavigating Granville but still arriving on the site an hour after we got off the ferry which I was extremely relieved about. Now, in the space of 10 days we had been offered the trip, put an emergency passport application in for Greer, arranged for someone to stay at our home to watch over the menagerie and got permission to take Findlay out of school for the week so I must have missed the section of the email that explained that rather than staying in a tent, we’d be hanging out in one of these for the next week:

Our Home For 6 Days

I have to admit to feeling a little ambivalent about staying in the static caravan rather than the tent but when the heavens opened not half an hour after we arrived, I realised immediately the one difference which became massively important – the kids didn’t end up traipsing mud everywhere. Anyone who has ever been camping will relate to that feeling as if your entire body is filthy no matter how good the ablution facilities are and thankfully, in our 3 bedroom superior we never had that. Having such an expanse of space was excellent too since the boys had a room to themselves where they could escape to play games, the girls had a room to themselves and we still had a comfortably sized living & dining room space too.

We were so exhausted after our trip down that we stayed on the parc for the first few days which is unlike us -we’re the kind of family who goes out and sees things rather than the heading-to-the-beach type – but with beautifully clean swimming pools and excellent facilities on site we wanted for nothing. There was plenty for the kids to do, a shop on-site where we could get the essentials and a bar too where internet access was available.

"Does It Look Cold To You?"

The kids absolutely loved the swimming pool and I have to admit I was terrified at the prospect of taking four of them to the pool with only two adults but it turned out to be completely manageable. What mainly worried me was that there was no lifeguard supervision (a common occurrence in France) around the pools but the boys took good care of Erica leaving Bob and I to take turns with Greer. Although, we did see a fairly horrific accident involving a teenager, a backflip dive and a certain broken nose. Ouch.

The site had a kids club available but our brood, being quite anti-social wary weren’t too keen on being left there which was fine. Instead they chose to spend a fair amount of time in a well-designed playground. I remember thinking, “Health and safety would never allow a playground like this back home” when watching Nairn clambering up a climbing wall – it was exactly the type of place that kids should always have access to and they absolutely loved it. Look at the smiles!

King Of The Castle

You Smell Of Elderberries

Take One Of Me Daddy!

Ninety Foot High And Rising

Erica

The Eurocamp staff who had briefed us prior to our departure had mentioned that this parc in particular was beautiful but that didn’t quite do it justice. The site was just stunning, plenty of greenery and a little fishing lake where guests were welcome to sit and indulge themselves. One thing that really impressed me – and which I felt reflected the consideration given to the site’s clientele – was that the entry to the parc was controlled via a security barrier which opened after a PIN number was entered into it. The PIN station was available on both sides of the road meaning that both UK and continental drivers could access it. Clever, eh?

Driveway

The Big House

Fishermen

Fishing

IMG_2209

IMG_2353

Flooers

Birdie 2

We did do a couple of day trips – to Le Mont-Saint-Michel and to Saint Malo where we visited the Great Aquarium which were both within an hour’s drive of our site – and I shall blog about these later.

All in all, this trip just reinforced how good a holiday a family of our size can have on a budget. A seven-night break in this site, staying in accommodation exactly like ours would cost £987 accommodation only and – as we did – you can book your ferry crossing through Eurocamp who manage to get it significantly cheaper than I ever found quotes for. I’ve been told that Eurocamp can also help organise fly-drives and rail travel too.

For me, the difference between this kind of holiday and a package holiday is simple – you do everything on your own time. Having our car with us meant we could leave when we wanted, go where we wanted and not have to worry about schedules and going off-plan. The Eurocamp couriers spoke English – which was an embarrassing relief as my French has never exceeded schoolgirl level – and were available at the drop of a hat to assist. As an example – on our trip two years ago I came down with a stomach bug and had to go to a Doctor. Our courier found a Doctor and came with me to translate. I get the impression that the sites are picked by people who understand what a family abroad needs, such is the level of detail like ensuring we had a travel cot available for Greer to sleep in and providing loo roll and washing up liquid in the welcome pack.We’ve done two Eurocamp holidays now and I know that we’ll be back. Thanks ever so much for a great time!

Posted under reviews

REVIEW – Erika Knight ‘Simple Knitting’

The lovely folk over at Quadrille publishing got in touch with me recently, offering to send me Erika Knight’s latest knitting book called ‘Simple Knitting‘ and asked me if I’d review it here. I’ve had this book for weeks now, desperate to do it justice so here we go.

Firstly I should own up and say that I was aware of Erika Knight as a knitting author already as my friend Midwife Katie had used one of her patterns from ‘Simple Knits for Cherished Babies‘ to knit a sweater for Nairn. I’ve been a knitter for a long time and as someone who spends a lot of time on the internet, I’m used to the easy availability of free patterns but I still ordered that book based on the one sweater I’d seen designed by this author.

Erika Knight’s style is very distinctive – it’s perhaps obvious to state that she goes for simple designs – so it wasn’t a surprise to me at all to discover that she has consulted with high street brands with instantly recognisable clothing ranges like Gap and M&S. This new book builds on her ‘simple’ look with 20 projects that really appeal to a broad spectrum of abilities and tastes all set out in a workshop fashion.

It’s slightly difficult for me to review this book as it is very much aimed at complete novices but suffice to say if I was learning to knit right now, this is the book I’d pick to teach myself. Beautifully photographed and illustrated instructions combined with Knight’s clean and simple style make this book easy-to-follow. Particularly appealing for me is that the author does not assume that her learners will be ‘afraid’ of their new hobby so alongside the usual explanations of different yarn types and weights there is also indepth instruction in understanding pattern construction, knitting in the round and reading charts – three elements of knitting that I didn’t understand until fairly recently and I’ve been knitting for over 20 years now.

Better yet, despite this book’s clear focus on instructing newbies each workshop ends with a completed project that is actually both desirable and useful whilst the learner has unwittingly developed new skills and techniques. The very first project provides the new knitter with a fashionable muffler and the others are just as creative – my personal favourite being the notebooks made as project #4 – between socks, a hot water bottle cover and a sweater I was truly spoiled for what to choose to work on first. I strongly suspect this is going to be the book I buy for any of my friends who express an interest in knitting from now on and I highly recommend it!

Simple Knitting by Erika Knight – RRP £16.99 – is published by Quadrille publishing

Erika Knight - Simple Knitting

Posted under reviews

This post was written by Vonnie on June 16, 2010

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News, reviews & a giveaway!

I promised you that I had lots to share and I am now able to share most of it. In my usual style, I’m going to tell you a bit of a story first.

I am a renowned rubbish practical joker. I try and play jokes on people all the time and they usually fall flat, this year’s April Fool’s Day was no exception when I told the kids that I was pregnant again and that as a result we would have to move into a one bedroom flat since we couldn’t afford to stay in our house anymore. They fell for it so well that I decided to expand it and phoned my sister, whereupon the following conversation ensued:
Me: Steph? Steph! Oh my GOD I’m pregnant. I can’t believe it. I can’t believe it. I’m pregnant and I have no idea how it happened and how can I possibly have another baby I’ll have five kids under 10!
Steph – Deadpan: Oh my actual God. Are you kidding?
Me – almost crying: NO I’M NOT KIDDING I can’t believe this how on earth did this happen?!
Steph: Are you kidding?
Me: NO!
Steph: No way. I am too.
Me – shrieking: OH MY GOD! OH MY GOD! I WAS ONLY KIDDING BECAUSE IT’S APRIL FOOL’S DAY! Are you ACTUALLY pregnant?!
Steph: I hate you.

What this little vignette doesn’t tell the reader is that I am also renowned for being the worst secret keeper in all the land. Seriously. And Stephanie is the only person I know who actually managed to keep her first pregnancy secret until she’d got past 12 weeks. GNNNNNNNNNGGGGGG! So the last eight weeks has been torturous for me knowing but not able to tell anyone until today. Steph & Gary had their scan yesterday and there’s a little baby in there! It’s the clearest scan picture I’ve ever seen – you can see it here which is a photo of the scan and therefore not great, but clear enough to see a bambino in there. Hooray! Baby is due to land before Christmas which is just perfect. I am seriously excited :)

So that’s my first piece of news. My SECOND piece of news is that Bob & I’s business The Life Craft (which we’ve been sporadically blogging about here) has been entered into a really amazing competition run by Barclay’s Bank. Competitors are divided up by location and then by sector; in 12 days the judges will shortlist their favourite three entries per location and whoever gets the most votes wins up to £50,000 to develop their business. We really need people to back us just now – a task that will take literally seconds to do in the hope that we can be shortlisted. If you could take a moment to do this I really would be most grateful.

So that’s the news for just now! Onto the reviews.

I posted yesterday about our big walk around Calderglen Park with Penny the other night. When we got home, I was so knackered that I decided to have a bath. Lush had sent me a Big Blue bath ballistic and a bar of Sandstone soap last week as a freebie to encourage me to take 90 minutes as a World Cup Widow and I wasn’t going to look that gift horse in the mouth (although I didn’t have the heart to ‘fess up about Scotland’s lack of qualifying!) I’ve used the Big Blue loads of times before and love it but the Sandstone soap was a new one to my crappy sensitive skin and I’m really impressed with it! I got off all of the dry flaky bits without irritating my skin any further and it smells really nice too. Lush are also promoting their BB Seaweed facemask to World Cup Widows but I haven’t tried that one yet.

Lush yummies

Although I have to say I’m very jealous of our friends in the South after discovering that Lush have Spas, but they’re only in London, Leeds, Poole and Kingston! Have any of you tried them out before?

The other review I wanted to share with you is for a website that I discovered after Christmas called Dot Com Giftshop. I got these supercute Russian Doll tins for the girls to keep their hairbobbles, colouring pencils and various tiny toys in so that I’d stop standing on them and I was really impressed with the speed and service offered by the site. A few weeks ago, they contacted me to say they’d listed Adventures of a Lady in Training in their top 50 craft blogs (at #42! The cheek of it, I reckon I should have been top 20 at least!) and would I be interested in reviewing some of their products. So they sent me out some of their Heart gifts range and I have to say that yet again, I was impressed with the speed, service and quality offered by them.

This gorgeous & classy tealight holder has been claimed by Erica for above her bed:
Super cute tealight holder

and they also sent this selection:
DotComGiftShop hearts range

which just made me smile as soon as I opened the box which contained Feltcraft butterfly hearts, Iron-on patches, thick wrapping tape with hearts, thinner gift tape, alphabet heart stickers and decorative heart stickers which I have to admit made me want to sit down and write a letter to someone – anyone – which I could decorate with hearts. Yes I know, I’m unashamedly girly. Anyway, it’s a big thumbs up from me for the Dot Com Giftshop not just for having such a wide variety of cute and inexpensive gift items but also for the brilliant customer service experience.

And finally the bit you’ve all been waiting for – the giveaway! This giveaway has now closed

OK – up for grabs we have everything in this photograph:
DotComGiftShop hearts range

and to enter the giveaway I would like you to:

1) Comment here (that gets you one entry)
2) Be a fan on facebook (that gets you another entry
3) Tweet about the giveaway (that gets you yet another entry)

Please remember to tell me in your comment if you’ve done steps 2 & 3 otherwise you won’t be credited for that entry! Also ensure you leave an email address for me to contact you on. You have until 8pm on Wednesday 2nd June 2010 to enter and I will post anywhere in the world.

Please note: I am not paid for reviews other than getting to keep the product I’m reviewing. You can therefore be assured that the review I write is unbiased.

Posted under giveaway

This post was written by Vonnie on May 26, 2010

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Giveaway time!

NOW! A giveaway.

A few weeks ago, I was contacted by the PR company who represent Ecover asking if I’d like to review Ecover’s new range on my blog. In order to review the products honestly, they have supplied me with not only their own range but comparable products from other petrochemical-based well-known brands. I will be posting my findings tomorrow.

Before agreeing to this, I asked Ecover’s PR company to supply me with a pack to giveaway to my readers which they kindly did. The pack contains four 500ml bottles – multi surface cleaner, all purpose cleaner, power cleaner (degreaser) and window & glass cleaner.

Ecover giveaway

To be in with a chance of winning this pack, leave a comment below telling me what you do to make your house a happier home. Closing date for entries is Sunday 11th October at midnight. Now closed! Thanks for entering! Due to the weight of the bottles I’m afraid this giveaway is restricted to the UK & Eire.

Posted under giveaway

This post was written by Vonnie on October 2, 2009

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