For those of you whose babies have turned head down already, did you know it had happened?  Could you feel it happen or did you just find out when you went for an ultrasound?
My baby was breech at my 24 week ultrasound and I know it is really early, but I worry about baby not turning at all.  A co-worker just had her baby and he was still frank breech at 39 weeks when her water broke and she had to have a c-section.  I am really not hot on the idea of a c-section.
So I was just wondering if it's possible to feel/know when baby turns.  Thanks!                
                             
        
Re: Baby Turning Question
I never felt him move into that position but I've been feeling a lot of kicks up near the right side of my ribs for a few weeks so I kind of assumed he was head down.
With the hiccups, I only felt them down low with my first and he was breech, probably for the last 10 weeks, maybe longer. I guess he wiggled his little booty when he had them; I had an anterior placenta too, so that might've played a part. I felt what I though was an elbow poking my side high up in my ribs (I could feel it from the outside), and it turned out it was a heel bc he was frank breech. I had been getting chiropractic adjustments by a prenatal pro from about 20w, doing yoga, and started spinning babies once we figured out he was breech a little later on during a cervical check, but he never turned. I'm 26w and am currently carrying frank breech again with an anterior placenta. I'm doing all the things on the spinning babies website, skipping the chiro this time bc it just doesn't work with my schedule. I'm resigned that I just may be anatomically prone to carrying this way.
I get ultrasounds every time in the 3rd tri bc I ended up with really low fluid towards the end last time. We discovered this when I went in for an attempted version, so we a had to ditch that plan. AND I'm "advanced maternal age" - which makes me LOL, why not just say "dang biotch, you old" - at 35, so my doctor would have been doing them anyway.
Again, chances are your baby will be in position when the time comes. If not, roll with it and be thankful modern medicine can ensure our breech babies are born safely.
I think this is good advice in general, baby or not.