unclehobart
New Member
Dude... fly.
Inkara1 said:*sopt-checks Expedia for a flight leaving Friday, August 13, 2004 from LAX to ATL, and returning on Tuesday, August 17* Hmm... cheapest round-trip they got is $363... *ckecks again, same days, leaving from San Luis Obispo so I don't have to drive 4 hours to LAX and pay big to long-term park the car* ...cheapest is $506.
Hmm... I'll have to think about this. If I can get my car to average 30 miles to the gallon (I think I can do it if it's all freeway miles), and figure gas at $2.15 a gallon, for a 2400 mile trip one way... gas for the round-trip would cost $344.
Of course, if this were near a holiday airfare would probably go up a good bit. I think knowing the date of the get-together would play a big part in whether I fly and bug one of you for a ride from and to the airport, or if I drive. No telling how much they would want to rent me a car since I won't be 25 yet.
That's why I keep pushing for a date after mid-June. I'll have a week of paid vacation time... so it wouldn't be cash out of my pocket, and I need that cash in my pocket.unclehobart said:Another hidden cost a lost week to sheer driving. Time away from work is cash out of the pocket.
HomeLAN said:Lots of hidden costs to driving that distance. Wear-and tear issues among them.
MrBishop said:I'm already feeling it. I get to pack JAG into a car right after work and drive (just me and him) to Petawawa..which is normally a 4hour drive, but will end up being a 5 - 5 1/2 hour drive before its over. Then...I have to deal with 2 nights (without the benefit of breastfeeding), two days and a trip back. :shiver:
Leslie said:a couple of mine did.
at that age though, a couple nights away might actually be a good point to break it if the wifey is ready.
Professur said:The usual is to cut them off when the teeth break. If you don't, you risk them having their teeth rot. Drinking milk might give them strong bones and teeth. But sleeping all night with milk around their gums sure doesn't.
SourceAny amount of breastfeeding is good. Breastfeeding for the first year of life is best, but even a few weeks of breastfeeding is better than none.
Breastfed babies have fewer allergies, less constipation or diarrhea, and less stomach upsets.
Babies who receive breastmilk for the first four months of life have 50% fewer ear infections than infants who receive formula. It is especially beneficial to give the baby breastmilk during the first six months of life while the gastrointestinal tract is maturing.
The breastfeeding mother also benefits. Women who breastfeed lower their risk of ovarian and breast cancer. Adults who were breastfed as infants have less risk of developing diabetes and heart disease.
Ideally, breastfeeding should continue throughout the first year of life. However, the nutritional and psychological benefits continue beyond the first year. It is up to each mother to decide when to wean. World wide, the average age for weaning is four years
MrBishop said:Hunh? Saliva...say it with me...saliva. Washes away milk in the mouth, helps digest that which it doesn't wash away.
Professur said:V2.0's teeth. Say it with me. V2.0's non-existant, gum line rotten teeth.
Baby bottle syndrome. Say it with me. Baby bottle syndrome.
Nursing bottle cavities occur when an infant is allowed to fall asleep with a bottle in his or her mouth
MrBishop said:There's a reason that it's called Baby-bottle syndrome and not breast-feeding syndrome.
The usual is to cut them off when the teeth break