My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find baby sling and baby carrier advice here.

Slings and backpacks

Pouch sling?

12 replies

quertas · 09/05/2013 14:09

Hi all,
Hoping for some advice here. Expecting dc2 in 6 weeks time and looking to get an easy on/ off sling for use round the house. We have a ton of stairs and a toddler who still needs help to get up and down but we go up and down a horrifying amount! I remember trying a ring sling with DD when she was little and just not getting on with it- though oh I do love the designs and fabrics Grin. I used to worry that she'd fall out between or behind the rails bit iykwim. Will I get on any better with a pouch sling do you think? We had a stretchy wrap and a stretch wrap hybrid and I couldn't get on with them ( too much stretch!)

OP posts:
Report
Giraffeski · 09/05/2013 18:13

I thought pouch slings ha been taken off the market/banned or something now? To do with suffocation risk IIRC.
I might be wrong though.
I have an Ergo, have used from birth successfully with the infant insert and now at 4 months don't need the insert any more.

Report
Giraffeski · 09/05/2013 18:14

Sorry, meant to add that once you get he hang of it, the Ergo is really quick to get on and off and the baby is lovely and snug.

Report
FlightyAphrodite · 09/05/2013 18:21

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

quertas · 09/05/2013 19:10

Wow, I hadn't heard that , thanks!! Okay thats off the list then! I still have DD's ergo but I thought you had to have an insert for a newborn for them? That'd be a bit of a faff I guess just so we can get upstairs, especially when we're up down up down all day Wink

OP posts:
Report
SoupDragon · 09/05/2013 19:14

It was a particular style of pouch sling that was dangerous, not all of them.

Report
Munxx · 09/05/2013 19:15

Baba sling?

Report
GoofyIsACow · 09/05/2013 19:18

The one that was banned (infantino slingrider) was a bag sling, pouch slings are fine, they are sized however, you might prefer a ring sling which is similar but mor adjustable

Report
FlightyAphrodite · 09/05/2013 19:19

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

sugarandspite · 09/05/2013 19:31

Thinking about it, do you really need a sling for the stairs?

Most toddlers can go up fairly safely - especially if you get them to do hands and feet, so you could just walk behind as a 'backstop' if needed.

Coming down, you and toddler sit side by side and bump gently down on your bottoms. Hold toddler hand with one hand and baby in your shoulder with the other. You're on your bum too so no risky of falling.

Might that work?

Report
nonamenewname · 10/05/2013 12:19

I wouldn't want to be using the ergo insert in the summer, I don't think.

Report
Barbeasty · 11/05/2013 07:51

The Boba 3g is like the ergo, but doesn't need a newborn insert. You sort of roll the waistband once and popper it to make the back shorter, and then the baby goes in it with their legs in. Might be easier?

Also second the caboo or caboo dx (buckled version) as really easy. It stays at the right size settings between uses.

You could always stick the toddler on your back in the ergo & carry the baby!

Report
quertas · 11/05/2013 14:20

Thanks all. It's the combination of steep stairs plus stone floors that's giving me the wig! DD is 2.10 and can manage normal stairs in houses not designed by Victorian psychopaths but sadly ours was Grinaargh!

Will look into these, thanks!

OP posts:
Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.