I am new to Gransnet, but had to ask someone. Since when did honey become dangerous??! I have a great relationship with grandkids, but got told off for giving little one (just turned 1) honey today. DIL said it with a smile, but I feel out of date. I hate to think I have put the little one at risk. What else don't I know??!!
Water is not needed if the mom is exclusively breast feeding. The breast milk contains adequate hydration but Mom's might need to feed more frequently.
I started to give water when mine were closer to one as I wanted to get them used to having water with meals.
I'm not sure about what the advice for formula fed babies (mine were exclusively breastfed)
Honey is just as bad as sugar for children and for us, despite what is said about its nutritional and curative qualities. If children get used to having it, their teeth will suffer just as they suffer from excess of sugar. Better not to let them get used to having sweet things when they are tiny.
Babies under 1 year old should not be given honey. Honey can contain spores of a bacterium called Clostridium botulinum, which can germinate in a baby's immature digestive system and cause infant botulism, a rare but potentially fatal illness. ..
(I knew that and I'm 71 - well 49 on the other thread!)
And I probably wouldn't encourage them to eat too much sweet stuff anyway. Although I must say that I love honey - on toast, on Scotch pancakes, in porridge, in yogurt, I could go on
Oh, I see thatbags has already posted that, I should read before posting
I remember one HV saying that on no account to give baby water, another one said cool boiled water was fine.
I don't think that breast milk is always enough if the weather is hot, but you have to go with what Mum decides is right. And I was brought up with absolutely no water with meals - only in between. But that was many years ago.
Never forget that many of us put our babies on their tummys to sleep, my two did, but changing that particular rule has decreased the rate of cot death significantly.
These sorts of warnings need to be looked at. The issue about mums not eating soft cheeses, pate etc and listeria is another one.
Having been given this information or warned about potential problems I doubt if most responsible parents would go against it. Can you imagine the outcry if the medical profession knew about these possibly very small risks but failed to tell the public.
annieb, "jar of honey a day... cures constipation"
I have mild IBS which has recently got more bothersome. Been trying various, ahem, approaches to the problem. They haven't worked too well. Honey will figure in my next strategy, on oatcakes.
Yes granny pier, if not on solids yet and breastfeeding, they only have breastfeeds, even if it's hot. I think it's different if they have formula. I live I learn .
When GS was weeks old and obviously not being filled by his bottle I suggested a spoon of cereal mixed in. Well, you'd have thought I'd suggested hanging in the garden or worse
When DGS was about 9 months old I went with DD to see his very traditional German Paedeatrician. he sais how well he was doing and asked if he was getting any solid food. DD and I stuttered and I fessed up that he liked a spoonful of my Scotch Broth liquidised of course and a little fine milled porridge with some of his baby milk in it. We expected a telling of but he laughed and said that was fine by him and when the baby was ready for solids the Mother usually knows best. DGS is a wiry(skinny) very active little boy and still has porridge for breakfast in the winter.
I remember the health visitor suggesting giving my (breast fed) DS demerara sugar in warm water when he was constipated. This would have been in his first year. I did as I was told, as we all did then (in the 70s). And it worked, with a vengeance ?
It really makes me wonder how my children survived childhood. You didn't know you were definitely pregnant for three months, there were no scans, etc.!!!