The Duchess of Cambridge's Pregnancy Has Sparked A Rise In Home Birth Enquiries

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By Olivia Blair for Elle UK

The Duchess of Cambridge is reportedly considering a home birth for royal baby number three

The Duchess of Cambridge effect shows no sign of waning. Enquiries into home births are said to be on the rise since reports circulated to suggest that she plans to give birth to her third child at Kensington Palace.

Private Midwives, the UK's largest private provider of home birth services, says it has experienced a 44% increase in enquires following the royal pregnancy confirmation in September.

Shortly after the announcement from Kensington Palace, the Daily Mail claimed that Kate was considering a home birth this time around. According to the newspaper, she had planned to do the same with the birth of her daughter Charlotte but decided against it after taking medical advice.

Despite the reports not having been confirmed by the royal family themselves, they have nevertheless spiked interest amongst expectant parents, the private midwifery practice found.

Their survey of almost 1,600 UK adults revealed that nearly a third (29%) would prefer to give birth at home, while one in five (21%) admitted to looking to royals and celebrities for pregnancy inspiration.

Linda Bryceland, director of midwifery, quality and safety at the company, said: "We've seen a definite rise in interest surrounding home births [since reports about the Duchess]. With many of the services she and other A-listers utilise becoming more readily accessible and affordable, we're seeing expectant mothers being presented with more and more options.

"As well as a rise in awareness, there is also an increase in professional career-driven women who, in the current economic climate, do not want to take time off work for antenatal appointments. Their partners also frequently struggle to get time off to attend antenatal appointments."

How a Staffing Agency Can Help

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British American Q and A in Goop.com
 

Anita Rogers, founder of household staffing agency British American, has more than a decade’s experience in pairing families with household staff, from nannies and butlers to personal assistants and estate managers. She’s earned a reputation for finding successful matches–and also for helping to handle any situation that may arise in the working household. Here, she shares her insights on why hiring for your childcare or home needs is profoundly personal, and how a staffing agency can help with the process. 


A Q&A with Anita Rogers

 

What are the upsides to using an agency?

An agency helps you determine what kind of help you really need, and devises the way in which you want your staff to fit your lifestyle. It also saves you time and keeps you safe during the interview process. Some families have limited experience interviewing and hiring childcare and household staff, which makes it easy to miss signs of danger, red flags, or dishonesty. We enforce strict standards as we interview thousands of candidates each year. This has allowed us—and other reputable agencies—to become experts at spotting dishonest references and to be able single out specific personality traits and potential challenges. A staffing agency has seen how similar traits have played out with other candidates, which lends to its ability to find the best fit for you, your family, and your household.

What are the biggest misconceptions about household staffing?

Both parties must be willing to give and take in order to find the best match. Often people think they can hire a candidate if they offer a competitive or high salary. Or if a nanny or butler has excellent experience, they might assume they can get a higher salary and an ideal schedule. But staffing is a matchmaking process, and both parties must be satisfied with the relationship and the circumstances in order for it to work.

How do you recognize good talent?

It’s a long process—and it’s so much more than just a great résumé and reference letters. We look for candidates that have a balance of experience, training, and education in their field and glowing references from past employers. Other indicators we look for include personality, attitude, flexibility, grammar, responsiveness, and confidence.

The résumé is always the first indicator of talent, where we look at formal level of experience, age appropriate childcare experience, the types of homes an individual has worked in, longevity in previous jobs, and demonstrated professionalism and willingness. We screen all résumés and references and do extensive state, federal, and international background checks, as well as a thorough screening of their social media.

What’s the secret to finding a good match between a family and nanny?

Everyone must be on the same page from the very beginning of the process. One family’s dream nanny could be another’s nightmare. It’s imperative that the candidate and the family have a similar approach to raising children, as well as complementary personalities. Someone who is really laid back isn’t going to work well in a formal home that thrives on structure. (The reverse is true as well.) The perfect nanny and family pairing has similar philosophies about discipline, education, and responsibilities. There has to be a mutual respect between the parents and the nanny regarding the decisions made concerning the child. As a parent, if you feel like you have to micromanage and instruct your nanny on how you’d like every situation handled, you will become frustrated and resentful of the situation.

One of the most important factors to consider during the process of finding a good match is assessing the needs and expectations of the family. There’s a huge difference between a parent looking for an extra set of hands to help with driving, activities, and meals and a working parent who needs someone to be the child’s primary caregiver. A take-charge, independent, problem-solving nanny with sole-charge experience isn’t going to thrive as a helper. In the same way, a nanny without the confidence to make decisions on his or her own and proactively foresee situations isn’t the best choice for a family where the parents are gone most of the day. 

Once the hiring process is done, what other support do clients typically need?

It depends upon the family. Clients will often come to us for help with communicating with their new employee, especially during the transition process while the employee settles in. We always encourage regular, open and honest communication between both parties. On occasion, we will go into the home as a “manager” and help iron out any small issues that may exist. A relationship between a family and their household employees needs to be nurtured and carefully built, as this is a private home, where discretion is of utmost importance. We encourage clear communication and a weekly sit-down between a family and staff.

If a match doesn’t work out, what is your advice for handling a potential change (or parting ways)?

We suggest that each party be gentle but honest about their feelings. The parting should be done with kindness and care so that everyone involved understands that it isn’t a personal attack, just a relationship that has outlived its potential. When hiring staff, you are creating a business in your home. I have seen people distraught if something isn’t working out because they don’t want to offend someone, they don’t want to hurt their feelings.

In certain situations, we’ll go into the residence and let the candidate go so that we can assure it’s done with delicacy. Every situation is very different. We’ve learned it’s best to never point fingers and to make everyone feel good. We directly address and try to resolve any problems, serious or minor, that are brought to our attention, and to support the client or candidate. The ending of a professional relationship can be emotional, particularly if it involves an intimate household setting, so we work to minimize any potential animosity a much as possible.

Is there a difference between a nanny and a career nanny?

Most definitely. A typical nanny is different from a career nanny in that they often have a lot of experience with families, but no background or education in child development. Other nanny candidates are great with children and may have teaching degrees or other formal education, but limited in-home experience (typically part-time babysitting work).

A career nanny is someone who has chosen childcare as his or her profession. Most often, these candidates have formal education in child development and/or psychology. This can include a college degree in education or or training from previous jobs. Career nannies also have an employment history of long-term placements in private homes, understand the dynmics of working in a home environment and are great with children. A career nanny knows how to anticipate needs, respect a family’s privacy and space, and handle the logistics of high-end homes. Being in a home is very different than working in a school or daycare; there is no way to prepare or train someone for it, it’s something you learn and understand only after having experienced it.

How have staffing agencies changed over the years?

Historically, many agencies have been run by only one or two people. Today, the amount of work it takes to verify backgrounds, interview candidates, and create and nurture relationships is impossible with such a small team. This is a time-intensive business, which is why a larger team with modernized and strict processes is essential.


Anita Rogers is the founder of British American Household Staffing (BAHS), the nation’s leading domestic staffing and childcare agency with branches in New York, Los Angeles, Palm Beach, and London. BAHS provides childcare and estate staff available in the USA and U.K. She is also the founder of Anita Rogers Gallery in SoHo, New York, and of British American Talent, based in Los Angeles, London and New York.

Feel free to contact us for any immediate permanent, temporary or seasonal staffing needs.

Giving Birth in Different Worlds

By Janet Elise Johnson for The New Yorker 

The photographs in the series “Hundred Times the Difference,” by the photographer Moa Karlberg, capture, in closeup, the faces of women in the final stages of giving birth. Across the images, there is a range of expressions: grit and sensuality, trepidation and expectation, pain and elation. But in their intimate perspective the photographs emphasize the women’s shared experience—the inward focus and physical determination in their final, transformative moments of becoming mothers.

If you look closely, though, you’ll see signs—the sterile white backgrounds in some photos and patterned fabric in others; a single acupuncture pin in the center of a forehead—that the women in Karlberg’s photographs are having drastically different experiences of giving birth. Half of the pictures were taken in Sweden and half in Tanzania. In the former country, almost all births take place in hospitals, where women have access to supportive midwives who are backed by sophisticated medical technology when needed. In Tanzania, by contrast, only half of births take place in medical facilities, and those that do often occur in places that lack even the most basic amenities.

In a statement about the project, Karlberg, a native of Sweden who travelled to Tanzania in June, with support from the International Women’s Media Foundation, describes the disparity between the scenes she witnessed in the two places. In her home country, “The woman about to give birth is lying on the public hospital’s white sheets. . . . Next to her is her husband, stroking her back, talking to her supportively, helping her to focus on her breathing. Low music comes from the speakers. Water and juice is on the table next to the height-adjustable bed. The woman has her own room and her own bathroom with a tub. Painkillers are available upon request.” In Tanzania, “the woman about to give birth is lying on a bare, rusty bunk, covered in fabrics she brought with her. The water tap is not working, and even if it was, the water would not be drinkable. If she has to urinate there is a bucket on the floor. There is no family member by her side, but three other women, on similar bunks and in various stages of labor, share the room. As they moan, the nurses tell them to be quiet. Since there are no painkillers, the women need to save their strength for the pushing in the end.” As a result of these extreme disparities, and the corresponding difference in the ability to deal with medical complications, the risk of dying during childbirth in Tanzania is a hundred times higher than it is in Sweden.

But despite this cross-national chasm in maternal health, simple explanations of the West-as-best and modernization-as-cure are insufficient. As Karlberg hints in the photo shown in the final slide above—a woman originally from Uganda, giving birth in Sweden—Sweden has experienced a wave of immigrants over the past four decades, many of them refugees from conflict-torn places like Iraq, Eritrea, Somalia, and now Syria. Though Sweden has proved more welcoming than other European nations in the current refugee crisis, the country’s government—influenced by the far-right Swedish Democrats, who received support from one out of every eight voters in the 2014 parliamentary elections—has grown more nativist and stingy about its welfare state. In Tanzania, meanwhile, maternal-mortality rates have improved slightly in recent years as the country has experienced impressive economic growth and extensive foreign aid, but the rates today are the same as they were sixty years ago. In both countries, birth attendants, who are almost all women, are underpaid and overworked.

In Karlberg’s stark photographs, these many inequities seem simultaneously highlighted and erased. Her stunning, unembellished mothers-to-be seem to triumph in ways independent of their immediate surroundings, and notwithstanding the obstacles to empowerment that extend across racial, ethnic, and national lines. Yet the obstacles remain.

See more photos at newyorker.com

 

OUR HOBBIES AND HEADSPACE ACTIVITIES THAT ALSO TRAVEL WELL

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From parentshaped

Travel can involve a lot of time sitting, and the more I do travel, the more I want to make that time count too. Sometimes of course, it is great to just look out the window and be alone with your thoughts, especially I find on trains. But other times, I think it’s nice to have something to pass the time. Double win if it also helps you to unwind.

Over the summer we decided to retreat to a fairly out of it cottage in Wales, I decided it was time for some time offline and to try and remember exactly what my hobbies were too. I’m really proud that the time I spent in Wales really helped me reconnect with myself and that lots of those activities have really stuck for me, so I thought I would share them.

YOGA

I dabbled in yoga each morning out on the grass overlooking the curious sheep and green hills. I watched the ants crawling to distract myself as I held a plank in the sun salutation. I’ve kept it up too, just a little each morning, often while I wait for the kettle to boil.  A few sun salutations and whatever poses I can remember from all the classes I have dabbled in. Yoga is the perfect antidote to travel aches and pains and the stiffness that comes with sitting still. Sometimes the kids join me, and Ive managed to teach them a few relaxation activities too, including this one of my Mum’s, to help them sleep anywhere.

In this picture they also found some natural clay and made little sculptures, nature crafts can be brilliant.

KNITTING AND CROCHET

On a whim in Wales I picked up a knitting and crochet magazine, which came with some wool and needles/hook. I have so many half finished craft projects, but this time it felt a little different, it really helped me to feel mindful of my holiday time and to relax.

First I crocheted a mandala storage box – mandalas in themselves are quite therapeutic -and suddenly felt like my crochet skills took a leap forward. Then I used some of the wool to teach L to knit which took me right back to sitting on my Gran’s knee. I’ve always felt passionate that it’s important to treasure these skills, and pass them down. It made me happy to watch L move from me guiding her, to busily clattering off a scarf for a teddy. I’m going to look out more patterns for her as she is keen to try something more complicated now. Deramores have crochet and knitting patterns to order online, I wonder if L might like the penguins and Christmas baubles.

My latest crochet project, a rainbow blanket is really growing, it’s been on our last two trips too, to North Norfolk and to stay in the Ben 10 Rust Bucket too, so I feel like it’s almost stitching together the memories of those adventures too.

PHOTOGRAPHY

I love taking photos to remember wherever we go, and I’m never happier than when I have landscapes and places to photograph. I’ve always felt a little shy taking pictures of people, but I’m learning that I love buildings, trees, fields, forests, horizons, seas and the great outdoors. Sometimes I take my big camera, other times my phone will do, but the more I take photos, the more photo opportunities I see when we travel. This was snapped on my phone in Ashbourne, Derbyshire.

READING

Simple pleasures are the best. I like to ask my friends on facebook  before I go on a trip for their book recommendations and make sure my Kindle is all fired up and ready to go. I also like to indulge in some magazines and newspapers, I like to read more about how our minds work, how to be happier, books that will inspire me to improve my life while I have some extra headspace. I find in flight magazines are brilliant for more travel writing ideas too. Mum gave me this mini book of the Moomins, little books like this are great to keep in a travel bag for the kids, who always forget to bring a bedtime story.

WRITING

I try to write while things are fresh in my head, I think it is the best way with travel writing. So on planes, trains, in the car I am always tapping out notes on my phone or scribbling ideas in a notebook. It also means the writing up isn’t hanging over me when the post holiday blues set in.

CROSSWORDS

Whenever I feel stressed and in need of a holiday I am reminded of the little things my grandmothers did which seemed to give them so much headspace. Crosswords and puzzles are good when you really need the brain to totally switch off. My Grandma did one daily and was unbelievably mentally agile into her 90s, so I always mean to take a leaf out of her book. I am sure the knitting helped her too.

TRAVEL GAMES

Travel games are another way we get quality family time, magnetic ludo was a huge hit on our last trip, Yahtzee went down well on our Scottish road trip and we found a jigsaw in the cottage in Wales – long forgotten simple pleasures!

WHY YOU SHOULD DEFINITELY TAKE YOUR CHILDREN ON FOREIGN HOLIDAYS

By Helen Wills for Space in Your Case

At Space In Your Case we’re firmly committed to travelling anywhere we can with our children. After all, what would be the point of a family travel site where the editors didn’t travel, or restricted their trips to just one country? Makes no sense, right? So we were intrigued today by the Telegraph’s headline: The science behind why you should never take your children on foreign holidays.” Bold statement, we thought, let’s read that and see what this science really says; that’s going to be fascinating.

The basis for the piece is a quote by child psychologist Oliver James, who says:

“Home-based holidays are what children really want. A familiar, recurring holiday spot can sometimes be the only anchored thing in a child’s life – a safe and predictable place in a shifting universe.”

WHY FOREIGN HOLIDAYS ARE PERFECT FOR KIDS

Now we’re big fans of Dr Oliver – usually. He has talked previously of travel being an essential part of family life, an experience that allows a family to create memories and feel stronger as a unit. Sign us up to that. But on the matter of travel abroad we wholeheartedly disagree. And so, it would seem, do most of the families who have experienced a foreign holiday.

“I felt that [the article] was written about what worked best for the author and family and not from a wider angle. Whilst going to the same place every year might work for some, it’s a nightmare scenario for others (me!). I want to get out and see as much of the world with my family as possible.” Emma, A Bavarian Sojourn.

Monika, from Mum on the Brink, feels just as strongly.

“The psychologist says that young ones won’t be able to appreciate the sight and smells of Morocco. Absolutely true, they won’t appreciate it as an adult or even a rebellious teen, who’ll probably hate it if it’s their first trip abroad. A young child will soak it it up with all their senses. They will immerse in the experience more than any adult can and it will rewire their brain to accept this new as something not dangerous. Through travel with young children we help broaden our children’s perspectives.

Sure, returning to familiar places is fantastic, but only if you stop helicopter parenting and let the child explore further and further as the years go, independently. We do a mix of exotic new destinations and returning to old haunts. The new destinations give us an opportunity to discover together; the old haunts have the kids excited because they know what they want to do and where they can push the boundaries. In our case this year, they’ll be allowed to go anywhere on the large campsite on their own.”

At Space In Your Case, we’ve pushed the boundaries with our kids, just as much as we’ve stuck to tried and tested holidays, and all of us agree that whilst returning year on year to the same campsite, or cottage holds some comforts that we all appreciate – not just the kids! – exploring new horizons is just as exciting for every age. Helen’s kids love Center Parcs, and will settle in as quickly as you can say ‘mine’s a slushie,’ but each foreign trip has awakened a bigger hunger for travel, and that’s exciting, she says. Whether it’s Christmas in New York, or a lazy week in Barbados, she says the everyone’s lives are all the richer for their foreign travels. Helen’s 12 year old daughter is firmly committed now to a career in the Big Apple, having fallen in love with the pace of life there. And if her younger son has anywhere he’d like to revisit, it’s the beaches and seafood of the Caribbean.

“When we travel abroad it can definitely feel more stressful from time to time, but the children are usually the ones pushing to go somewhere new.”

WHERE’S THE SCIENCE?

Cerys wants to know where the science is behind the article:

“Any early childhood specialist will tell you that children want to explore and learn about the world but surrounded by comfort and familiarity. What better way to achieve this than exploring the world with the most important figures in their lives – their parents and even grandparents. For children to understand more about life outside of their bubble they need to experience it and with more than just a book or from tv programmes.

Even a new holiday can be familiar – if you stay in a tent every year then swap the location but keep the same tent, a villa holiday – do a villa but in a different country. If you ski, try a different resort but stick within the same area.

I believe that a lot of the time it’s not the children that feel that but the parents that are stressed about the unfamiliar and that leaves lasting impressions. It is certainly easier to return to the same area each year especially with young children. But facing your fears and journeying beyond your comfort zone is showing children how to be resilient and taking risks is ok too.”

We say hear hear. Of course familiarity feels comfortable, and there’s a place for that. But from the scientist who told us that families are brought together more closely by travel experiences, we can’t help feeling that this stance is a half measure to family happiness. Rebecca Ann agrees, and says that by taking kids out of their safe and easy spaces you’re doing them a huge favour:

“Surely showing your children how to step out of the comfort zone and try new things is part of parenting. Life is full of changes, often unexpected ones, and preparing my children for that is a big part of my role. That being said for many reasons we haven’t taken the girls too far as yet but I definitely hope to. As far and as frequently as time and finances allow. To travel is to live after all.”

 

10 INCREDIBLE BIG COTTAGES TO RENT FOR FRIENDS AND FAMILY GET TOGETHERS

By Penny Alexander for Space In Your Case

Organising a big birthday party, an extended family get together or simply looking to share the childcare with some likeminded friends somewhere family friendly? Today we are sharing 10 amazing larger self catering properties. From Cornwall to Aviemore we’ve found some amazing big cottages to rent which will reconnect with your special people. Whether you are 14 or 44, there is something for every gathering.

We’ve also included links to Penny’s posts on some of the local areas, she’s a real UK cottage holiday lover and has lots of posts bursting with family friendly tips on things to do locally. To find out more about the cottages click the link to read much more about locations and amenities.

MIDDLETON HALL, NORTHUMBERLAND, SLEEPS 24 (40 WITH NEARBY PROPERTY)

Middleton Hall, is a Grade II listed, beautifully refurbished, stone-built mansion. Nothing quite prepares you for the sight of this breathtaking 17th century retreat, nestling amongst the trees near Belford in the heart of the Northumberland countryside.

Penny visited Northumberland recently and found no end of fantastic things to do with the kids here, castles to explore, pretty fishing villages, playing on vast swathes of beach that look like the Caribbean, boat trips to the Farne Islands to see puffins, or days out following Roman history along Hadrian’s Wall. The hospitality and the welcome is wonderfully warm.

Middleton Hall can be combined with neighbouring/nearby property to sleep 40.

OUGHTERSHAW HALL, YORKSHIRE DALES, SLEEP 16.

With a Sauna, heated swimming pool and basement games room there is something to keep everyone busy at Oughtershaw Hall. The features of this former shooting lodge are guaranteed to impress. There are servant’s bells and stained glass windows, and a guest book dating back to the 18th century.

Oughtersahw Hall is surrounded by National Trust land and situated in one of the best areas for walking in the Yorkshire Dales. You can wear the kids out and then snuggle by the fire in the evenings. Nearby Hawes is one of the most popular market towns in the Yorkshire Dales, home to the famous Wallace & Gromit Wensleydale cheese with its working factory, museum, visitor’s centre and restaurant.

TAN LLAN, SNOWDONIA, SLEEPS 16

If you are looking for a really special getaway in stunning Snowdonia, with it’s mountains, castles and beaches, Tan Llan could be just the place, with 15 acres there is space to truly feel at home in Snowdonia’s glorious National Park.

We think Tan Llan could be great for a couple looking to celebrate an anniversary with extended family. The exceptional master suite is situated in its own wing, with its own freestanding bath.

Penny loved exploring North Wales with her family, find out which beaches and castle they loved here.

ANCARVA, MILLBROOK, CORNWALL, SLEEPS 8

With its own mooring and pontoon (that’s a boat if you were unsure!) on the banks of the River Tamar, Ancarva is perfect for making family memories. Prepare to be wowed by the contemporary design and panoramic views across the river to the historic Mount Edgcumbe estate and beyond. Travel by boat or by car to small beaches and coves along the coast, a paradise for sailors and sunset lovers.

SILVERHOLME, NR HAWKSHEAD, LAKE DISTRICT, SLEEPS 18

The views of Lake Windermere from the giant dining kitchen at Silverholme are incredible, there are log fires and a cinema room too. This would be an amazing place for a family get away in all seasons, the Lakes make an amazing place to retreat to.

For local inspiration, check out Penny’s post on things to do in the Lake District with kids. There are amazing walks along Lake Windermere and up fells, trampolines in the trees and museums and walks that explore Wordsworth and Beatrix Potter’s footsteps. For a Swallows and Amazons themed action adventure, check out this post.

PLAS GWYNFRYN, LLANBEDR NEAR HARLECH, NORTH WALES, SLEEPS 18

Plas Gwnfryn is an imposing Edwardian residence set within 8 landscaped acres. It’s perfect for spending time together and apart. All the bedrooms have spectacular views of Artro Forest, the Rhinog mountain range, Moelfre mountain or the sea. There is a courtyard for summer alfresco dining and 4 log burners for chillier nights. The sitting room sits 16, so the whole gang can be together. With beautiful arts and crafts architecture, it’s even been featured in Country Living magazine.

Only 4 miles from the stunning beacon of Penny’s childhood holidays, Harlech Castle. The castle is surrounded by six miles of sandy beach.

BOOKILBER BARN, SETTLE, YORKSHIRE DALES, SLEEPS 12

Featured in The Sunday Times top 100 cool cottages list and Concept for Living magazine, Bookilber Barn enjoys an fabulous hillside position with breathtaking views and fabulous walks in every direction over the breathtaking Yorkshire Dales. We love the contemporary comforts: underfloor heating and a hot tub to relax in afterwards!

One of Penny’s first holidays with a baby in tow was to this area. A baby carrier and grandparents meant she still managed to fully appreciate walking in the stunning Yorkshire Dales.

WINSTER HALL, WINSTER, PEAK DISTRICT, SLEEPS 16

Enjoy staying is a grand country home complete with quoins, a cornice topped by a parapet, a beautiful balustrade, ornate ceilings and beautiful fireplaces. Winster Hall is the perfect place to play board games together, the first floor sitting room is stunning and the summerhouse is equipped with games to make the most of the garden.

Nearby, Penny recommends Matlock for chips by the river, Gullivers Kingdom and the Heights of Abraham; Bakewell is world famous for its Bakewell Pudding and stunning Chatsworth House is close by. There are magnificent walks from the doorstep in the beautiful Peak District.

SUIDHE LODGE, KINCRAIG NEAR AVIEMORE, SLEEPS 15

Play at being Laird and Lady in the stunning Scottish Suidhe Lodge. There is zip wiring, clay pigeon shooting, 4×4 adventures and horse riding on the doorstep and in nearby Aviemore you can certainly get into role!

We love the tartan accents, antique furniture, gorgeous country kitchen and, yes, this places even has a hot tub. There is a wonderful feeling of space in the Victorian high ceilings and generously proportioned rooms, and outdoors via the views of mountain ranges. There is even a discrete and self contained pub within the lodge, Suidhe Lodge is a social place to be.

Penny’s family motorhome trip took her through this amazing part of the world, she promises you, the scenery is absolutely out of this world.

ISMERE HALL, BLAKEDOWN, WORCESTERSHIRE, SLEEPS 44.

A stunning, detached Georgian house, ideally situated in its own private parkland. The games room has a pool table, table football, air hockey and darts to keep the kids busy while grown ups enjoy making an entrance down the sweeping cantilevered staircase, cooking in the AGA and chilling by the open fires and woodburning stoves.

Close by to Ismere Hall visit the Black Country Living Museum, Severn Valley Railway and West Midlands Safari Park, or further afield enjoy a day out at the pretty town of Bridgnorth, with world-famous Cadbury World, Ironbridge Gorge and Stratford-upon-Avon, birthplace of William Shakespeare.

Penny spent a couple of days in Worcestershire on a university friends and families reunion over the summer, making toy boats and watching the river go by, it’s very pretty place to be with your loved ones.

Planning a Baby Shower

from Bounty

A fun celebration before baby arrives

Baby showers have seen a huge rise in popularity over the last few years and are no longer just for celeb mums-to-be. They have been a 'thing' in the US for years, and are now catching on big time here in the UK too.

The trend has doubtlessly been helped along by celeb mummies tweeting and Instagramming pics of their swanky bashes to the world, but a baby shower doesn't have to come with an A list price tag!

Organising a baby shower

Showers are usually organised by friends of the mum-to-be, although of course there is no reason why you can’t throw your own. Sometimes work colleagues will arrange a baby shower for when the mum is about to go off on her maternity leave. However, bear in mind that mum will get tired as she begins to bloom so don’t leave it too late!

When and where to hold one

What you do is down to personal preferences – but bear in mind if you are organising the event for the mum-to-be, that she is unlikely to appreciate a boozy lunch she can't participate in, or a late night do. The practicalities of pregnancy must be taken into account.

That's probably why most baby showers are held at the mum's house, and usually during the day. Afternoon tea-style is always popular, and friends can all contribute by bringing a platter of sandwiches and cupcakes so the guest of honour doesn't have to do anything beyond enjoy herself.

Depending on the number of guests, and mum's stage of pregnancy, the party could just be a nice girly afternoon chatting and eating, or a pampering session or party games could be planned. If you are organising for a pregnant friend, always try and get a handle on what she would like (check with her partner or mum) so that she doesn't get any 'surprises' she might not want to participate in.

Present ideas

As baby will no doubt get a load of presents on their 'birthday', a baby shower is a nice opportunity to treat mum, so think about gifts for her at this stage – maybe a hair salon voucher to use after the birth, or a mobile beautician to come and give her a manicure and pedicure at the party or a few weeks before her due date (by which time reaching her own toes will be nigh-on impossible!).

Whatever you decide to do for your own – or your friends – baby shower, make it a day to remember by taking lots of pics and videos –it could be the last time you all get together before baby's arrival.

New Study Reveals Moms Need a Full Year for Recovery After Giving Birth

from Red Tricycle

Growing a baby a beautiful experience, but it’s also demanding on your body. New mothers may be told by books and doctors that they’ll be back to ‘normal’ within six weeks of giving birth, but a new study has found that most women take much longer to recover.

Dr. Julie Wray, a researcher at Salford University in England, interviewed women at different stages of post-partum life. She found that the standard six-week recovery period is a “complete fantasy,” and it can take a full year to recover from childbirth.

It’s not just physical recovery that’s needed, but mental as well. Many feel the pressure to get back on their feet soon after childbirth and feel it may be necessary to head back to work as early as six weeks.

Wray found that recovery should start in the hospital. Back in the day, women spent more time in the maternity ward learning how to take care of their infant and getting breastfeeding advice. Now, some women are discharged as early as six hours after giving birth and expected to just go with it, according to Wray’s research.

“The research shows that more realistic and woman-friendly postnatal services are needed,” Wray concluded. “Women feel that it takes much longer than six weeks to recover and they should be supported beyond the current six to eight weeks after birth.”

Recovery after childbirth is different for everyone, but the general consensus is that a full year to heal the body and mind is much better than a month and a half.

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