We’re Huggies® Pull-Ups® Ambassadors!

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Whoop whoop - the end of nappies is finally in sight!

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Dexter was almost 3 when he finally figured out that the potty wasn’t a makeshift garage for his micro machines. I was eventually ‘shamed’ into stepping up my game when Craig and I attended his nursery prior to him starting. I naively asked whether we had to provide our own nappies and was met by sniggers and raised eyebrows; “Well, hopefully he’ll be trained by the time he starts” said his teacher.

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There followed a chaotic few weeks with a bare-bummed Dexter. He was very slow to talk so it was hard to tell what was going in, and he found it tricky to communicate when he needed to go. Hundreds of accidents later, he was finally semi-dry. Although I later found out he was holding in his No1s and was refusing to use the nursery toilets, he was eventually coaxed in by an attentive teacher who would decorate a cubicle with Fireman Sam toys to relieve Dexter’s anxiety.

At 4, he’s now dry throughout the day. He’ll still go to bed every night with a pull-up, and it’s hit or miss whether he wees in it or not. The hope is, we can finally move him on so he can wear big boy pants to bed.

Heidi is an altogether different story. This kid amazes me with the speed in which she’s hitting milestones. Walking at 9 months, now nattering at 2, she’s very fascinated by the potty. She is beginning to verbalise when she needs to go for a wee, and hates wearing nappies or being changed. In fact, she’ll often whip off her nappy and find somewhere cosy to relieve herself. It seems that she is craving the independence that potty training provides, and she’s had the odd success round grandmas that we’re desperate to replicate at home.

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Don’t get me wrong, I’m not expecting an easy-ride. She’s willful, stubborn and drinks her own body weight in water every day. It’s going to be a long old journey but one which will hopefully showcase just what an sweet, beautiful and clever little girl we’re raising.

What to expect from us as Huggies® Pull-Ups® ambassadors

As Huggies® Pull-Ups® ambassadors we’re excited to bring you a video diary of our progress training Heidi from scratch and helping Dex get over the final hurdle. I suspect you’ll see some epic fails, an exasperated mummy and plenty of floor-wiping on our journey. Craig and I will also do some post-bedtime debriefs (beers in hand) as we go over the days events. All the while, we’ll be supported by Huggies who have developed their 6 Steps to Potty Success in partnership with renowned child psychologist, Dr Heather Wittenberg who celebrates toilet training as a signature developmental achievement of toddlers.

It also means I can bring you news of exciting promotions from Huggies. In fact, at this very moment you can grab your Pull-Ups from ASDA stores nationwide at only £2 per pack!

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Joining us on our adventures are some other top class bloggers - all at different stages in the potty training journey. Keep an eye on our blogs & YouTube channels for tips, slip-ups and plenty of giggles:

Ghostwriter Mummy / Odd Socks and Lollipops / Hello Archie / Mummy Tries / Chelsea Mamma Along Came Cherry / The L’s Mum / Life Unexpected

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Re-imagining parenthood - at least my children won’t ever sign up for Love Island

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I’m 99.9% sure I won’t be winning any parenting awards any time soon. Dexter (4) and Heidi (2) are hard work, so the thought of adding paint, crayons even water to the mix makes messy play a no-no in our house. I leave all the dirty work to Dexter’s nursery play leaders and my God those women deserve medals. If I was left in charge of 20x children for just an hour, I’d be rocking back and forth in the toilets swigging gin.

In fact, my two can be downright unruly. We get through around 7 plasters a week in our house and my two would happily knock the crap out of each other over the iPad. They’re not bad children by any means, they’re just at that age where the thought of sharing Avengers Mashers sends them into a blind panic.

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Then there are dinnertimes. Dinnertimes have me knocking back Co-codamol faster than it takes my daughter to wee on the bathroom floor after a soak in the tub. My son has a real aversion to food (all food, not just fruit and vegetables) and we’re guaranteed several tantrums if we have the audacity to read his mind incorrectly and serve fish fingers rather than pizza.

Moving onto bedtimes - these should-be-serene adult times are all too often hijacked by our little night-time ninjas. In fact, Heidi has been affectionately dubbed The Punisher in our home. I truly believe she’s capable of elicting secrets for Our Majesty’s Secret Service; one night with Heidi and sleep deprivation will have you coughing up all your darkest and shadiest deeds.

I can’t remember the last time I slept in my bed without a nappy-clad bum in my face - I consider myself lucky if I don’t wake up beside wee-soaked bedsheets. If you are reading this and thinking what an ungrateful mother I am, don’t worry, the chances of adding us to our brood are made near impossible thanks to our little passion killers Dexter and Heidi. They’ve even started screaming at us if they see us having a cheeky snog in the kitchen.

I’m sure you’ve read many a similar article before where the author will sign off with some twee comment about “not changing anything for the world”, but exhaustion has a way of forcing honesty out of me. I would change lots of things.

I’d rebuild my entire personality - I’d add in healthy slops of patience, self-control and cheerfulness. I’d get rid of this shitty bi-polar and remove any social awkwardness so I could ask for help when I need it. I’d switch up a few of my decisions and have spent more of my youth on practical life skills like learning to drive and cook before becoming a mummy. If we’re going the whole hog and I could change anything, I’d do away with a few excess inches off my bum and boobs too.

As regards my little people, I’d do lots of thing differently if I had the opportunity again. I would serve one meal for the entire family and adopt the “like it or lump it” attitude that better mothers than I have long since used on their toddlers. I would never have given into my daughter’s 3am screaming, and made a rod for my own back by dishing out night-time bottles. I’d stop using gin as a crutch to make it through an evening. And if reality could be altered, I’d have had a volume and sleep switch implanted when they were growing inside my womb.

Yet there are worse things than being a shattered parent, even a reluctant one. Like being a useless one.

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Somehow I still manage to read them a few books every night, and they’re crashing through milestones at an alarming rate. They are also capable of moments of such breathtaking loveliness - Dexter likes to hold my hand whilst he drifts off to sleep, and Heidi doles out up to 15 kisses in a row if she’s feeling generous. Despite resenting the state of my kitchen, my garden… my social life… we sort of mesh together as a family and I can definitely see us all enjoying each other’s company when we’re older. We’ll be like that Jewish family off Gogglebox.

And if I’m feeling particularly useless, I’ll reassure myself with the knowledge that my children will never sign up for Love Island and get their bits out for the nation to see. I know they won’t make a fool of themselves and audition for Big Brother either - afterall let’s face it, they’re bound to take after their rather flabby and cynical mother. Yes. There’s always that.


Why every household could use a Nilfisk Compact Powergrip pressure washer

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For me a pressure washer immediately conjures images of a cumbersome unwieldy machine sat in some 40 year old man’s garage. It gets an outing every 3 months or so when football season is over, where it’ll blast away dirt from a station wagon sat on the driveway.

But I’m wrong. So wrong. The Nilfisk Compact Powergrip pressure washer promises so much more than that. Resembling a small gardening trolley, this is lightweight and easy to pull from chore to chore, and its revolutionary feather-touch pressure settings take care of so much more than cars and caravans.

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In fact, before undertaking this review I checked out a few reviews online and found many of them to be written by women. They’d found the Nilfisk a game-changer for so many “softer” yet no less dirty and time-consuming jobs - everything from hosing down wellies, to blasting dog poo from pushchair wheels.

It was a no-brainer for me. Craig has (albeit minor) OCD and will spend hours scrubbing things at the weekend - whether that’s removing hand-prints from the conservatory doors, or buffing the BBQ ready for sunnier days - if this pressure washer works as well as the hype suggests, this could become a real time-saver for us.

The spec

The New Nilfisk Powergrip 130 Pressure Washer with PowerGrip technology that enables you to control water flow and power usage at your fingertips. You can now adjust the cleaning power to suit the surface you’re cleaning directly from the spray gun handle. Making it easy not to use much power when a gentler cleaning action would be enough. The Nilfisk PowerGrip high-pressure washer puts 7 levels of cleaning power at your fingertips.

The website will tell you this model is used for low intensity routine cleaning tasks. Yet we’re not talking a quick burst of water pressure here, this bad boy is capable of big things. Their latest campaign #LoveYourStuffAgain has seen people blasting all manner of things home, garden and beyond, and I couldn’t wait to get in on the action.

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So how did we get on?

I left Craig and his dad to put this together. Most of it was self-explantory, requiring little more than slotting or screwing things into place. However, sat in the kitchen with a glass of wine, I did hear a little huffing and puffing before they located the picture instructions on the hefty manual. This brings me to my first niggle with the machine - as the model we were sent is manufactured in Denmark, the hose adaptor wasn’t suitable for our outside tap - although the correct adaptor cost us just £2.29 from Clas Ohlson, it’s worth mentioning in case you’re in a hurry to use it straight out of the box. On this point, you can simply use a water butt for quick tasks rather than attaching to a tap, but be aware that a deep clean of anything bigger than a hiking boot will need a fair old bit of water.

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It’s a mobile cold-water system so is fully portable with a 10m steel-reinforced hose. This means you can trail it away from your water source for quite some distance - to your front driveaway for example. When you have it where you need it, it’ll stand unsupported so you’re hands-free to operate it.

So, as soon as the boys had built it, I took it for a quick tour of my garden to test just how easy it was for women to pull into position (this isn’t intended to be disparaging to women, I know that most women are equal to men in every way - I just usually defer more strenuous tasks to Craigy). In short, I was struck by how lightweight and unwieldy it was and found it easy to pop into position. I will point out I wasn’t such a fan of the reel however. This will keep the 10m steel reinforced hose tidy, and allow you to feed out the exact length so the excess doesn’t become a trip hazard. I’d have prefered a reel you can just pull to release more hose, but this required manually unreeling using a handle. I found this a little temperamental and fussy.

Yet, let’s face it, all of this isn’t important. It’s all about how well it cleans. And this is a pleasure to use. In fact, I’d go so far as to say it’s quite therapeutic to swing this bad boy around and watch all that muckiness disappear before your very eyes. Water power alone can revive most gardens, sheds and decking, without the need for nasty chemicals, although you can add a little detergent to an integrated bottle and press a button to add a squirt into the mix.

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We’ve found ourselves using our Nilfisk for everything. From hosing down the kids Little Tikes hoard in the garden (from cars, to summer houses, to sandpits), to blasting away moss from inbetween patio slabs, to de-muddying wellies and pushchair wheels. Owing to the wealth of settings on the Powergrip, you can adjust the water compact with ease. Water pressure setting are located on the hose itself, and you can twist the squirty bit of the Powergrip for a wider spray. This means you don’t have to go back to the unit and can simply dash from task to task without fussing over complicated settings.

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It does however get a little more technical. It comes with a number of accessories - some of which we were left scratching our heads at. Some of these look like broom heads, others like shower heads etc. We’re yet to fully explore these and prefer the traditional point and shoot head. It is good to have this flexibility however as I imagine some jobs require a more delicate head - especially if you have an super expensive car.

In summary, we’d be lost without this bit of kit. I can’t quite think how we ever coped without it. A post BBQ scrub would usually take half an hour with a few expletives thrown in for good measure, now it’s a five minute blast. Dog poo on my pushchair wheels would have ordinarily sent me flying into some kind of Facebook rage and seen me dry heaving into the nearest plant pot - now it’s a thirty second squirt with a tiny bit of washing up liquid. Although I used this tentatively at first, over time it’s become pretty apparent you can crank up the pressure without worrying about chipped paint and piercing tyres.

The average dirt-conscious parent will find a multitude of uses for this pressure washer, and find it an absolute breeze to use. That’s not to mention the £10 per fortnight saving you’ll make by swerving the car wash. With Father’s Day around the corner, I’m backing the #LoveYourStuffAgain campaign and would encourage everyone to invest in a Nilfisk Compact Powergrip.

Find out more at on the Nilfisk consumer website, and buy from retailers such as Argos (RRP for our Compact system is £229.99 although other lines are available) . To check out what others are saying, head over to social media:

Facebook: @NilfiskHomeGardenUK / Twitter: @NilfiskHomeUK / YouTube: @NilfiskConsumerUK

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