Tommee Tippee Digital Video Monitor Review

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Tommee Tippee Grey Logo

I’ll admit that we didn’t bother with a baby monitor for Dexter. As per the usual advice, he stayed in our bedroom with us for the first few months, then graduated to his own room when we felt confident he’d sleep through the night. We lived in a two bedroom flat with his nursery located neatly between our lounge and our master bedroom so we were always able to hear him cry (and trust me, he cried a lot).

We did have a Angelcare system, but the sleep pad bugged the hell out of me, and I was constantly unplugging the device as the lights kept waking me up. In any case, due to the layout of our home, it felt like overkill.

Tommee Tippee Baby Monitor

With Heidi however we’ve found a baby monitor invaluable. Now we’ve moved into a large three bedroom house, there’s more distance between us and her when she sleeps so we’re not always able to hear her easily. Add into the mix an over-excited toddler who seems a little confused as to whether he loves or hates his baby sister, I also can’t have the two children in the same room as one another or he’ll be apt to smother her in kisses… or her blanket.

The Tommee Tippee Digital Video Baby Monitor with Sensor Pad has therefore been a godsend.

This monitor is literally rammed with features:

  • Infrared night vision camera
  • Movement sensor pad
  • Adjustable sensitivity settings
  • 3” colour screen
  • Baby’s room temperature display
  • Up to 300m range with out-of-range indicator
  • Two-way talk back
  • Pager to find missing parent unit
  • Baby night light controllable from parent unit
  • Channel auto-select

The camera on this monitor is among the best I’ve used. The images on the screen are so clear, even in the pitch black (in daylight, the video is colour, switching to infrared when it gets dark). It’s also much simpler to position the camera unit to get a good angle of Heidi as you can tilt the camera up and down freely (with other systems, I’ve either had to pop the camera within the cot itself, on a bedside unit, or lower than the cot mattress). Given Heidi’s nursery is weeny with little furniture, Tommee Tippee’s camera is therefore ideal as it can live atop her windowsill.

Camera Unit Tommee Tippee Baby Monitor

Once the camera is aligned, and you’ve set the monitor up (see the above video) you simply press the ‘on’ switch on both units.

TIP: don’t turn the camera on with the parent unit in the same room, the feedback will wake baby.

You’ll be able to view baby as she peacefully sleeps from any other room in your home. There’s also an option to zoom in a little if you’re not 100% certain she’s awake and needs her mummy. If baby makes a noise (you control the sensitivity) the unit immediately springs to life and you’ll be able to hear her through the parent unit. If she’s having a right paddy and needs a little reassurance, there’s a two way talk-back option on the parent monitor that allows you to whisper that you’re on your way.

Tommee Tippee Digital Monitor

I’m also a big fan of the temperature indicator (there’s a display on both units). We previously used a Gro-egg for this but I’m not convinced on its accuracy. I’m terrible at gauging temperatures so find it reassuring to know that her room is comfortably ventilated.

Additionally there’s a nightlight function (low, medium and high settings) on the camera that negates any need for additional lighting in the nursery. This is ideal for Heidi who has only just moved into her big girl room away from mummy and daddy.

Zoom on Tommee Tippee Video Monitor

To be honest, we rarely bother with the sensor pad. Heidi is a real wriggler and does 360 rotations and covers every inch of her cotbed with baby drool every night. The detachable sensor pad has 3 settings (low, medium and high) and slots comfortably under baby’s mattress. You can opt to monitor baby soundlessly (a little light will flicker to reassure you baby is breathing) or choose to hear her. It will sound an alarm on the parents unit if no movement is detected from baby after 20 seconds. Although there’s little danger of this with my little gymnast, I can be a little forgetful at 2am, 3am and 4am (thanks Heidi) and have forgotten to turn the feature off a few times. This has woken up Craigy who was none too pleased.

I can see the benefit of the feature though. For anxious parents it adds another dimension of reassurance. Baby monitors have certainly come a long way since the days of old, and sensor pads are generally regarded as the ultimate in baby safety. Reading around the web to check out other parent’s opinions, they get 5 stars from parents whose children are asthmatic or have breathing difficulties. There are inevitably a few reported instances of it going off for no reason (or indeed, baby rolling off the pad), but I’m sure any parent would agree this is preferable to sleeping through when your baby is in trouble.

Finally, there’s rechargable batteries in both units. Whilst running on the mains, you’re also charging up the units, ready to be used mains-free later on. This makes it the perfect option for taking on trips and holidays where your plug sockets might be poorly located.

The Tommee Tippee Digital Video Monitor is available to buy from most major UK retailers at an RRP of £199.99. I appreciate this is a fairly significant investment for any cash-strapped parent, but it is competitively priced if you compare it with other brand’s best-in-range monitors (Angelcare’s AC1100 Video, Movement & Sound Monitor is £249.99). It’s certainly given me peace of mind, and you cannot put a price on that.

To find out more, or buy directly from Tommee Tippee, head over to TT’s website. Tommee Tippee will also be more than happy to answer any questions you might have over Twitter or Facebook. Of course, I’m also more than happy to discuss any aspect of the monitor with you if you leave a comment on this post.

 


A Gale Force Makeover and Near Miss!

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Last week I did something very stupid. I looked in our kitchen cupboards and decided we didn’t quite have the supplies we need for Christmas, and set off with the little guy into the nearest village on foot (I don’t drive). This is despite me being warned by my doctor to rest up my enormous baby bump, and despite the fact that BBC News had been banging on about storms all week. It looked nice enough out of the window so I thought it was worth the risk to save Craig having to brave the supermarket before Christmas. Hmm - not one of my finest decisions.

I can now testify that although I have the most comfortable riding boots in the entire world, they are definitely not waterproof. Nor is the cheap liquid eyeliner I’ve been wearing for the last few months. Luckily Dexter had a rain cover to keep him getting wet, but judging by his screams the sound of the wind and rain beating on the plastic was still terrifying. We had a hill that might well have been Everest to descend on the way back and the wind was constantly threatening to pull the pushchair from my death grip. My coat was warm and cosy but doesn’t quite stretch round the bump either so baby girl was probably wondering what the chill was inside her ordinarily snug cocoon.

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Image courtesy of BBC News: More storms are forecast this week

That walk, normally just fifteen minutes, took us almost an hour. By the time I got us home and liberated Dexter from the McClaren, I looked like a suicidal goth, and he was traumatized in a way that only an hour of CBeebies could fix. My nerves were equally shot as we’d come very close to a serious accident that day.

Halfway up the hill, we’d witnessed a nasty car crash. Obviously in a rush to get home, a car had gone speeding down the hill past us and misjudged the bend in the road. It went headfirst into a parked car and spun around into oncoming traffic. Luckily, the other traffic on the road has made allowances for the weather and the collision was low impact. Despite everyone seeming to be okay, it was a bit of a shock with bits of cars strewn across the pavement a matter of yards in front of us. The incident had been a purely visual affair as we had struggled to hear anything over the noise of the wind.

Although Dexter and I were entirely unscathed it certainly makes you think how lucky we’d been. If we’d have been making slightly better time and not fighting the storm, we’d have been level with the parked car and might have been hit by all the debris. Dexter would have had a flimsy rain cover to protect him, bump had little more than a sweater, and I’m the one responsible for them both. I didn’t stop thinking about it all that night.

The lesson? I ignored all those weather warnings, and I put my babies at risk trying to take on more than was necessary. It’s never worth taking small children (even those who haven’t experienced a second outside of your belly yet) out in a storm.

There’s every chance this shocking weather of ours has resulted in a dozen personal injury claims, and worse still. Don’t let yourself become a statistic and stay in.

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Dear Dexie

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This is wayyyy overdue. I haven’t written a proper update on your progress for months - and there is simply so much to say.

You are now nearly 9 months and growing up so fast. You’re beginning to look so much more like me in the face. You have your daddy’s chin and ears, but your eyes, nose and cheeks are definitely mummy’s. You’re just about growing out of 6-9 months clothing and are therefore exactly on course. We’ve moved you up to Pampers Dry Fit 4.5 - as you’re on the move we need to ensure you’ve got plenty of room to avoid little accidents.

You’re now managing to get around - using sheer determination rather than any actual skill. You pull yourself around with your arms and your little leggies are forced to come along for the journey. You don’t seem in too much of a rush to use your knees yet, but it can’t be too long before you perfect the move.

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This rubbish attempt at crawling allows you to traverse the room in a matter of minutes. You’ve been using this newfound freedom to explore the house, which is incredibly cute but a little terrifying at the same time. You have a bit of a kitchen obsession and I’ve caught you messing around with the mop and rummaging through the recycling box. You’ve also got a strange habit of seeking out wires and will therefore bypass a rug full of toys to get at the back of the television. Black and white are your favourite colours so I have to hide daddy’s trainers, iPhone charger, mobile phones and other things I don’t want you putting in your mouth.

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You’re now regularly saying “mama” and “dada” but you won’t do it on command so only mummy and daddy have witnessed it. You can’t connect these words with us yet so you use them to tell us you’re hungry, had enough of bath-time, or are tired… I can’t wait to hold a conversation with you and teach you all about the world around you.

You still love splashing in the bath, music, and being tickled. You’re also ridiculously vain and one look in the mirror will stop a tantrum in its tracks. Some of my favourite pictures have been of you posing in front of the mirror.

Weaning is going well and you’ll eat literally everything we put in front of you. We’re trying you on Petits Filous, Dairylea, and real fruit now (banana is your all-time favourite) and you’re finding it all very exciting. We still can’t get you interested in water or fruit juice though, and you’re finding it hard to get your around sippy cups; I reckon you’re playing us for fools though as one day you’ll drink from them just fine, the next you’re flinging them across the room.

You’re still a massive fan of napping and we’ve bumped these up to 2 a day (totalling a whooping 3 hours) - I’ve put this down to you getting tired more easily as you’re more mobile. With all the chasing you around - I often feel like doing the same!

I’ve been so sad recently having lost your baby brother or sister. When mummy fell pregnant we were so excited; buying baby name books and imagining our lives as a family of four. When I started bleeding the day after New Year, I felt so angry and devastated. Our baby was almost 12 weeks old.

For weeks I was so lost in my own personal denial, grief and hope that I missed my own 30th birthday, and have been hiding away from friends and family - this has meant we’ve only had each other (and daddy) for company for almost a month. I’m still reminded of it everyday, but things are slowly getting easier. I promise this month we’ll open our curtains again and let the light in - it’s time for us all to move on and be thankful. Soon my body will allow mummy and daddy to try again and we will. You’ll make such a beautiful brother.

Mummy and daddy are so incredibly proud of you and love seeing you grow into such a sweet and happy little boy. We might have the odd day when you’re unsettled (yesterday was a prime example when you screamed for hours when mummy was having a catch-up with her best friend over a glass of wine - I was embarrassed and desperate in equal measure) - but I couldn’t love you any more than I do. We’re so blessed to have you, and will go to the ends of the earth for you.

Love Mummy xx

Whilst writing this post, I’m reminded of another 9-month-old baby, who grew her wings last weekend. Matilda-Mae was the most beautiful little girl of a fellow blogger who devastatingly passed away in her cot at exactly 9 months. I am consumed with sadness and grief for her parents Jennie and David - there are simply no words to describe how they must be feeling.

I’m so proud be a member of such a wonderfully caring community who have all sent messages of love, sympathy and support to Jennie. Although there is simply nothing we can do to take away her sadness, I hope Jennie will take some comfort in the fact that we are all thinking of her, and sending her and her family thoughts of faith, strength and courage.

I won’t be promoting this post out of respect for her.

 

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