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backpack stroller|Storage on an umbrella stroller?

24 January 2012

The following are not relevant to the content of some backpack stroller,but classicA bully is always a coward.You cannot eat your cake and have it. Your mind is like this water, my friend, when it is agitated, it becomes difficult to see, but if you allow it to settle, the answer becomes clear..car maintenance prices。!!Good advice :Make play-time green-time with greener toys,Get back to basics and try old fashioned wooden toys and organic cotton or homemade teddies. Because babies put most things in their mouths,go as natural as possible.
backpack stroller–: Storage on an umbrella stroller?
Okay.. so we leave Sat at 12 AM for South Carolina.. we’ll pretty much be packed to the brim and can only bring with us an umbrella stroller (small car). I can’t go out and buy one with a basket on the bottom and I can’t bring my big one.. please don’t suggest it.

Can I safely put a backpack or a small bag on the back of his stroller so I can put some diapers/wipes/snacks and sippy cup in and not have to carry it? (I’ll already have the camera bag and probably pocketbook).
thanks, very reassuring!
yeah I know miss.. but time has run out and we can’t use extra money… we need it for vacation
amanda I do that too!


The following is the answer: (Hint: The answer is not necessarily.)

Answer by ♥ Johnny’s Mommy ♥
If you can balance the weight between the two handles somehow (like one backpack strap over one handle and the other strap over the other handler), then yeah, it should be okay. It may be in the way of your legs when you are trying to push it though.

When I need to do something like this, I’ll pack the backpack with Johnny’s stuff along with my necessities (like my cell phone, wallet, camera). Putting everything into one backpack and then I wear the backpack and push the stroller. :)

Answer by silly_duck96
If he outweighs the bag it should be fine. And of course don’t leave him unattended (I know you won’t).

Answer by Brittany
Just make sure it doesn’t weigh more then the baby. If so it will tip over. Other then that… I have loaded a lot of stuff on the back of an umbrella stroller!

Answer by MISS D. WOULD LIKE 2 HELP U OUT
ya but it can not be to heavy or it will flip the baby back
watch it falls over when the baby gets taken out also
but they sell ones with a bottom in a small umbrella

Answer by Dalton’s Mommy & #2 due 2/16
Buy an “S” hook (they are cheap) I got mine at gymboree they were giving them away about a year ago. Just make sure it’s big enough to fit around whereever you want the bag to hang. I also (when using my umbrella stroller) just put the diaper bag straps over both of the handles and it works just fine so it’s not heavy on just one side. Good Luck

Answer by amanda
yep a bag over one handle and over the other is a perfect idea, when I go grocery shopping (just for a couple items) I take one of those baskets and do that with the stroller, and bobs your uncle!! have a splendid trip!

What do you think? Answer below!

backpack stroller
Welcome to my blog,This blog is about healthy baby food & educating a baby.
!!Tips :Improve your indoor air quality and maintain a healthy household environment
Q&A–: toddler backpack type harness or a bigger carrier?
I have a very lets say ACTIVE almost 2 year old…she will be 2 the end of Nov…she has been walking since before she turned a year old and is starting to really not like her stroller at all…When she was smaller I carried her in a carrier and she loved it and as she become bigger she become to heavy for me to carry anymore so I had switch over to her stoller…I would like to know if anyone knows of a good comfortable carrier for an older baby who is still almost to little to just walk but hates to be put in the stroller….we have also been thinking about one of those backpack type harness things…just so that she is close and can’t get away…..I already know that you have to teach them dicipline..I get that I have an 8 year old that is very well behaved and never had this much energy when she was little…I just want my little girl to be safe and happy all at the same time….any suggestions??? Would you use a backpack harness???
if I was to use a backpack it would only be when we go to like the zoo or the store or someplace crowed…I would never use like outside playing or anything like that…

I would use it just to get her used to walking until she learned to stay by me…she is not even 2 years old yet


The answer in the following: (Hint: The reader is not the correct identification.)

Answer by kleasure
harness = leash.

hold her hand while you are walking, and if she doesn’t listen or tries to run, punish her. you are the parent, she needs to learn that you are the boss.

Answer by angie p
when i first saw these harnesses, i was completely against them. Then I had children. Needless to say, i quickly learned that safety is the most important. A backpack harness provides that. A carrier will probably result in a bunch of bruises from her kicking. if she wants to walk, get her a harness and let her go.

Answer by Diann C
My highly spirited 18-month-old uses a harness/leash combo almost all the time when we go out.
She loves it! She knows that she can wander within the 2 foot radius that the leash gives her and she loves the semi-freedom. She knows that if she doesn’t wear the harness that she has to hold my hand or ride in the buggy (shopping cart) and she doesn’t like either of those options so she always chooses the leash.

I don’t even use the backpack style ones, the leashes are way too short to give your toddler the freedom they are looking for. Munchkin makes a great harness/leash combo that can also be used as a dual wrist leash when they get too big for the chest harness.

I get looks and the occasional comment, but for my little one she would rather have the harness then have to ride in the buggy or hold my hand, she likes the freedom to wander.

Give your answer to this question below!
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Do you find what you need? Look here!,In the blog: & Newborn Baby Clothes.
!!about backpack stroller tips :Improve your indoor air quality and maintain a healthy household environment
Wonderful backpack stroller:

Your baby is cute, Gwen, but take a look at *my* baby!
backpack stroller

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in a May 16, 2010 EveryBlock NYC Streets blog titled "1-99 Block of W. 55th St.."

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Because Central Park occupies a massive 843 acres in the (duh!) center of Manhattan, it’s no surprise that there area numerous entrances and exits all around the perimeter of the park. Some of them are quite well known — such as the entrance on the southeast corner, at Fifth Avenue and 59th Street (across the street from the GM Building and the old Plaza Hotel), or the entrance at the western side of the 72nd Street "transverse" that cuts through the park and comes out on Fifth Avenue (well known because the statuesque Dakota apartment building, where John Lennon once lived, is located at Central Park West and 72nd Street).

Based on where they live, and based on their normal work and leisure routines, most New Yorkers tend to favor certain entrances and exits, and may never have used (or even seen) certain other ones. In my case, for example, I’ve always been aware that there’s an entrance at the southwestern corner of the park, right at Columbus Circle. It’s officially known as Merchant’s Gate — and it’s hard to miss, because there’s an enormous monument commemorating the explosion/sinking of the Maine in February 1898, which precipitated the Spanish-American War. But since I don’t live, work, or travel to that particular corner of Manhattan very often, I’ve almost never used that entrance to the park. By "almost never," I mean only once or twice in the 40+ years that I’ve lived in New York City.

I don’t think that this almost-perfect record of non-use of a park entrance has had any negative effect on my life … but it occurred to me, the other day, that I might have missed some interesting photographic opportunities. And since I was getting a little bored by returning to the same old places to photograph the same old scenes in other parts of the city, over and over again, I decided that the southwestern corner of Central Park was worth taking a look at.

As you might imagine, the massive Maine monument dominates the scene — and I felt obliged to photograph it once or twice, just to acknowledge its existence. But after that … well, it turns out that it’s not really all that photogenic, and nobody was paying much attention to it. Aside from the monument, there was an open mini-plaza where people could walk, chat, sit, and relax — presumably on the way into, or the way out of, the park itself. There were a couple of food stands, offering items that looked slightly more nourishing and tasty than the stuff available from the usual hot-dog stands that one finds throughout the park (and almost every street corner). I wasn’t hungry myself, but I noticed that several people bought a snack, or a sandwich, and then found a convenient spot to sit and relax while they munched and nibbled.

So, in the end, the photographic opportunities turned out to be pretty much the same as always: it was the people who were the most interesting — not the statues or the squirrels or the trees or the flowers. There were tourists, and New Yorkers on their lunch break, and students from a local parochial school, and office workers on their lunch break. There was a Statue of Liberty mime, a few retired people, some bicyclists, joggers, and athletes. There were nannies pushing babies in strollers, and mothers carrying babies in snugglies and backpacks, and dog-walkers with their pets. There were crazy-looking people, and beautiful people, and ugly people.

And there were lots, and lots, and lots of guys hustling unwary tourists, offering them rides and tours through the park in their brightly-colored pedicabs. Perhaps because I was wielding a camera, I was mistaken by several of these guys as a tourist; when I responded to their pitch about a park ride by saying, "I live here," they gave me a disgusted look and quickly moved away. Meanwhile, several other vendors had tables with photos and trinkets and bawdy signs that they did their best to sell to anyone who walked by. All of this, as best I could tell, was dutifully recorded by a NYC Police Dept. security camera, which sat high above it all … but nobody seemed to even notice it.

I took some 300+ photos to document all of this, and winnowed it down to 50 "keepers" that will hopefully give you a reasonably good impression of what the scene looked like. Having done so, I hopped in a taxi and headed back uptown. For all I know, it may be another 40 years before I enter this corner of the park again…

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