In spite of all your planning, there’s one thing that can ruin a family vacation in a hurry: losing or leaving behind a favorite stuffed animal. Vrbo has come to the teddy bear rescue with the new Vrbo Teddy Bear Service.

If you’re already halfway home from your family vacation when you finally discover that Mr. Teddy (or Sir Swan or Ellie the Elephant( has gone missing, don’t fret. Thanks to Vrbo’s new teddy bear hotline all you have to do is call 1-774-VRBOTDY or email TeddyBearHotline@vrbo.com to report a lost teddy or other item of sentimental value. Vrbo will then track down the lost stuffed animal and return it to you.

photo: Marina Shatskih via Unsplash

A survey conducted by Ipsos for Vrbo revealed that 55 percent of those surveyed said stuffed animals were the most important things kids brought with them on vacation and 69 percent said their child has left a toy or stuffed animal behind while away from home. Parents also admitted to the lengths they would go to replace that lost toy. Nearly half (48 percent) said they would buy a duplicate toy and pretend it was the original.

Luckily now parents won’t have to go such great lengths if they’ve booked a stay at a vacation home with Vrbo. “We know how easily teddies can get left behind under beds, in canoes, or in a vacation home’s best hide-and-seek spot,” said Melanie Fish, Vrbo travel expert. “Our goal is to make sure every teddy finds its way back home and to help kids and their families keep happy vacation memories fully intact.”

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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It looks like the Gaines family doesn’t have the market cornered when it comes to taking over the world, one lifestyle-branded step at a time. The Pioneer Woman, Ree Drummond, is a force to be reckoned with. And now she’s branching out into the sweet treat business!

Drummond recently announced, via Instagram, a brand-new eatery—featuring everyone’s fave summer-time treat. The post features a pic of Drummond’s son Bryce, his friend Kevin and a cherry-topped sundae, with the caption, “When you’re about to open an ice cream place in town, it helps to have teenage boys on hand to taste the sundaes.”

Between another upcoming cookbook, her successful Food Network show, boutique hotel, restaurant, pizza shop, dog treat line, bedding collection and cookware line, you’d think that Drummond’s plate is full. But apparently the Pioneer Woman has room for at least one more entrepreneurial idea.

While Drummond hasn’t released specifics, she did note (on her blog) that the ice cream shop’s name is to Pawhuska, Oklahoma soon (as in “later this week” and, “It might make you cry.” Sweet and sentimental? Yes please!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: The Pioneer Woman via Instagram 

 

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Valentine’s Day is just around the corner, and for many breastfeeding mothers—or new moms in general—that means wondering how to celebrate the most romantic day of the year. Should we hire a babysitter or just bring the baby to dinner with us? What should I wear (especially if I’m feeling a little less than stylish these days)? Having just delivered my third child (conveniently right before Valentine’s Day), I’ve learned a few things along the way about balancing a breastfeeding regimen while still finding time to spend with my partner. Here are a few of my sanity-saving tips for all you nursing (and soon-to-be nursing) mothers out there.

Try to Do This:

Embrace the Little Things to Keep the Spark
Life is hectic with a breastfeeding newborn and there’s just no way around it. You are often exhausted from feeding a hungry baby day and night, which can be a real romance killer. Instead of trying to recreate a Valentine’s Day reminiscent of the times you spent together before you started a family, rely on small gestures to display affection. Recreate your first wedding dance as a married couple in the comfort of your living room. Order take out from a restaurant you’ve been dying to try out. Feast on premium chocolates while you luxuriate in your comfiest robe and slippers. Whatever simple things bring you and your spouse joy, do them!

Dinner and a Movie… at Home
Babysitters are hard to come by on Valentine’s Day and are often booked weeks in advance. You may also be completely worn out from keeping up with your breastfeeding schedule along with the day-to-day tasks of running a household, so I find it’s best not to force a Valentine’s Day “occasion.” Cook dinner with your spouse, light some candles, fire up Netflix, and have a romantic evening for two on the couch.

Go with the Flow
There is nothing nursing moms understand more than to expect the unexpected. Even the best-laid preparations can be thrown into a tailspin with a newborn calling the shots, so be ready to go with the flow. Maybe your baby is especially fussy on Valentine’s Day, or a cold strikes during the most inopportune of times. Be ready to laugh off any roadblocks and know that you and your spouse can tackle anything together, including a non-traditional Valentine’s Day celebration.

Try Not to Do This:

Talk About the Kids
This may seem counterintuitive, as your whole life essentially revolves around their daily needs, but the Breastfeeding Resource Center recommends making your best effort to avoid talking about your breastfeeding newborn during your couples Valentine’s Day. Instead, take the time to concentrate on each other as it will give you both a mental break and allow you to reconnect as a couple before you started your family. As a breastfeeding mother, you deserve a night off and your significant other can agree!

Pressure Yourself to Celebrate on Valentine’s Day Itself
With reservations booked weeks in advance, I felt like I was forcing myself to celebrate on Valentine’s Day and felt like more than pressure than I needed. So, I came up with a solution: DON’T! My husband and I often set the occasion to the night after Valentine’s Day to avoid crowds and eliminate some stress out of the holiday.

It’s important to remember that Valentine’s Day doesn’t center around writing a sentimental card, buying flowers and digging into a box of chocolates. Celebrating unconditional love with your significant other, and the family it has grown into, is what the day is really about. So, treat yourself this holiday and take time with your one and only. You’ve earned it!

This post originally appeared on Imalac.
Rachael Sablotsky Kish
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Rachael Sablotsky Kish is the Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer of Imalac, a med-tech company which created Nurture, a hands-free breast massage system for nursing mothers that uses an attachable massage component to replicate hands-on pumping. Kish is a Certified Lactation Counselor (CLC), educating and training women on breastfeeding.

Happy Mother’s Day, new mamas! Now that Baby is here, you’re probably excited to revel in this special day, and while it’s a great day for moms with kids of all ages, we happen to know for certain that this first Mother’s Day is the very best. You might be covered in spit up and haven’t gotten a full night’s sleep in 9 months, but your first Mother’s Day is one you will cherish. Don’t believe us? We’ll prove it to you.

Photo by Paul Roth via Flickr

1. Sleep in.
Listen carefully, first time mommies: try as you might, you will not be able to sleep in on Mother’s Day (or any other day, really) for at least 10 more years. Next year, your toddler will be scurrying through the house, and no one can sleep through that. For years after, your little one will be too excited to celebrate your day that they will end up waking you up early. This year, this sacred first year, your partner just needs a bottle to keep your little one quiet for a few more hours so you can catch some shut eye. Enjoy it and sleep a few extra minutes for the rest of us.

Photo by tracyjuang via Flickr

2. Mimosas and brunch.
A few years from now, your preschooler will love making you breakfast in bed. You will love it too – it’s sweet, thoughtful and a rite of passage for mommies and kiddos. But the bacon will be crunchy, the eggs will be runny, the cereal will be full to spilling, and the yogurt will be in a tube. Your first Mother’s Day is the perfect chance to indulge in brunch cooked by someone else and mimosas that won’t get spilled on your nightstand.

Photo by surlygirl via Flickr

3. Welcome to the club.
The best part of your first Mother’s Day is that you are finally a part of the Mama Club. You spend your afternoon wishing your friends Happy Mother’s Day on Facebook and you finally understand why your parenting pals cry at those darn mom-centered commercials. Welcome to the club, Mom.

Photo by A. Strakey via Flickr

4. Baby snuggles.
No matter if you are a newborn lover or if you are excited to get past the crawling stage, your first Mother’s Day is full of guaranteed baby snuggles. In coming years, your lap will miss having a baby on it. Your preschooler might be affectionate, but he doesn’t fall asleep in your arms anymore. And let’s face it, your teenager won’t smell nearly as good as the baby you rock right now. Breathe it in this year, Mama.

Photo by Donnie Ray Jones

5. You are the star of the show.
Everyone is extra nice to you on your first Mother’s Day. The waitresses at the restaurant smile bigger, your husband is still in awe of your strength during labor. You, dear Mother, are the belle of the ball. Choose the restaurant, pick the traditions that will carry your family through this day for the next twenty years. You deserve it, after all. You grew a tiny human inside your body and pushed him right out. Everyone who encounters you should give you spirit fingers and high kicks. Live it up and soak it in.

Photo by clappstar via Flickr

6. Gifts without popsicle sticks.
Don’t get us wrong – your upcoming Mother’s Day will be full of the most sentimental and sweet gifts, think homemade cards with kindergarten handwriting. But it can be – ahem – difficult to find special places in your home to properly display these popsicle stick and pompon creations. Your first Mother’s Day will feature sentimental gifts that you dropped hints about to your husband. A necklace, a print to hang on your gallery wall, a gift certificate for a much needed pedicure and Target run. These, dear Mama, are gifts won’t cause you a major bout of Mommy guilt when you tuck them in your bottom drawer.

Photo by Sandor Weisz by Flickr

7. Your mom becomes more important.
Having a child brings your relationship with your own mother into focus a bit more. Whether you have an awesome mom or a bad one, you will find yourself thinking about her even more on your first Mother’s Day. Did she struggle, like you, when she decided to move you out of the bassinet and into the crib? Did she cry, like you, when your baby grew out of 6 month clothes? Did she, like you, tell her husband she was taking a shower but really sneak a roll of cookie dough into the bathroom to eat in peace? Call your mom and celebrate with her.

Photo by Lexi and Livi via Flickr

8. Project Runway.
On Mother’s Day, you have free reign to dress your baby exactly the way you want to. Put her in the biggest hair bow you can find, even if she doesn’t have any hair at all, and even if your husband hates it. Put him in a collared shirt and a pair of overalls that are super cute but super unrealistic during diaper changes. Heck, you can even pick out an outfit to coordinate with your baby. We are pretty sure that your husband will wear whatever you tell him to as well. Stretch your fashion imagination because next year your toddler will say that the collared shirt is scratchy and your preschooler will insist on wearing her Tinkerbell costume for the third week straight.

Photo by Clever Cupcakes via Flickr

9. Keep it low key.
Does all of this Mother’s Day planning give you hives? Or does your relationship with your own family keep you from feeling like you want to celebrate with them? Your first Mother’s Day gives you the perfect excuse to play it low key and skip out on the big hoopla – you have a baby scapegoat if you need it. Spend your day snuggling your little one and catching up on The Walking Dead instead of hitting up your in-law’s house for dinner. If they insist that you come, blame your absence on your wee one’s schedule. You can’t use that excuse for too much longer, as eventually they start talking – and tattling.

Photo by Theresa Martell via Flickr

10. The best is yet to come.
Being a mommy is amazing and it only gets better as you continue to get to know your baby. You’ll love watching your toddler conquer his fears of the playground slide and your preschooler gain confidence when he takes a swimming class all by himself. You will be proud when you watch your second grader be kind to a classmate and feel old when your teenager uses a term that you have to Google. But this year, your first Mother’s Day, you get to dream about what that relationship will be like, what your baby will grow up to be. It’s a sweet and optimistic place to be.

So Happy Mother’s Day to you, new mama. We hope you enjoy your day, whether it is full of quiche and mimosas or cookie dough and catching up with your DVR.

Tell us about your perfect Mother’s Day in a Comment.

–Haley Burress

Love is in the air! And these days, thanks to Pinterest, even in a lunchbox. To celebrate Valentine’s Day this year, send your little sweetheart to school with a sentimental surprise. Check out our list of favorites, from free printables to fun lunch accessories that you can use long after the holiday is over.

A Bento Full of Love
Blogger Wendolina built a loveable bento for her son Wyatt’s Valentine’s day lunch. On the menu: popcorn with pink sprinkles, a few heart candies, an apple with a heart-shaped chunk cutout and a heart-shaped piece of fruit leather, heart-shaped strawberries and heart-shaped sandwiches. Check it out in full at wendolina.com.

photo: Wendolina 

Heart-Shaped Food Picks
Been meaning to get your toe wet in the bento world? Consider these food picks your floaties. Stick them in sandwiches, cheese cubes or fruit for a low-maintenance makeover. And at $3.50 for a set of 30, it’s no big deal if a couple don’t make their way back home. Buy them from WHSupplies at etsy.com.

 photo: WHSupplies

Fruit Rollup Fortune Cookies
We want to high-five the genius who thought of this. Instructions are nice and clear, and it looks like it only takes a few minutes to make, too — a small price to pay for a creative sweet treat that your kiddo is sure to fall for. Grab the how-to at sheknows.com.

photo: She Knows

GoGo Squeez Wrappers
Leave it to GoGo Squeez to make lunchtime fun. Print out any of the free, deliciously punny designs (each matches a different GoGo Squeez flavor), cut and wrap around a pouch to give to your “main squeez.” Bonus: Each comes in a black-and-white version to color if you’re feeling extra crafty or want to involve baby sister or brother. Get the printables at liveplayfully.gogosqueez.com.

 photo: GoGo SqueeZ 

Owl Pillow Box
And here we thought that pillow boxes were just for weddings. Pinterest is chock-full of kid-friendly designs, including this Valentine’s Day owl made by Kiki and Company. Print the free template as an extra-special way to surprise your little love with special treats or homemade goodies. If owls aren’t your kid’s thing, this alligator or fox is equally irresistible. See them all at overthebigmoon.com.

 photo: Kiki and Company / Over the Big Moon

iPod Chocolate Bar Wrapper
Older kids who are too cool for cute are sure to drool over this iPod treat. Print and fold the free download and wrap around a chocolate bar for a tasteful way to let them know they’re loved. The only other material you need on hand is thread or floss, but you could easily forego the heart-shaped earbuds. Snag the download from the adorable blog artby angeli.blogspot.com.

 photo: Art by Angeli

Valentine’s Day Jokes
If your kid is more into LOLs than XOXOs, these free printable jokes are perfect. They’re also a last-minute mom’s best friend — just print, cut and throw in the lunchbox and you’re done. Our personal favorite: What do you call a very small Valentine? A Valentiny! Download other ha-has at overthebigmoon.com.

photo: Over the Big Moon

Sucre Shop Utensils
Even jazzing up small, overlooked items—like utensils—makes a big difference come lunchtime. Order this set of 20 as spoons, forks, or a mix of both, or opt for the more subtle double heart mini spoons or hipster-worthy arrow forks or spoons. Keep your wallet close; this website is pretty dangerous. Buy them for $12/set of 20 at sucreshop.com.

 photo: Sucre Shop

 

What kind of surprise will you put in your kiddo’s lunchbox? Spill the details in the Comments!

— Selena Kohng

Big Audio World, made up of a collective of Portland musicians and other seasoned pros, just released a new children’s album, The Peculiar Tales of the S.S. Bungalow. The nautical-themed album offers a stellar production filled with rich vocals, catchy tunes, inventive storytelling and plenty of life lessons for kids along the way.

photo: The Peculiar Tales of the S.S. Bungalow album cover, by Magmatic Northwest

The album opens with the sights and sounds of a fisherman’s market, where people are invited to step inside The Museum of Maritime Wonderments and Nautical Oddidies. Listeners are then transported back in time to the story of Sleepytime Gregory, a struggling fisherman who discovers a treasure map. In no time flat, the captain, his best friend Toothpick and pet beagle, Tater-Tot, prepare to set sail on a grand sea voyage across the Atlantic Ocean, headed to the Lullaby Islands in search of treasure.

Along their journey, the crew transforms the fisherman’s old, wooden boat into the S.S. Bungalow, say good-bye to friends, make new friends and discovers how powerful a beagle’s nose (and appetite) can be. Songs about obstacles, riddles and legends carry the listener through the album until the end, where an albatross leads them to meet the Lullabeans on the islands where Monsters Never Sleep. It is here that they uncover the treasure that’s more powerful than gold.

photo: Big Audio World by Magmatic Northwest

Creators, Laki Karavias (founder of Magmatic Northwest creative studio), and singer-songwriter Jason Reuter, selected the musicians from Portland and a nationwide talent pool, including narration by Kevin Barbare, instrumentals and vocals with Eric Earley, from Blitzentrapper, as well as songs sung by gospel singer, Liz Vice. Instruments on some of the songs include a washboard, fiddle and spoons.

Most of the album is mellow, but a few tunes keep it lively, like Swab the Deck, Sleepytime Greg, This Island Life and Life Is Good. Fair warning, if you have a little one who is having a sensitive day, you may be able to avoid additional tears by skipping the song, Aquinas, and save it for another time. The song is a sentimental number about saying goodbye to a pet fish who passes.  It is a beautiful song though and, if you do happen to hear it, just be ready for the conversation.

Unlike some other kids’ albums that might grate on your nerves from the moment you hit the play button, The Peculiar Tales of the S.S. Bungalow is pleasant to listen to all the way through and would make a nice addition to a family road trip or during a play date where it can be heard in its entirety.

The Peculiar Tales of the S.S. Bungalow is available on iTunes, AmazonCD Baby and ssbungalow.com, and is also being released this month as a two-CD, illustrated digi-pack, at places around town, including Green Bean Books. The digi-pack includes one CD with the story, punctuated by music, the second CD is just the music.

Have you heard the album yet?  Let us know in the Comments below!

-Suzie Ridgway