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Advice Needed.... Baby Practicality...


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#1 lsto

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 11:40 AM

Right, as from the title we need a little advice on this.

 

Basically we have a baby on the way so I was wondering if anyone actually has a mini as their main transport for a baby or am I better off getting rid and buying a focus or astra?

 

At the min we have a fiesta ST too but we are looking to try and save money as we have just bought a new place too and two cars is probably going to be a luxury we cannot afford.

 

So basically has anyone on here ever used just a mini for their baby or is it time I grew up and get a boring 'family car'

 

 

Cheers



#2 ShaunaFTW

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 11:45 AM

What do you think people did in the 80s when minis were used as family cars:P?

#3 A-Cell

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 11:48 AM

What do you think people did in the 80s when minis were used as family cars:P?


We used a Maestro!

#4 A-Cell

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 11:52 AM

Right, as from the title we need a little advice on this.
 
Basically we have a baby on the way so I was wondering if anyone actually has a mini as their main transport for a baby or am I better off getting rid and buying a focus or astra?
 
At the min we have a fiesta ST too but we are looking to try and save money as we have just bought a new place too and two cars is probably going to be a luxury we cannot afford.
 
So basically has anyone on here ever used just a mini for their baby or is it time I grew up and get a boring 'family car'
 
 
Cheers


First of all Congratulations.
You probably already know that a Mini is not the safest car. Also it is not very convenient to get a baby in and out of, let alone all the kit that you have to take with you.

#5 mab01uk

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 11:52 AM

It can work for a short while but there comes a point where baby buggies and all the gear and hassle required in transit needs a hatchback or at least a 4 door car......not to mention the lack of safety transporting your most valued possession in a car designed in the late 1950's. This is not the 1960/70's.....in the 80's we ran a Metro for a while instead of a Mini for same reason, so your Fiesta ST would be ok for a little longer than a Mini, but as they grow fast a proper family size car becomes a must in the end.

 

If you want to stay with a Mini and have safety plus space you would need a modern MINI Clubman estate, several owners seem to manage with babies and young children on the MINI forums.

TotalMINI Forum Kids and Mini's:

http://www.totalmini...totalparenting/

 

http://www.totalmini...kids-minis.html


Edited by mab01uk, 27 July 2013 - 11:59 AM.


#6 lsto

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 11:55 AM

I know back in the day people used mini's, my parents did in fact. What I meant with in this modern day and age with stupid plastic baby seats and the mountain of c*** she wants to take everywhere, does anyone do it anymore or is it something best left to the days of Anglia's and Cortina's?

 

Thanks for the replies



#7 lsto

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:00 PM

Yeah that's what I thought... the ST isn't exactly practical anymore though. With coilovers and too many ponies under the hood I imagine it would be a matter of seconds before the car is full of sick lol.

 

And I know your right about the mini too really, I was trying to kid myself I think.

 

Just have to enjoy it for a couple more months until the little one arrives lol



#8 A-Cell

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:01 PM

Probably best to go modern. Will give the new mum peace of mind.

#9 Tanya

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:04 PM

Sorry to say, I had a boring family car as I just could face getting three children under the age of two (plus their equipment and cars seats etc) into a Mini. However, I was lucky as I had a Metro, but then switched to my lovely Montego Countryman, which was fab (so fab, I've just bought another :-)) so only had to endure boring family cars when I moved on to Zafiras. Thankfully, my children are now 18 and 16, so I can rid of boring family cars and go back to Minis, oh and Maestros and Montegos of course!

My husband always kept his Mini and the kids loved going out in it with him, but it would have driven me mad trying to use it on a daily basis with three small children, car seats, buggies etc. 30 years ago, I expect that it would have been fine. My dad had Transit vans and I remember rolling round in the back of them as a small child (in the dark as the load space was sectioned off) and having great fun. Of course, that could never happen now.

#10 jefinabox

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:05 PM

Minis are do-able unless you're easily brainwashed into carrying everything and the kitchen sink, like most first parents. Our baby is 11 months now and we manage just fine. We have a changing bag and a carrier bag of food and that's about it. For carrying baby we use a cloth wrap, it's ten times easier than pushing a great big pram about and takes no room at all. A bigger car would make life easier but it's definitely do-able in a mini.

#11 mab01uk

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:07 PM

Imagine being on the motorway, all lanes are full, its pouring with rain, your baby is strapped on the back seat, there is a large artic truck a short distance from your back bumper and if the worst happens you are in the smallest car designed long before anyone had heard of strong passenger safety cells, or impact absorbing crushable zones to protect vehicle occupants......... :ohno:

 

We got a family car in the end but like Tanya we always managed to hang on to a Mini as a second car. :-)


Edited by mab01uk, 27 July 2013 - 12:10 PM.


#12 lsto

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:09 PM

Yeah, we have been talking about it on and off the last few weeks. She keeps telling me to keep the mini and trade in the ST for a focus or something. I just cant see us affording both when she leaves work. I thought about selling both and getting just a family car but she don't want us to part with the mini.

 

As much as I'd love to keep it I think it'll soon be time for it to go...



#13 leroy26

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:21 PM

sorn the mini during winter, just buy 6 mths tax may-oct (£77) put it on a classic low milage policy say 1500 miles so the insurance come to £100 ( ins for 12mths tho just in case it get nicked), then just use it for fun in the summer starting and rolling it once a mth whilst sorned.

obviously you need somewhere to keep it off the road if you do this



#14 AVV IT

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 12:26 PM

A mini is a family car!!

You will often see classic minis for sale with the line "baby forces sale", this has always annoyed me as it really doesn't have to be that way. My kids are now 5 & 3, but I kept my mini as a daily drive throughout them both being babies. It wasn't our only car, but as my wife uses her car for work and we share childcare between us, the kids have always been in my car, as much as they've been in hers. When my daughter was born I had to contend with both a newborn and a toddler in a classic mini at the same time, so if I can manage that, then I'm sure you can manage a baby in one!

Admittedly in a mini you have to be a bit more organised than in a larger car, but if you only carry necessities there is actually plenty of space. Women usually insist on carting a huge amount of unnecessary crap around with them when they have a baby in tow. So the first trick is to thin all this down and stop them carrying a months worth of supplies when they're only leaving the house for a couple of hours. Rearward facing car seats don't work very well, particularly if you have static rear belts, so for the first few months it's better to have the baby on the front passenger seat, that way you can also keep an eye on little 'un from both the drivers seat and if you're sitting in the back. When they get bigger and move on to forward facing seats, you can put them in the back. If you tip the front seats forward and kneel on the floor of the car facing the rear seat, with one leg in the car and one leg out, you can lift little 'un in and out of the car/ car seat really easily. It also means that you are directly in front of them when putting their seat belts on, which is much easier than trying to it from the side as you do in a larger 4 door car. Buggy wise a "Quinny Zap" folds down small enough to fit in the classic mini boot. They're only suitable from 6 months though, so before that I always used a carrier instead.

Safety is the other consideration, some people won't put children in classic minis because of the classic minis poor crash protection. If that bothers you greatly, then you probably shouldn't be driving a classic mini in the first place, but you should also be thinking about buying something with a high N-Cap rating too like a Renault or a Volvo, not just any old modern car.

Practicalities aside though, I'm of the opinion that parenthood changes your life so much that you really need something from your former life to cling onto in order to stop your identity from bring eroded completely. Also with a baby in the house you desperately need a distraction to get you away from all things baby. So if anything you'll need your mini now more than ever before! Plus kids love mini's, so if you sell then ultimately they'll be missing out too.

#15 jefinabox

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Posted 27 July 2013 - 01:11 PM

It's true that they love minis, my Daisy is hard to remove from mine.Attached File  13749306569011.jpg   156.37K   9 downloads




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