Posts Tagged ‘Guide’

Lusso Baby Canada

The Family Rescue Kit & Guide – Restaurant Edition Reviews

The Family Rescue Kit & Guide – Restaurant Edition

  • Award Winning Guide Book! Games, jokes, magic tricks & more! Endorsed by Dr. Laura & voted Best Product 2008 by DadLabs.
  • Clever activity kit packed with high quality arts & crafts items, & kid-tested games, toys & more.
  • Comes in a durable, attractive & compact bag your child will love to carry everywhere!
  • This is a published book & activity kit containing non-toxic, lead free items that comply with all CA FCC safety regulations.
  • Perfect for all kids, including those with ADD or other special needs. Best for ages 3 & up.

Are you afraid to bring your kids to a restaurant? Avoiding running those errands because you don’t want to deal with the impending melt downs? Well no more! Introducing The Family Rescue Kit & Guide, Restaurant EditionTM! This clever book and brilliantly designed Activity Kit will turn your plight into educational play – everywhere you go!

The Family Rescue Kit & Guide, Restaurant EditionTM is not just for restaurants! Great for waiting rooms, dressing rooms, road trips, grocery and other stores, traveling – anywhere you go where your child’s behavior needs an adjustment for a public setting. This award winning book will turn just about any environment into a fun, educational, engaging and peaceful play area for your children.

Endorsed by well known family radio talk show host, Dr. Laura Schlessinger, this dynamic duo is filled with tantrum stopping games, jokes, and magic tricks to distract, engage and channel your child’s energy toward activities appropriate for whatever public environment you happen to be in. The Activity Kit (included) is packed with craft items, games and toys, giving you all the tools you need to turn frustrating restaurant visits, errands and trips into peaceful, educational and fun experiences with your children – NO MORE TANTRUMS!

PERFECT for all children, including those with ADD and other special needs! Best for children ages 3 & up. (Contents may be adjusted to accommodate younger children.) Additional deluxe toys and crafts and refills are available to add to your kit at FamilyRescueKits.com.

Also available: Take it to the next level with the Airport Editions, which includes expanded areas and safety issues connected with traveling with small children through airports.

List Price: $ 24.95

Price: $ 24.95

Baby Store at Buy.com!

Nanny Jenn’s Guide to Babysitting

Nanny Jenn’s Guide to Babysitting


Have you ever found an action figure swimming in the toilet? Have you ever said the words, "it’s not polite to lick your brother"? Have you ever spent the afternoon peeling bubble gum off the dog? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then you might have done some babysitting. Written by an experienced childcare professional, this book covers everything from the games to the goobers. You will learn all you need to know to be the best babysitter in town.
List Price:
Price: 15.48

Childrens Furniture Select

Guide to Springfield – The Simpsons

Some cool Fighting Babies images:

Guide to Springfield – The Simpsons
Fighting Babies

Image by TheCamerons
Check out my blog

Bukittinggi
Fighting Babies

Image by John Orford
West Sumatran buildings have rooves that symbolise bull horns. The bull horned rooves commemorate a famous battle that was settled between two bulls.

The Javanese had a ferocious bull, the Minangkabau sent out a baby calf to fight it sharpening its horns so that when it looked for an udder under the big bull it killed it.

Nice eh? That reminds me, us Irish also have several legends about bulls.

God Dammit.
Fighting Babies

Image by Brian E. Ford
Man, sometimes it doesn’t take much to completely ruin your day.

Carolyn and I were taking out the trash and came across a baby rabbit in our garage. We thought it was dead and were preparing to put it into a box when it turned out that it wasn’t dead at all.

We had heard a very pronounced "SKREE" earlier and it turns out that her cat had pretty ruthlessly ripped this poor guy a few deep gashes before dragging him into our garage and callously (catlously?) leaving him (or her) for dead. Yes, I know that this is what cats do, and no I do not harbor resentment towards her cat.

Not knowing what to do (and because I cannot bring myself to end the life of a baby rabbit through any method) I sat up with it for most of the night with the thought that if it’s going to die, it’s going to die with me sitting by it’s side. While this may have been little consolation, I felt as though my guilt over not being able to save it would at least somehow make up for it’s death.)

Despite having a very large cut on it’s stomach (that was not really bleeding — I have hope that it was not through anything more than his pelt) and a puncture on the neck (that was bleeding a bit) he was still breathing and aware in the morning. I’m a bit worried that his legs might not have been working but was encouraged to see some response and pressure against my touch. (And it was nice that my touch was eventually no longer cause for fear.)

I took him to the OWL office (Outdoor and Wild Life) and they are hopefully doing everything in their power to give him a fighting chance at life. If not, I have faith that they’ll make his exit from this world as comfortable as possible. I’m content that I did what I could and that I can now pretend that he’s growing into rabbit-hood and that someday I can be frustrated that he’s digging holes in my yard. (Or someone else’s.)

It was a lot of trouble to go through for a rabbit (I got little sleep that night and took a couple of hours of personal time from work in order to drive to the OWL in the morning) but I’m not sure that I could see eye to eye with a person that would have done anything differently. (Or that has it in them to bury or otherwise kill a living baby rabbit.) While you might argue that doing so might be the "humane" thing to do, I’m not sure I can understand someone’s ability to go through with it.

Childrens Furniture Select

How-to Guide to Baby-Carrying

Nearly all women here carry their babies as little bundles on their backs, and I thought it was pure adorableness that this girl was doing it with her doll, so I asked her to show me how to strap her baby on for the camera. She got a little confused, though.
Video Rating: 4 / 5



The One-in-a-Million Baby Name Book: The BabyNames.com Guide to Choosing the Best Name for Your New Arrival

The One-in-a-Million Baby Name Book: The BabyNames.com Guide to Choosing the Best Name for Your New Arrival

  • ISBN13: 9780399534300
  • Condition: USED – VERY GOOD
  • Notes:

From one of the top parenting websites—a comprehensive naming guide featuring the unique Babynames.com popularity ratings.

Forget those traditional lists of names and their meanings—in guiding readers step-by-step through the naming process, as well as the seven things to consider, this book will help parents decide upon a name perfectly suited to their child and family. The only baby name book to draw upon the opinions of 1.2 million parents, each listing features a popularity rating derived from website feedback as well as the top personality traits associated with the name. Readers can also browse lists of names organized in unique ways such as names for sports fans or fiction lovers, and names to be avoided.

Rating: (out of 10 reviews)

List Price: $ 16.95

Price: $ 3.75

More Products