K.D. asks from San Clemente, CA on October 31, 2008
Feeding and Sleeping Schedule for a 5 Month Old
Help!!! My beautiful 5 month old baby girl is very ready for solids! I have only nursed her at this point but, am ready to introduce one bottle of formula. The problem is that I have no clue how to introduce them into our feeding and napping schedule. I know I should start off with cereals and progress through the vegetables, followed by the fruits. However, I am not confident in what time of day to give her solids or how much milk to give her during the day. She has been getting up early from naps hungry so, her routine has been disrupted for several days now. I work full time and can’t nurse “on demand” so, a schedule is very important to us in order for me to be able to provide her with enough pumped breast milk for the day. My babysitter has noticed that she is getting frustrated and hungry during the day as well and has had a talk with me. I would greatly appreciate any schedules that have worked for you and your baby! It just doesn’t “feel right” at the moment and I feel terrible that I don’t know what to do for my little girl!
More Answers
L.A. answers from San Diego on November 01, 2008
Toss the schedule. Your daughter is hubgry because her babysitter is not feeding her on demand. Babies this age do not need solids, regardless of what her caregiver thinks. Sounds like an older woman to me, or someone with old school ideas on child care - there are plenty of people out there who do not understand that baby humans were designed to be fed breast milk. It is their perfect food, and all that is necessary for perfect health. Follow your instincts, mama. You DO know what is best for your little girl - you are not a rookie mom. If this caregiver is pushing you to start solids, switch caregivers, or let her know in no uncertain terms that you are the mom and what you say goes. Supplement with formula if you feel your daughter needs more milk than you can pump. Sounds like the problem is with your babysitter and her beliefs, not with your daughter.
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G.L. answers from Los Angeles on November 01, 2008
you do know what to do, don't doubt yourself. i work full time and pumping has become my way of life when i am at work, my son is almost 10 months old. yet, he has never had formula. be sure that when you pump you relax and are keeping up with your water intake.
your daughter will still need your breast milk. so keep it up. have you changed the nipples on the bottle? i did at this time, from slow flow to medium. maybe she just isn't getting enough out of the bottle fast enough???
as for solids, i only began a few days prior to his 6 month check up, even though my doctor said i could start at 4 months. Baby's intestines aren't ready until closer to 6 months. Deena Leigh left a great guideline, one that i followed too.
as for what to start first, La Leche League recommends bananas because they are most like breast milk. i began with that and i mashed it up with a fork. then i began cereal and fruit. be careful with banana and cereal they are both cause constipation. Apples, Pears, and prunes will help to releave that. and prunes on the face make for a fun picture of eating solids. good luck. oh, and since i work, i began feeding him dinner with solids and then my sitter worked in a small lunch so he could take a long afternoon nap.
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S.F. answers from Reno on November 01, 2008
Both my sons went to the same in-home day care povider when I went back to work after having them. Bless her heart, she had the best schedule ever. Here it is...
I would feed my baby a bottle at home before dropping him off. She would give the kids (infants through toddler age) a breakfast snack around 9am. Lunch was between 11:30-noon. Afternoon snack was around 3:30pm when everyone woke up from afternoon nap. I fed my baby dinner between 5-6pm. Bedtime was 7-7:30 and we started again at 6am the next morning (yes, my kids would sleep through the night that long...I was very lucky).
However, I had my babies on formula and bottles by 3 months and solids at 6-9 months. <chuckle> My oldest never ate baby food, he went right into table food...it's own very special challenge for a person with no teeth! <g> If you're worried about obesity, I can tell you that neither of my two sons became obese as a result of this. The were way, way too active! It was fuel, pure and simple.
Of course, that was all a long time ago. My kids are 14 and 10 now and we still pretty much keep to the same schedule.
Hope this helps!
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L.A. answers from Los Angeles on November 01, 2008
Pump for a bottle, don't give formula chemicals. Your milk is made for her specifically, keep up the great work with breast feeding. THEN, you don't have to worry about what to feed her. Her food is just for the texture and experience your milk gives her ALL she needs. She won't get sick and IF she does nurse extra and she'll get better quicker. Your schedule probably doesn't 'feel right' because she misses her mother throughout the day. Maybe try to nurse first thing in the a.m. then about an hour later offer baby oat cereal, then nurse/bottle about 1/2 hour later, then lunch of fruit and more cereal and bottle/nurse, then about 2 hours later nurse before dinner, then dinner of veg and cereal, then nurse before bed. The Le Leche League international website has more info for you. You'll get into a routine, just tweek things around, check nap times... she'll get it. Every change takes a while to get used to.
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C.M. answers from Los Angeles on November 01, 2008
This is such an exciting time. It's great that you're aware se's ready to start solids.
If you go to weelicious.com to the "introducing new foods" and "recipes for 6-9 month olds" on the right hand side, it should answer most of your questions.
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B.B. answers from San Diego on November 01, 2008
I started my little one on solids at 5 months. I would just do rice cereal in the morning and evening...making sure to breast feed/ give her bottle first then cereal. At this point, it should be for texture and learning how to move food around her mouth...not for calories or to satisfy hunger. She should get those needs met through nursing/formula at this point. At around 9 months, I moved my DD to 3 meals a day. I always give her a bottle first...then finger foods for practice (bananas/avacado/berries/cheerios work great) then follow up with pureed veggies or fruit. Good luck!
D.M. answers from Los Angeles on October 31, 2008
Okay, so here is what my son and I did...
Depending on when you little girl wakes up in the morning, but my son's schedule was something like this I think...
7am wake up (it varied)
8am cereal with BM (formula can be used too)
930am nap with bottle (filled a 6oz bottle and let him go to town)
1130am wake up
12pm ceral with fruit or fruit juice 1tsp. (pears/apples)this worked great for variety
2pm naptime w/bottle
4pm wake up
5pm dinner...this is where I did cereal and started to introduce jars of veggies. My son took to them right away, that has changed now...he's two.
http://www.babycenter.com/0_age-by-age-guide-to-feeding-y...
It really depends on what your day is like with naps and playtime, but really it's best to just pick a time after wake up and start introducing it a little bit at a time. My son was a really good eater when we started cereals. He loved the Earth's Best ones with flavors, and adored jarred veggies from the start. Don't stress, it's okay. I remember going through the same turmoil, but really feeding solids is such a tricky thing. Try to create a breakfast, lunch and dinner schedule that you can continue to follow, once she starts eating table food too.
I included the link from Baby Center that was what I printed out and kept in the kitchen when my son was that age. You don't have to follow to the letter, as every baby will like and dislike certain foods and that will change with every stage! My son is in his carrots, corn and lima beans phase now and it's funny, but he used to adore brocoli and won't touch it now.
Oh, and if you daughter is only on BM and you can continue to give that to her, I would wait to introduce formula once you're past introducing foods to your kiddo. My son's doctor suggested that, and I'm glad we did cause it was a whole other mess since, we found out he was lactose intolerant...
Good luck.
J.W. answers from Los Angeles on November 01, 2008
Just my opinion, but it is kind of soon for solids. I would just offer her another feeding, maybe formula if you don't have enough bm, that is what I did. She is probably going through a growth spurt. Good luck.
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