Only 5 weeks here with our first baby and VERY excited. (Also moody, sleepy, sore, and dying to tell people at the same time!)
As a downtown-living Chicagoan with no car, a Divvy pass, CTA card and lots o' walking shoes, I'm starting to wonder how we'll carry baby around the city with us.
Specifically:
1. Car-less?
Any other Chicago moms who don't have cars out there?
2. Strollers?
I have an illogical fear that our tiny apartment entryway will be filled with strollers of different types: running stroller, easy fold stroller, 3 wheel stroller. Can we just have one? Or none? What's your stroller strategy?
3. Baby Carriers?
I know you can bring a baby in a stroller on a CTA bus, but can you carry one in a body carrier? I know I'm naive here, but it seems so much easier to use the baby carrier than to lugg a stroller up & down El stop staircases, stores, etc. What do other city moms use? And if the baby carrier is the way to go, is it legal or safe to be in taxis without an official car seat?
4. Ice?
Any rules/ advice about strollers/ baby carrier usage in winter months when there's ice? Seems like the baby sling could be a dangerous option if we were to fall. Or is that too doomsday?
THANKS!
Re: Newly Pregnant Question: How to transport a Chicago baby?
4. Ice
Check out Lucie's List and Baby Bargains for a lot of the safety information on the carriers and car seats. Baby Bargains has a forum page where people might have more insight about which models work best in urban settings. I found both websites super helpful when creating my registry.
Good luck!
For grocery shopping, I'd take the stroller and hang reuse able grocery bags from the handles with carribeaners, and I'd just buy as much as I could fit in them. So small but frequent grocery trips. I actually liked it better than shopping without the stroller, because I could push everything home without having to carry heavy bags! We had an elevator though. Everyone I know who doesn't have an elevator has started using Peapod.
You can definitely take a baby on public transit in a carrier. It worked great for us for at least the first year, and you can figure out what works for you after then. We'd just take the stroller if we were going to be out for longer than I'd want to wear DS, or if we were going to a restaurant or something before he could use a high chair. I also started walking with the stroller more, and taking the CTA less.
For strollers, we had the City Mini for walking around, and when DS was 3 months old, we also got a Maclaren Triumph for taking on public transit. It has a shoulder strap and is very light, so with a bit of practice, it wasn't too hard to take up and down the stairs of the L with a baby and a diaper bag.
You'll also certainly get to know which L stops are handicap accessible, and will probably use those ones much more often. All Brown Line stops are accessible, which is awesome, as are many stops in the Loop for other lines.
It's not so hard to get around with a baby in the city. Definitely good to have a couple options, like stroller vs carrier, because different trips will be more convenient with each.
BFP #2: 8.31.16 Dx w/ GD @ 28w DD Born @ 36w: 4.21.17
Definitely consider doing a back pack! I live an hour outside the city, but DH and I take the kiddos to cubbies games and all sorts of activities in the city. We ride the train in and then go on buses and walk.
DH takes charge of our 3 year old, and I have baby in a front pack carrier. We each also take a back pack. One with food, water, blanket, camera, w.e. and the other is fully equipped diaper bag for the day.
Wearing a carrier AND the back pack is very convenient, especially keeping my hands free!
If you're going to do this AND shop, it is possible. As a new mom, there are a million things you think you might need while towing baby out of the house. The diaper bag is filled with crap, most of which you will not use on that particular outing. Once you've had some experience in leaving the house with baby, you will be more confident in leaving for an hour with just some food, a few diapers, and a small package of wipes.
DD1- 2009, M/C- 2011, M/C- 2012, DD2- 2012, DD3- 2014
In my experience, taking a baby on the CTA is easier with a baby carrier. Yes, they allow strollers, but CTA has a new rule about strollers. CTA employees will ask you to fold up your stroller when the bus/train is full or if it is rush hour. Try holding a baby and folding your stroller at the same time while the bus/train is moving. Not fun. Carrying the baby in a car seat while on the bus/train is easy when they are newborn and weigh next to nothing. Not so easy when they're over 5-6 mos and your arm feels like it's going to fall off. As another poster said, a backpack instead of a traditional diaper bag makes traveling easier.
I think a good sturdy all-terrain stroller (like the one you get when you buy a travel system) is a good stroller to start off with. When baby gets bigger, a good umbrella stroller is soooo much easier. The big strollers are super bulky and heavy. Just make sure it has a tray for sippy cups and a reclining seat if baby wants to nap. But do not get rid of the big stroller when you are ready to switch to an umbrella stroller. I still use the big stroller when I do groceries because I can throw the groceries in the big basket.
As for ice and snow...well it sucks pushing a stroller thru snow when someone chooses not to shovel or when Streets & San pile up the snow at the crosswalks. But it is totally doable. Our local school is a block away. When I have to pick up my ds from school, I take my other boys in a stroller in all kinds of weather. It makes no sense to drive a block. I got one of those plastic cover thingies for rainy days. And I pushed the stroller thru snow in the winter.
Just remember that some people have no choice. They can't afford a car and public transportation is their ONLY choice. If they can get by without a car, so can you.