Bargain Toy Section at Babi Pur

In CategoryOrganic & Wooden Toys
Bypeter

Plan Toys Offers

Listen up folks!  This aint your average backstreet market sale, these are quality wooden and eco toys from our favourite brands like Plan Toys and I'm Toy.  We've brought you some fantastic prices on some of our most popular toys and some limited stock special offers.  When they're gone, they really are gone!  My favourite has to be the Build 'n Roll marble run which is a pretty substantial piece of kit and the bits all interchange with the plan construction kits too (also on offer).  Plan Toys road systems won't be available to buy in the UK soon which is a real shame but that means we've got some fantastic prices on Plan road and rail, , in particular the road system deluxe  stands out for me.  Oh I wish I was a little boy again :)

There's lots of toys for £10 and under so if you're looking for some little gifts then have a browse.

Click here or on the above picture to view our toy sale category

 

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Chickens – the practical stuff

In CategoryHow Green is your Mammy
ByCat

Thanks for your comments on my  chicken post. Sorry it’s taken me so long to get round to answering your questions, my netbook's  on it’s way out and has days where it decides it just doesn’t want to work - hence no Llun Dydd Llun this week.

So, for this week only, here’s Llun Dydd Gwener (Friday’s Picture!)

NW at 18 weeks. Think he's trying to tell us something? :)

Anyway, back to the chickens:

1. Space -   Chicken coop suppliers lead you to believe that chickens needs very little space.

I lusted after an Omlet  Eglu for ages, but the bank account wouldn’t allow so I ended up buying a 2nd hand chicken ark for 30 quid on ebay that was supposed to be suitable for 4 chickens. Both work on the principle of giving the hens a relatively small run that can be moved around the garden every few days so the chickens always have fresh ground to scratch.

However, maybe its because ex-batts tend to be quite large birds, but mine looked cramped in the ark. Also, after a while they started to really hen peck each other, to the point where one of them had the bone of her skull exposed.

In desperation I tried posting on some forums an the consensus was that the ark, although sold as a 4 hen, was too small. Most people recommended a run that has at least 1 meter square per chicken.

So poor OH set about constructing a walk in run. It is about 4 meters on each side and has plenty of different levels to keep chooks happy. However, it does turn into a mudbath when its wet, and to be honest, I hate to see them confined so I let them out most of the time.

Don’t know if sharing this helps, but I guess the conclusion is that chickens would like to have as much space as you can give and if you're  softie like me you may well end up having them out and trashing your garden most of the time!

2. Food - Layers Pellets are specifically designed to provide the right nutritional diet for hens, however, chickens do love a bit of mixed corn too. I  find that corn fed chickens seem to produce richer yolks in their eggs, so I started giving my ladies half and half mixed corn and pellets so that they get the nutrients they need and I get tasty eggs!

A large sack of each comes to about 16 pounds and lasts me 3 to 4 months. It should last longer really as each hen is supposed to have about 4oz a day but my dogs and the local crow populations have a habit of stealing chicken food!

3. Poo! - I line the chickens nesting box with newspaper the cover it with a good layer of straw. Every morning, when we go to collect the eggs, I take a plastic bag with me, and take out any solid poop and chuck it on the compost heap (chicken poop is a great compost accelerator and the straw provides valuable ‘brown matter’ to mix with the ‘green’ of the veg peelings and make lovely compost) . I prob top up the nesting box with straw about once a week.

About once a month I clean out the box by simply rolling up the newspaper and spent straw, chucking it on the compost, cleaning out the coop and laying fresh straw. I bought a bale of straw for about 3 pounds when I got the chooks and its still going strong now so bedding is pretty cheap. And doing it this way means it takes a couple of seconds on a daily basis and then about 10 mins once a month - easy!

3. Going away - As chicken needs are fairly basic, going away isn’t too much of a problem. Daily cleaning out, and topping up with fresh food and water takes less than 5 mins a day, and I have plenty of friends and neighbours who are more than happy to pop in once a day. In fact, they are queing up to do it because in return, they get scrummy fresh eggs!

4. How many? - Chickens are not solitary animals and you should never keep just one. Two would be possible, but the BHWT recommend that people take at least 3. This is so that should one die there would still be two to keep each other company. Introducing new hens can be difficult and a new hen is likely to be picked on while the pecking order is established - and trust me, chickens can be vicious!

I hope this lot helps answer your questions. If you have any more please feel free to ask. And if you keep chickens yourself, how do you do yours?

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New ranges by Piccalilly at Babi Pur!

In CategoryEthical Brands, Organic & Fairtrade Clothing
ByJo

We're ever so excited to have stock of the beautiful new ranges by Piccalilly, we think you'll agree that  they're absolutely gorgeous!  Piccalilly design organic baby clothes, children's clothes and gifts  that are bright, modern and of course childish!  They're made from the best quality organic cotton to the highest ethical and fair trade standards.  We've tried and tested lots of Piccalilly clothing on our own little ones, and also given them as gifts.. we love them because they still look good wash after wash and wear after wear!

The new Cotton Knit Collection for babies up to 12 months is available in two colours - dusty pink and twilight.

Piccalilly Knitted Rupert Twilight PlaysuitCotton knit play-suit 

The Tomato Stripe  range has clothing and gifts for babies and children up to the age of 5.  We love the bold stripes and bright red and royal blue. This collection has quite a few pieces including a fantastic sausage dog scarf (for children over 3yrs) and a stripy playsuit for babies.

Piccalilly Blue Ear Warmer HatTomato Flapper Hat

The Cornflower Stripe range is another lovely collection of Flapper hats, beanies, scarfs, playsuits and bibs.  We love the colour combinations!

 

Piccalilly Cornflower Stripe Peruvian HatCornflower Stripe Peruvian hat

The Ditsy Dot & Floral range has lovely bits and bobs for both babies and children.  We love the ditsy floral sausage dog scarf.. sooo cute!  And the pyjamas below are available in both Children's and baby sizes in two different prints - gorgeous!

Piccalilly Ditsy Floral Baby PyjamasDitsy Floral Pyjamas

We just know you're going to LOVE this collection as much as us..  We'll leave you with these beautiful sausage dog scarfs we keep going on about...

 

Piccalilly Cornflower Stripe Sausage Dog Scarf       Piccalilly Ditsy Dot Sausage Dog Scarf       Piccalilly Tomato Stripe Sausage Dog ScarfClick on the images to buy online now!

 

 

 

 

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Babi Pur review competition

In CategoryCOMPETITIONS!
Bypeter

Babi Pur review competitionWin this fabulous bundle of goodies by simply reviewing any of the products you've used on the Babi Pur website.  We're giving away a flip mixed nappy trial pack which now includes the new version of the flip disposable inserts, 1 flip cover, an organic flip insert, a stay dry flip insert and a nappy wet bag.  Then winner will also receive our lovely violets laundry powder and softener which we've been using in our house, they really are great products and they smell lurverly too!

So all you have to do to enter is pop over to the Babi Pur website, browse through our products and write a review of the ones you've used.  Just login to your account, get creative and tell everyone what you think.  Reviews help future customers make their buying decisions and each review you do counts as an entry, so the more reviews you do the more chance you have of winning.  You must get your review in before 19th October and the winner will be announced shortly after.

Sit down with a panad (cuppa) and get writing!

Here's Alex's winning review from the last competition for a little inspiration

Itti Bitti Minky Wet Bags

Itti Bitti Wet Bags

"Lovely and soft, beautiful fabrics. I did find the zip a bit sticky on a couple of mine but the over all design is of such good quality and has great containment. They are brilliant for wet swimsuits and cosmetics too"

 ***this competition is now closed**** winner - Rebecca Seymour for a review on the Panda Teether

 

 

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Feeling Chicken

In CategoryHow Green is your Mammy
ByCat

 

I realised the other day that a year has passed since I went to collect my chickens. This post is a dedication to my lovely ladies; Hatty, Lottie and Stuart (or Chicken Stu as she is otherwise known).

Some of my earliest, and fondest memories are of wondering to the farm next door to my childhood home every day to help feed the pigs and gather eggs. I still remember  the thrill of hunting for eggs; reaching a hand under a nesting hen  to find  a lovely warm globe nestled there. This was a feeling I wanted my children to experience and as soon as DW was old enough (and I pursuaded OH) I put our name down to re-home some recued battery hens from the British Hen Welfare Trust.

Re-homing day came and DW and I went off  to pick up four lovely ladies. It was quite a moving experience to drive up to a farmyard filled with a few hundred chickens all in various states of baldness experiencing daylight and the freedom to move for the very first time.

We brought 4 home, but unfortunately the lovely Esme didn’t make it through the first week,  about 1 in 6 rescued hens don't.  Born onto conveyor belts,  they live 4-5 hens per 20 inch square cage, and never get the space to exhibit natural chicken behaviour. More info about their conditions can be found here.  It can therefore be quite a shock for a hen to come out of a cage and sometimes they don't survive. As harsh as it sounds, Esme was heading for slaughter anyway so at least she got to experience daylight and fresh air for a few days before she passed.

The first egg was produced the next morning, and I must confess I was in a bit of a ethical dilemma - was it a battery egg or not? I ate it anyway, and it didn’t really taste much different to a shop bought egg. But a year on, with happy ladies, the eggs are amazing. Bright yellow, creamy and delicious, fresh eggs are hard to beat.

There are pros and cons to keeping chickens though, here are a few I have found

Pro’s

  •   Delicious eggs
  •   ....and plenty of them!
  •   Chickens are great fun. Battery hens in particular are known for being fearless, and they boss it over the dogs, which is quite amusing to watch.
  •   Easy to look after.
  •  Very few food miles are involved (only that of the feed.)
  •  You are responsible for the welfare of your own animals and can give them happy lives.
  •  Gathering eggs is fun (especially for little hands)!
  •  Children get to learn about where their food comes from.
  • Cons
  •  They need space.
  • They don't smell too great.
  • Poo gets everywhere!
  • If you buy battery eggs they probably wont save you any money, but if you go for free range organic they might well do .
  • They wont leave you much left in the veg patch.
  •  ..... and they'll probably decimate your lawn too!

I would recommend keeping chickens though, and if you are thinking about it please consider getting them from the BHWT.   Not only do they rescue hens, but also educate the public on battery farming, campaign for better labeling on food products,  and most importantly work with farmer to improve welfare standards, so your donation to the could make a real difference.

If you are worried about getting ex-batts because you think they may produce less eggs, well, my ladies are still churning out an egg a day each one year on from the date they were destined for slaughter because they were not considered 'commercially viable'.  One of the saddest things I find about factory farming  is that a little life is considered so worthless that a hen will be slaughtered in case she goes for a day or two without laying an egg.

There is another reason to celebrate the day I went to pick up the chickens.  That morning I woke up feeling sick, and found the smell of the chickens overpowering......the first inkling I had that little NW was going to become part of our lives in 9 months time. :)

 

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Llun Dydd Llun – The Ladies

In CategoryHow Green is your Mammy
ByCat

The Ladies demanding breakfast. More on chicken keeping coming soon.......

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Llun Dydd Llun

In CategoryOrganic & Fairtrade Clothing
ByCat

Our first fresh Borlotti harvest.

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A Change in Seasons

In CategoryHow Green is your Mammy
ByCat

Change is in the air.

There’s an autumn chill in the breeze. Hedgerows are heavy with haws and sloes and I’m desperate to get out there to fullfil some primordial hunter gatherer urges and stockpile provisions for the lean months to come.

I love Autumn. Although I still feel a little deprived of sunshine (what on earth happened to August?), I can’t help but look forward to the colder months. Bracing walks along windswept beaches, or days collecting colourful leaves and acorns followed by hot chocolate and log fires; there’s a lot to recommend this time of year.

And of course there’s the 'C' word.  Sssssh, don't speak its name! I've heard it mentioned recently -  eek!  I used to hate the big ‘C’, but suddenly, now that I have kids I’m super exited, and can’t wait to make it special for the boys.

I’ve always felt a real sense of anticipation in Autumn. A sense of new beginnings, that stems, I’m sure, from my schooldays when September meant new uniform, new pencil case and most importantly of all new teachers!

This year I’m justified in my school-like anticipation, as, if you saw my pictures last weeks, little DW started playschool.

I must confess I felt quite weepy. Not just because I was going to miss him, but because his starting school symbolises yet another step he is taking to be less dependent on me; like weaning, walking and starting nursery.

But while I went home to mourn, he was, sociable little being that he is, having the time of his life, and the lovely leaders had trouble prising him out of the classroom when the time came.

Anybody else have little ones starting school? How did you feel? And how did it go?

We’ve had a lovely summer full of bubbles, butterflies and trains.

And more trains.

 

And a few more trains for good measure.

But with the seasons and our lives changing, I though this would be a good time to take stock of our situation, and consider the things that have changed and the surprises they have bought since I became the mum of two boys in May.

1. Worry turns to guilt - When DW was born the overwhelming emotion I experienced was worry. Am I doing things right? Is this normal? How do I do this, that and the other?

This time round I’m astounded by the guilt I feel. Guilty if I give DW attention, guilty if I give NW attention. Guilty that I’m co-sleeping with NW but didn’t with DW. Guilty that I may be putting NW at greater risk than DW for co-sleeping with him. Guilty for wanting time alone with NW and guilty for wanting time alone with DW, guilty for sticking CBeebies on while I feed NW and even guilty for bringing them into a world where I know they will experience pain. Guil, guilt, guilt!  I just hope it passes.

2. DW has grown up! -  OK, so not properly, but from the day NW was born, DW started taking on more and more responsibility.  Fetching nappies,getting the phone and picking things up for me, I find myself asking him to do more and more, and sometime have to remind myself that he is only two! Its clear that he is on the road to being and independent little man capable of making his own decisions and asserting his personality.

3. Every child is different - I know everybody says this, but I hadn’t expected it to be so true. DW and NW are completely different babies. DW was what people might call an easy baby. He hardly ever cried, has only vomited about 3 times in his entire life and slept through from about 8 weeks (I know miracle child!).  I thought this parenting thing was a walk in the park.

But NW on the other hand seems to have spent his first three months screaming in agony, vomits at least 3 times a day, and sleeps for stretches of about 30 mins at a time.

Nevertheless, I wouldn’t change a thing about either of them, they are both my very special, lovely little boys.

4. What worked once may well not work again. This goes with the above really, but I do find that different things useful this time round. With DW, I couldn’t have lived without his vibrating chair, Ergo and if all else failed in the quest to settle him, a trip in the car, NW doesn’t like any of the above, and my stretchy wrap, which I found difficult and faffy first time round is a god send as are muslin squares and bibs which I just didn't see the need for with DW.

5. We can love more than we think we can - I was really worried when I was pregnant with NW that I just couldn’t love another child as much as I love DW.  But, somehow, your capacity to love just grows.

As an only child myself, I was worried about how they would feel about each other too. But DW’s affection for his little bro was palpable from the off, and nothing settles my little screamer like some attention from his big bro. Sometimes just watching them together makes me want to cry with love, and I hope that is a feeling that will stay with me for the rest of my life.

Anyway, there are some other major changes going on in our lives, but I can't reveal all yet. They've kept me busy though, and I hope I can bring you another update sooner than the last.

Until then, I hope all your little cherubs are happy and full of hugs.

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Llyn Dydd Llun

In CategoryHow Green is your Mammy
ByCat

DW ready for his first day at school (sob).

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New Rainbow Tots from Tots Bots & Golden Ticket Promo

In CategoryCloth Nappy News & Offers
Bypeter

Rainbow tots ticket promotion

New Tots Bots rainbow colours are now available in Easyfits and Teenyfits.  Lovely bright rainbow colours which include Mucky pup (brown), Sweetpea (Green), Poppet (red), Cherub (blue), Sugar plum (purple) and Pumpkin (orange).  To celebrate the launch of these fab colours we're giving away a Tots Bots Golden ticket scratch card with each rainbow tots nappy transaction.  There's one golden ticket which wins over £500 worth of goodies and another 500 runner up tickets which will win either nappy liners or a rainbow coloured easyfit.

  • The Golden ticket prize
  • A complete set of rainbow tots nappies and accessories worth over £400
  • A family day ticket for 4 to Cadbury world
  • A bumper box of rainbow drops sweets
  • Things we love about Tots Bots Easyfits
  • A book and DVD in the rainbow magic series
Another 250 tickets will win a rainbow easyfit nappy and another 250 tickets will win a roll of nappy liners (always useful).  To get your scratch card all you have to do is purchase 1 or more rainbow coloured Tots Bots nappies.  There are a limited number of tickets and they are strictly first come first server basis.  Terms and conditions apply.
Things we like about Tots bots Easyfits and Teenyfits
  • The new rainbow colours of course ;)
  • One piece design is simple and practical
  • Great fit because of all the magic stretchy bamboo fabric
  • Made in Britain
  • Natural bamboo fabric next to baby's bottom
  • Super absorbent
  • Great quality
  • Birth to potty
  • Teenyfits are very very cute

 

 

 

 

 

 

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