Pimp my crib.

IpodcribYou know, people aren't doing enough modifications to baby stuff. I did my best with my Bugaboo cup holder a while back (which is still working well for me by the way), but the best one I've seen yet I saw on Daddy Types this morning. Some resourceful father hooked up some JBL On Tour portable speakers and an iPod full of lullabies to his kid's crib. My baby doesn't need any help getting to sleep, but I love the idea. The only thing I can see that's missing is a timer so the music stops eventually - but I suppose limited playlists would solve that problem. A remote so you could turn it off once your baby fell asleep (like a mobile) would be sweet too.

Anyway, get all the particulars at Daddy Types: MP3 Crib.

The best recipes.

NewbestrecipeSo after my success with corned beef, soda bread and bread pudding last night, I finally decided I had to blog about my new favorite cookbook, The New Best Recipe. Written by the people from Cook's Illustrated magazine, it's got something like 1,000 recipes for basically everything - but what makes it so great is their methods. They take on a recipe for something, like roast chicken for instance, and they try every recipe and permutation they can think of and then come up with what they think is the best, based on taste and ease of preparation. And they explain their methods before each recipe. It's really great, not just for a handy general purpose cook book, but by explaining why the recipe is the way it is, it encourages you to think about what you're doing and hopefully become a better cook.

The magazine is great too. It's essentially the same thing (recipes and methods), with additional magazine stuff like reader questions, tips, and equipment information. Think of a Consumer Reports for cooking and you've pretty much got it. Both are recommended.

The New Best Recipe. $22.05 at Amazon.com

Green links.

LeprechaunHappy St. Patrick's Day. In between beers, you might enjoy checking out:

Pancake Mountain.

You know what I hate? I hate it when someone shows me something so cool I'm pissed I didn't know about it before. Seriously, where the hell have I been?

A friend sent me a link yesterday to an article in the Washington Post about this unbelievably cool public access kids show in Washington DC called Pancake Mountain. It was started by an indie filmmaker who wanted to make fun TV shows for kids that didn't include a barrage of product tie-ins and, more importantly, that didn't suck. The result is a pretty awesome mix of skits, animation, and lots of great musical guests. Check out The Arcade Fire clip with the kids rocking on stage with the band, and also check out the clip from the Evens (with Ian MacKaye of Fugazi and Minor Threat) and their song "Vowel Movement." Since I don't live anywhere near DC, I'm ordering my copy of their DVD today.

On TV's 'Pancake Mountain,' Hot Bands Playing With Hip Tots
[Washington Post]

Pancake Mountain web site. Be sure to check out the clips section.

Baby deals.

Today is pay day for a lot of people, so here are some sites that help find good deals on stuff to buy on the Internet. First I tried to find places that had deals specifically for children (which there weren't that many of), so I've linked to those first.

Baby and Toys categories at Cheap Stingy Bastard
Babies & Kids and Toys categories at Fat Wallet.com
Baby & Kids and Toys categories at dealcatcher.com
Baby coupon and bargains at amazing-bargains.com

Not a lot of kid stuff, but still plenty of deals for dads:
BensBargains.net
Dealtaker.com
Slickdeals.net
Spoofee.com
Skimper.com
Coupon-Codes.net

Post more in the comments if I've missed any you frequent.

Hospital nightmare.

I was catching up on my dad blogs last night and I came across an absolutely harrowing story from Eric at MoreDiapers. He and his wife found a bump on their son's head, which (although it mercifully proved to be no big deal), led to them being investigated for child abuse - the primary means of the investigation being subjecting their son to multiple x-ray and other tests. Thankfully everything turns out OK, but it's a very real, very personal, and very scary story. If you haven't read it yet, go over and check it out (I've linked to the posts in chronological order below).

About Last Night

MRI at the end of the month!?!?
At Children's
I Apologize on Behalf of Children's

Rediscovering the swing.

SwingOnce Madame could sit up on her own and play, the Fisher Price Aquarium Wonders swing I loved so much got relegated to the corner. Then once I got her a "stationary entertainer" the swing was completely forgotten. But yesterday during an early evening freak out, I went to the old stand-by and damn if it didn't work. I put her in the swing, turned it on and she instantly calmed down. And after 10 minutes or so she took a quick disco nap, just like she used to a few months ago. If I had my act together that swing would have been in storage a few weeks ago, but now it's not going anywhere.

If I had to pick one optional baby thing that has been the most useful these past seven months, this is far and away it.

Get the Ocean Wonders Aquarium Swing for $91.99 from Amazon via the Modern Day Dad Store.

Monitoring your kid like a truck driver.

As a brand new father, I'm sometimes amazed at the changes in my personal views about some things, like this article about parents putting devices into automobiles to monitor teen driving (the same monitoring devices trucking companies use to keep track of their drivers). When I was a young adult, or even a few years ago, I would have thought it was a ridiculous invasion of privacy, and that young drivers need to be given responsibility if they are to be expected to take responsibility for their actions. Part of me still believes that, but I definitely see the other point of view too.

I was saying to a friend over dinner the other day, that if I try to take the overwhelming love I feel for my daughter out of the equation, the feeling I'm left with is this weird sense of ownership. Not literally, but a kind of "I'm working so hard on making sure you're going to be the best person you can be, I'll be dammed if I let you you screw it up." She's not screwing anything up of course, she's seven months old, but the older she gets the easier I can imagine the moment when my idea of what she should be doing parting ways with her idea of what she should be doing. Would I put a computer chip into the car that I let her drive to monitor her driving? I'm not sure, but I'm sure she won't like it if I do - just like I wouldn't have liked it. Maybe the toughest part of being a parent isn't working so hard on making sure your kids are the best person they can be, but letting them make sure they are the best person they can be.

Jesus. When did I turn into such a dad?

Parents chip in to keep eye on teenage drivers [Fort Wayne Journal Gazette] (chosen because it doesn't require a freaking subscription to view the article.)

Billy Bob binky.

Billybob_pacifierOK. First let me say that this is NOT a "Binky™," which (in case their lawyers are reading) is a trademark of Playtex and should only be used accordingly (except for glaringly obvious blog post titles).

You've probably seen the super-realistic Billy Bob fake teeth somewhere. Well, like everyone else it seems, they've got a product for your kid too. Billy Bob pacifiers are regular pacifiers with ends that make it look like your kid's got a mouth full of disgusting choppers. They've got some more tame designs too (like baseballs or the "Lil' Piglet") but most of them are similar to Billy Bob teeth. The one pictured is the "What's Up Doc?" Crass, but kind of funny. (Oh, and someone tell Greg from Daddytypes they've got a camo pacifier too).

$12 at billybobteeth.biz (about halfway down the page)

Clapping? She's seriously brilliant.

I've spent months (seven months actually) trying to get a reaction from Madame. The first couple of months I got nothing. Then I was able to get a smile and eventually laughter, which is very satisfying (and addictive on my part). She recognizes people, songs we sing to her, favorite toys; but the most of a reaction we can get is some squeals of happiness and some kicking. No amount of waving, clapping or "Give me a smooch" gets the appropriate, reciprocated response.

And then yesterday it finally happened. We were hanging out playing, and I clapped to her. She looked at me, took a second, and did it back. Needing to make sure it wasn't a fluke, we did it a bunch of times the rest of the day and let me tell you, it was pretty awesome. When she speaks her first word I'm probably going to completely freak out.

BabyPlane

BabyplaneThis is the BabyPlane, a ridiculous-but-kind-of-cool baby spoon I saw in a shop over the weekend. It's a basic baby-sized stainless spoon with a plastic airplane wrapper. A cute idea (for a gift I guess), but I really loved the packaging for it more (not pictured unfortunately). Ever wonder who makes all that cool, random gift stuff in cool, random gift shops in the West Village or on Melrose? I guess it's companies like Stilic-Force. On their website they've got some interesting things (in a clever-French-design kind of way), but if you want to buy online you'll probably have to rock a Euro or two.

8.00 € at houra.fr (Le Cybermarche!)

Hey! Nice looking can of...

VippLike a lot of dads apparently, the Diaper Genie is starting to annoy me. It works OK, but it seems like I'm always waiting for that one out of ten times where the bag won't twist properly and then I've got this big sac of dirty diapers that won't twist off. Some people recommend the Diaper Champ, but what about the modern parent with way too much money to throw down the... well, you get the idea.

For them I present Vipp wastebaskets. Electroplated, corrosion resistant, stainless steel wastebaskets made from a family-owned Danish company? Did I just say Danish? Why in the hell am I using this ridiculous Diaper Genie??? Oh yeah, because they cost $178. If I came home with a $178 diaper pail, I'd have to kick my own ass and save my wife the trouble.

$178 at Garnet Hill (link via Urban Baby Daily)

Moms (and dads?) in "the age of anxiety?"

Salon has a good interview I read the other day of Judith Warner, the author of "Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety." I'm sure loads of other blogs are talking about the book, but from what I can tell her basic premise is that in an effort to be the perfect mother, moms are actually overstimulating their children and creating an unhealthy, unbalanced home life. I wasn't intending on blogging about it (the book or the interview), but I've been thinking about it for a few days now, so I'm going to recommend checking it out.

She does talk about fathers eventually too. At one point the interviewer asks "A lot of women wonder, how can they get fathers to do their share?" Judith Warner responds:

I don't know. I think at this point it's largely a lost cause for our generation. It's too late. The statistics overall will tell you that there's a grotesque inequality of who does what. When you have families where the mother is at home full time, she does almost everything.  ...You see a lot of wives caught up in this desire to be this perfect mother and this perfectly functioning creature, and the husbands are kind of shunted off to the side and often made to feel like impediments to the smoothly functioning household. I don't think they're necessarily getting a whole lot out of this, easy though it is to get enraged with them.

I'm not going to argue statistics (I have to assume she's done the research), but in my experience the dads I'm friends with (none of which are stay-at-home) are all actively involved in the child-raising. To say it's "too late" and dismiss the need to get fathers involved because they currently aren't involved is absurd.

However the point about shunting off husbands to the side is interesting to me. As a stay at home parent myself I've found you get used to a lot of control over the household, and I can see how this would happen. Though the idea of shunting my wife to the side is ridiculous, if she were less interested in child raising (or culturally not expected to take as much of an active role) things could easily be different.

Anyway, some interesting stuff to think about.

Mommy madness. [Salon.com]

More punk rock baby stuff.

PunkpantsSports fans have loads of stuff to dress their kids up in, but what about the aging mosh pit veteran? The Cradle Rocks! is another online punk-rock-baby-boutique that wants to make sure your kid's first words are "Oi Oi!" Like Babywit.com they have loads of rock t-shirts and "one-pieces", but my favorites are the "punk essentials." These plaid pants would look ridiculous on you, but on your boy they would probably look badass.

Link via Boing Boing

Oscar got the better of me.

As it turns out, going to adult parties and drinking adult beverages still has adult consequences. Modern day mom and I went to a fancy Oscar party last night, and as a result I'm nursing my first stay-at-home-hangover. If I went to a job I'd probably "work from home" today, which is to say I'm going to do as little as possible this morning. And even though I wrote this post a while ago about how I wasn't interested in the Oscar's this year, I still managed to come in third in an Oscar pool. Plus we got our picture taken with this guy, which pretty much was the bizarre cherry on top of a great evening.

More dad stuff tomorrow.

Plumbers delivering; Doctors discovering; Dads coveting.

Kind of a busy day, so I'm sort of mailing it in with a couple of quick news links.

From old pipes to new babies, this dad delivers [The Daily Oakland Press]
Plumber dad delivers his new baby boy in his living room. Insert your own "breaking water" joke in the comments.

Low birth weight diabetes link [BBC News]
Lack of fetal nourishment leads to damage of the pancreas which leads to type 2 diabetes.

Strollers lure fathers with car-like features [The State (South Carolina)]
I guess a reporter from the WSJ wrote an article recently about dads and strollers which some other newspapers picked up. My favorite part is the last paragraph:

Wechselblatt confesses that he has run his hands “surreptitiously over the fine construction” of the neighbors’ Bugaboo Frog, which is often called “the Hummer of strollers” because of its shape and big wheels. Some days, after stealing peeks at strollers on the Web, he comes home and looks at his Peg Perego “with disdain and I wonder, how can I put my child in this?” he said.

He must read Daddy Types too.

When dogs attack! The baby swing?

Here's another news story to go along with the local-news-fear-mongering I was talking about yesterday. A MDD reader tipped me to this one from the AP: Coroner: Baby swings can trigger dog attack. At a medical examiner's convention in New Orleans, a state coroner from Maryland said there has been two deaths from dogs attacking babies in swings over a four year period, which he attributes to dogs not being able to ignore the rocking motion of the swing.

I'm no pet lover, but as far as I can tell this guy is a medical examiner, not an expert on dogs or their behavior. Dr. Conjecture blames the swing. What about the dumb-ass, negligent parents who left the pit bull alone with the baby?? Instead of rethinking the swing, maybe people should rethink the dog. It seems to me the swing is just an excuse.

But it sure does make a sensational news story - just look at all them all.

Not "elite." "Leet."

Well, it must be time for television ratings sweeps because all of the local news channels are running stories about how the world is ending. "The deadliest thing in your house may be your kitchen!" "Cat attacks - your pets are in danger!" "Your kids may be getting access to pornography, and we're not talking about the Internet!"

Here's one I actually saw yesterday - "Your kids are speaking a new language online that you need to know about!" A couple of weeks ago Microsoft published online "A parent's primer to computer slang", designed to help parents decipher "leet speak;" abbreviations, anagrams and typos commonly found on the Internet. If you're a parent and you've never seen it before it's probably worth checking out, but the funniest thing I thought was the first (and obviously most important) word under the section "Leet words of concern or indicating possible illegal activity."

"warez" or "w4r3z": Illegally copied software available for download."

Never mind your kids downloading porn, just make sure they're not pirating copies of Microsoft Office..

//d3rn d4y d4d r3wlz.

Seventh month developments.

In the previous months that I've written these (self indulgent) posts, most of her major developments were physical in nature, like sitting up, rolling over or grasping things. This month it's more about what's happening in her head. It seemed like about a week after she turned six months old a light bulb turned on and everything was different. Here are the changes I've noticed:

  • Separation anxiety.  At the end of last month I think she was just starting to realize that I am, in fact, a seperate person, but it didn't bother her too much. Now that fact occasionally stresses her out. Sometimes she'll be as happy as can be playing in her "stationary entertainer," but if I walk out of her eyesight for a second it can be a full blown freak out. It doesn't happen all the time, but where she didn't much care before, now she definitely does.
  • Stranger anxiety.  I think this one goes hand in hand with the separation anxiety. For months my baby would happily smile at anyone who smiled at her first. Then all of a sudden she wasn't smiling back so much and sometimes even crying. The frowning-lower-lip-quiver-I'm-about-to-cry face is cute, but it's also kind of sad she's realizing that maybe not everyone is her friend.
  • "Ga."  Madame is very chatty, and now she's got a favorite word. "Ga." Actually, it's her only word, and she uses it for everything. Someone walks in the room that she recognizes - "Ga!" Hand her a toy that she likes - "Ga!" Get her ready for breakfast - "Ga!" There's lots of random baby chatter too, but this is a word that definitely has some meaning for her, even if it means everything.
  • Naps.  OK. Judging from the comments I got about my sleep post a little while ago, I promise not to write about how great my baby sleeps. I got lucky, the next baby won't be so easy, it has nothing to do with me - I get it. So I'm not saying here that she's settled down into falling asleep for a nap twice a day (morning and afternoon) at about the same time each day. And I'm definitely not saying that it has anything to do with what I'm doing (because it really doesn't).