Gusto wrote:Looks great.
It looks as though it might be handy with a hand controlled brake on for the person/workhorse too. And walking Poles would surely help too.
forest wrote: Even though nappies will be a pain, for day walks your can just deal with it. I'd imagine on a multi day walk they would stack up.
I could just imagine a #3 baby poop (you know, the explosive ones that go everywhere) all over the back for a few days.... nice.
puredingo wrote:Now get yourself two well trained Huskies and you'll rteally be in business.
igor wrote:after several months of extensive pram usage decided to post some more thoughts about walking in the bush with really small kids (3+ months).
First of - absolutely no way one can do this kind of trips that we do regularly on weekends covering 30-35 km in 8 hrs.
This typically involves about 6-6.5 hrs actual walking and 1-1.5 resting because of the baby wanting to stretch, eat, play etc.
No way any mom can carry a baby when it is 30 degrees, sunny and flies are just going mad.
The pram allows a baby to sit inside comfortably with no direct sunlight and not a single fly/mosquito bothering.
During the last few months we've done closer to 1000 km of walking and riding with the pram. No complains at all. We've crossed little creeks under a pouring rain, climbed rather steep hills, even managed to pass 6 Foot Track in one day - that was really hard as there was a lot of sections with steps, tree roots and boulders. Most of the time baby sleeps quite comfortably inside or watches the scenery playing with her dolls.
The alternative for active mother is really bleak - staying at home, slow walking in park paths for maybe one hour when it's not too hot. That is sad.
Pongo wrote:, somewhere on the trail she popped her hip and continued to run on it, not a whimper, never slowed down (it eventually popped back in, as it tends to do), boy was she sore for the next few days though.
.
Onestepmore wrote:!!!
Have you ever tried to reduce a luxated hip, in an anesthetised dog??
I politely think a muscle strain or similar was more likely
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