I also posted on Multiples board:
If you delayed solids, how long did you wait, and why? When you did start them, what were the signs you were looking for?
My twins will be 5 months on Monday, and we are still EBF. I'd like to go as long as possible (definitely past six months), and just curious other moms handle it. I know DH is anxious for them to start eating food so that we are not wholly reliant on my breasts, but I've read that the sooner you start them on solids, the sooner they start to wean.
Re: Delaying Solids Q? XP
We waited until he could feed himself.
Which meant I started offering food at 6 month, but he didn't really eat enough to replace nursing until 18 months. Yes, a year later.
Signs of being ready for solids include sitting well, losing the tongue-thrust reflex, and (IMO) being able to pick up food and eat it.
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my 18 month olds eat anything and everything in sight and they still both demand to nurse like 8+ times a day.
we started solids around 6 months, a mix of purees and BLW.
ETA - i like the self feeding thing, but i was never super convinced by the arguments that they arent ready for food until they can feed themselves which is why we also did some purees or us feeding them slightly chunky things on a spoon. babies cant do much of anything by themselves for a long time so the idea that we have to help them didnt seem strange to me, plus historically people have been doing things like chewing meat and other foods and then spitting it out and feeding it to their kids for 1000s of years (not saying thats what i did, just that the idea of purees in some form is not really new).
we followed the "rules" for spoon feeding, never forcing the food, always stopping as soon as they turned their heads, etc, and it worked for us.
We started BLW at 5 and a half months. I hadn't really planned it, but she just stole my muffin and ate some. So then I just gave her bits here and there. I didn't really do any planned meals until 7 months, but she always got some of my food after that first bite of bran muffin.
And she is still nursing at almost 2 and a half even though I am pregnant. I think the weaning thing has to do more with the parent's emphasis on solids over breastmilk than on the child.
DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)
I kind of followed my kids' leads on this, and they were very different when it came to eating and self-feeding.
DD was really interested in foods; she would keenly watch us as we ate, even when she was tiny, and she started grabbing for foods as soon as she was able. I started offering her regular food at around 5 months, not so much to feed her, but to keep her busy and to give her practice. Her primary food source was still breastmilk. I would say that for a good 3 or 4 months after that, she would munch, slurp and nibble when DH and I ate dinner. She was always enthusiastic about mealtimes at this age, and had a great time playing with food, and sometimes even ingesting it. Around 9 months or so was when she seemed to switch from mostly milk to mostly food. It seemed very natural. My pediatrician encouraged me to follow my instincts about it.
DS was a different story. He really could not have cared less about table foods until after 6 months old. He has always had a really sensitive gag reflex, and this made every new taste and texture a real struggle. He also started to eat "real food" at around 9 months. The difference was that he didn't go through the whole "munch/slurp/nibble" phase. He just seemed to wake up one day at around 9 months ready to eat real food, and from that day on he pretty much ate like a toddler instead of a baby.
Both of my kids self-weaned at around 11 to 12 months.
Ironically, now that my kids are older, my daughter is pretty picky while my son likes all kinds of weird stuff that's often on kids' "yuck" list. He
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