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emz
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Topic: Really worried about him biting the cot.. Posted: 03 November 2008 at 7:04pm |
Hi all, I thought I would put this in here so I can get a bit more advice than just in the bubs thread.
Jack is teething (yet again - already have 8 teeth and now 2 more are trying to get through) and he always teeths quite badly. Anyway, I noticed yesterday there were bite marks on each end of his cot which I knew would appear eventually, so I didn't care (although would prefer him to use the teething pads on the sides lol)
But.. my boy loves anything hard when teething and I found today he has taken huge chunks out of the wood on the cot!  He's swallowed god knows how much of it and I found large pieces (up to 3cm long and .5cm wide) in his mouth at various times. I'm really upset cos I don't know if he'll keep on doing it and one day get a bit stuck (god forbid) and its a brand new cot so I didn't think it should do this (maybe that's just being naive). I know he has a strong bite on him, but what can I do?
I've wrapped blankets around either end and tied firmly with string to move them, but I noticed he's also getting near the teething strips and biting the wood there (must feel good I guess). Seeing as he spends a lot of time in the cot it makes it really difficult, but now I'm paranoid he's going to get hurt or worse. Is this normal? What should I do? Should I ring baby factory (where I got it from) and ask them about it (like is the paint OK to be ingested in those doses?) I'm really worried (in case you haven't got that already) that he's going to get a piece lodged somewhere inside him.
So yeah, advice/recommendations or something please! I really didn't think that cots should be able to be eaten so easily, it seems so damn dangerous (oh and the cot's pine with white paint so I thought it would be quite hardy).
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kebakat
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 7:06pm |
Daniels cot is pine with white paint. Most of the paint is gone on the top of the side rails. I don't think any of the wood has gone. I'm not worried about it.
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emz
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 7:17pm |
Yeah I'm just worried about the big bits of wood he's actually eating
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miss
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 7:21pm |
Lily has taken a couple of chunks out of hers. Yours sounds pretty bad though! I wouldn't worry about the paint, if it new then the paint is safe.
What about tying bubble wrap around the exposed wood, more manageable than blankets.
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BuzzyBee
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 7:26pm |
Lucas has chewed away nearly both ends of the cot and he's still alive  ....and when I say chewed away I mean DEEP DEEP gaping holes where he's been at it. I'd often wake of a night time to the sound of him chewing away at it ...
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busymum
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 7:42pm |
LOL the mental pictures I am getting are pretty funny! But I'd be worried about the choking hazard of the wood, too. Is it possible for you to limit the amount of time he spends in his cot, awake? That's all I can think of
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emz
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 8:41pm |
I try to but some days he's quite happy to just 'rest' in his cot for 40+ minutes instead of sleeping. I have tied the blankets on so hopefully that will help, just wish I'd done it before he ruined the lovely cot lol
I just assumed, obviously naively, that cots would be made to a standard that kids wouldn't be able to bite chunks of wood off them.
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BuzzyBee
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 9:02pm |
What perplexes me is that they go to lengths to put teething rails on the sides and claim that they comply with this safety standard and that safety standard, but what about the ends of the cot? Thats where they tend to run to and knaw at ....
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.Mel
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 9:13pm |
Go to Baby Factory and buy the plastic strips that you can put on top of the rails etc. If not get a bumper and tie that to the top.
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cuppatea
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 9:41pm |
Wow he must be a big biter to take chunks out. The blankets is probably the best idea, or the bumpers as someone suggested as I doubt he would like either of those in his mouth and hopefully it will deter him. I would be in contact with baby factory though cos that seems pretty poor to me. Spencer's cot is also pine and painted white and he has made dents in it but no paint or chunks of wood have come away.
The paint on kiddies stuff has to be safe though, so as long as it complied with nz standards you should be fine (and coming from baby factory I would be surprised if it didn't).
Could you also maybe attach something to the inside of his cot for him to chew on? Like tie a teething toy on to the side so that he can't throw it out.
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Shezamumof3
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Posted: 03 November 2008 at 11:29pm |
yeah I reckon the blanket is your bet bet....so he cant get to the wood. And if you are worried about him chewing the bars aswell then you could put a bumper round the cot while he is in there?
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Bizzy
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Posted: 04 November 2008 at 7:57am |
can you give him something else to chew on instead?
i wouldnt have thought it acceptable for big chunks to be chewed off by a baby so i would also perhaps talk to the baby factory... my cot has gnaw marks on it but there is no way they could have bitten off wood!
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Bel
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Posted: 04 November 2008 at 8:39am |
Yeah I would be talking to Baby Factory or manufacturer, because I don't think that he should be able to bite chunks off - that is definitely a safety hazard.
Other than that, I guess the blankets etc are your best bet.
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Luke (09.11.2007)
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emz
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Posted: 04 November 2008 at 9:39am |
Thanks for the suggestions guys - I will ring the Baby Factory today and enquire about standards etc. Yes he's got a strong bite but he's only 9 months so he wouldn't be any worse than say a 18 month old in the teeth stakes. Thanks for the idea about the toys, although he doesn't really chew anything that's not wood lol I'll have to investigate though. He did have toys in there but yes he chucks them out so thanks I will tie them in (why didn't I think of that?!)
I would have just assumed that when you spend a few hundred on a cot that it would be pretty damn safe for longer than 9 months
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Bizzy
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Posted: 04 November 2008 at 12:40pm |
maybe get a wooden mary lou doll - they are supposed to be good for teething. eden has one.
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emz
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Posted: 06 November 2008 at 4:03pm |
Ok update, I am fuming but don't know what to do. I emailed the Baby Factory telling them about it and how I didn't think it was very safe a baby being able to ingest wood (found some in his poo the other day and of course the big chunk in his mouth). I also said that I would like to talk to the manufacturer as I think it is a safety hazard and there should be standards to prevent this from happening. This is the response
"Thank you for your email. The Rustic Valley Pine Cot that you purchased is made from New Zealand plantation timber pine however the cot is manufactured in China, so it would be difficult to contact the manufacturer from China.
Please note also that New Zealand made cots are also made from New Zealand plantation timber pine therefore even New Zealand made cots cannot prevent your child from biting the wood.
Perhaps a suggestion could be to introduce a Safe T Sleep wrap which could help to secure your infant and prevent this from happening in the future. "
Ok... are they just trying to fob me off and get me to buy a damn Safe T Sleep? I have one and he gets out of it. I don't think they even got the point. What should I do?
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cuppatea
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Posted: 06 November 2008 at 6:46pm |
Talk to the consumer/trading standards people about it. I would also be annoyed by that. Plenty of people buy cots that their children aren't able to eat, you shouldn't have to buy a safety sleep to stop your child from choking on his own cot, that is ridiculous.
Is the company that makes them nz owned but manufactures in China, because if so then you could still talk to the nz company about it.
If that doesn't work maybe tell them you think it must just be your particular cot that is defective as no one else seems to have trouble with theirs and ask for a refund or replacement. A big purchase like that should have at least a 12 month guarantee.
Failing that I woudl phone Campbell live, he won't have anything else to talk about after the election.
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emz
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Posted: 06 November 2008 at 7:45pm |
Hmm unfortunately the cot was bought more than 12 months ago, but I know that they have to be fit for purpose for a set amount of time, which for a cot would be more than 12 months IYWKIM.
I'm going to think about it overnight and then email them back - don't want to email them when I don't have the nicest words running around in my head at the moment
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mummy_becks
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Posted: 06 November 2008 at 7:57pm |
Email the consumers people. It doesn't matter how old the cot is (for a recent cot) no child should be able to bite chunks of wood off it.
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I was a puree feeder, forward facing, cot sleeping, pram pushing kind of Mum... and my kids survived!
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.Mel
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Posted: 06 November 2008 at 8:08pm |
I've been thinking about this today, regardless of when you brought the cot, it would still be covered under the consumer guarantees act. You were basically sold a dodgy product which has failed and shouldn't have because it should in theory last for as long as you need it for.
I wouldn't let Baby Factory fob you off like they have... Like Cuppatea said they should have a NZ representative here that you could talk to, maybe take photos of the cot and offer to email them. Maybe the NZ crowd are already aware of the defect.. just haven't made it public - which they should.
Looking at the Ministry of Consumer Affairs website, you definitely have a case against the manufacturer - regardless of where they are.
Have a read of this:
Faulty Goods
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Mr Mellow (16)
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Destructa Kid (3)
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