We're starting to look into baby proofing the house and I'm starting to get a little over whelmed with all the things that are potentially dangerous. It's like my house is a death trap. It's a wonder children have visited and not killed themselves. I've just started to look into all the things we need to get done like securing furniture to the walls, gates on the stairs, electrical covers, securing loose wires (holy hell we have a lot of loose wires), toilet clamps etc, etc, etc.
Has anyone else looked into it yet? Found any good resources? Any BTDT moms have any advice? Things you wish you did differently or things that were life saving (literally)?
I know this is getting WAY ahead of myself, but again, just looking into it.
Re: Baby Proofing
I'm also dreading our backyard area this spring. We have an area that is covered with small rocks...it would be near impossible to remove all of the rocks..but pretty sure she would go after mulch as well. We'll just have to teach her early and keep a close eye.
I'm curious to see what others post!
As for the baby proofing, I'm no help. We haven't started and are getting ready to tear apart our kitchen to remodel. I predict lo spending a lot of time upstairs during the construction.
I also found when she was first crawling a great way to be able to leave the room for a min (to use bathroom/ answer door) was to use one of the round baby gates they are pretty big and you can put a bunch of toys in there. Dd1 was also a August LO but she was not walking until 18 months so the first summer we were also able to use the round gate outside with mats under it and it kept her from getting into the rocks/ mulch.
I would recommend completely baby proofing at least one space in your house. Enclose it w gates. Other spaces you can get 90% there and then just don't leave your kid alone.
Most outlet covers are no match for my big one. Cover as many as you can w furniture. Nail down cords. Move breakable things up high. Cover up buttons (like on cable boxes) best you can. Lock kitchen cabinets, but leave one LO can open and fill it with Tupperware and other kid-safe stuff. Cushion hard corners.
Once your kid gets mobile, what you need to do will become obvious. And you'll never be able to think of all the ways something will be dangerous until your kid shows you.
Only thing I baby proof is my cleaners cabinet and outlets (outlet covers). I am team, "don't touch shit." It is more work, constantly telling them no and moving them away from stuff. But... I also never have to worry about them breaking or messing with stuff when we visit people.
Worked great with the first two.
Also, figured I would add. I have nothing potentially dangerous sitting around. No baby level picture frames, glass, knick knacks and so on.
We ended up having to move our coffee table out to the garage because it was just too much of a hassle. We had to get rid of a big house plant because he would stand up and grab the dirt and eat it. That sort of thing.
Also I second what somebody else said about making sure you completely baby proof one room. The rest, just make sure you watch them when they're in those areas.
@katies7 I love this approach!
DD2 8.22.13
MMC 1.4.17 at 16w
Expecting #3, EDD 1.29.18
But after the 300th round of "stop climbing into the plant" and "don't eat the cat food!", you have to start moving some things around for your own sanity.