portable high chair table

portable high chair table

portable high chair in a bag

Portable High Chair Table

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neat and petite, ready to eat! pod is the lightest and most compact clip on high chair on the market, perfect for travel. It is a hygenic solution when eating out and is ultra portable! Since pod is so compact that it fits in your buggy gear tray, it is a great addition to your Mountain Buggy collection, enabling you to live a life without limit. the perfect gift for grandparents, family and friends versatile indoors and out comfortable, durable and hygienic fits like a glove... anywhere Functional and elegant in style, pod clips neatly to most table-tops measuring between 1.8 and 4.5cm without taking up excess room - perfect for the kitchen bench. The neat and robust aluminium clamp secures to a picnic bench for lunch outdoors, Nana’s dining table, or is suitable as a permanent highchair solution at home. the perfect travel highchair pod is one of the smallest, most compact and lightweight portable highchairs. With a simplistic fold, it fits easily into handbags, buggy gear trays or compact storage spaces.




pod also comes with a custom fit, recyclable carry bag for ease of portability. to get the perfect compact travel bundle. pod can neatly fit into the nano travel satchel to be carried on board airplanes, trains and buses. pod is made from wipe clean fabric that can easily be removed for a more thorough clean. There is a padded back support sitting over an ergonomic frame to keep your child sitting comfortable for longer. The base of the high chair is reinforced with a strong plastic insert and the seat is designed deep to provide postural support for your growing child. Take pod to restaurants and cafes for a hygienic table solution, where conventional high chairs cannot be relied on. The aluminium clamp tightens with ease to a super strong and safe vice grip on the table or benchtop. Non-slip rubber grip pads protect your table and eliminate any chance of pod shifting when fitted, providing the safest little seat at the table. C-shape clamps can securely fit onto tables with small lips or measuring between 1.8 and 4.5cm.




Booster & Hook On Seats (126) SGD 0 - SGD 38 SGD 39 - SGD 76 SGD 78 - SGD 153 Max Weight of Child Up to 30 lbs Up to 45 lbs Fisher-Price® Deluxe Spacesaver High Chair in Grey/White Bumbo Multi Seat in Aqua Fisher-Price® Healthy Care™ Deluxe Booster Seat in Grey Chicco® 360° Rotating Hook-On Booster Chair in Avena Graco® Swivi Seat™ 3-in-1 Booster in Abbington™ Fisher-Price® SpaceSaver High Chair in Lime Links phil&teds® Lobster Black High Chair OXO Tot® Perch Booster Seat with Straps in Grey Ingenuity™ Baby Base 2-in-1™ Booster Seat in Slate Grey Ingenuity™ SmartClean™ Toddler Booster in Slate Oxo Tot Nest Booster Seat in Navy Chicco® Pocket Snack Booster Seat in Grey guzzie+Guss Perch Hanging High Chair in Salt and Pepper Bumbo Multi Seat in Blue Graco® Swivi Seat™ 3-in-1 Booster in Whisk™ Inglesina Fast Table Chair in Black Bumbo Multi Seat in Pink




Chicco Deluxe Travel Seat in Papyrus phil&teds® Lobster Red High Chair Graco® Swivi Seat™ 3-In-1 High Chair Booster in Tart™ Summer Infant® Pop 'n Sit Portable Booster Seat in Green/Grey Boppy® Baby Chair in Elephant Walk OXO Tot® Nest Booster Seat with Straps in Green Mamas & Papas Baby Snug Booster with Tray in Teal Inglesina Fast Table Chair in Navy Mamas & Papas Baby Snug Booster with Tray in Red guzzie+Guss Perch Hanging High Chair (G+G 201) in Charcoal guzzie+Guss Perch Hanging High Chair (G+G 201) in Black Contours® Twist Grow-With-Me Seat in Aqua Mamas & Papas Baby Snug with Tray in Raspberry OXO Tot®Perch™ Booster Seat for Big Kids in Taupe Graco® Blossom™ Booster Seat in Brown guzzie+Guss Perch Hanging Chair in Charcoal and Silicone Placemat in Green Mountain Buggy® POD Clip-On High Chair in Flint Inglesina Fast Table Chair in Cream OXO Tot® Perch Booster Seat with Straps in Taupe




Chicco® 360° Rotating Hook-On Booster Chair in Scarlet Inglesina Fast Table Chair in Red guzzie+Guss Perch Hanging High Chair (G+G 201) in Aqua OXO Tot® Nest Booster Seat with Straps in Taupe Prince Lionheart® Soft Booster Seat in Soft Grey Summer Infant® SupportMe 3-in-1 Positioner Feeding Seat and Booster in Green Go Anywhere Booster Seat OXO Tot® Perch Booster Seat with Straps in Pink Mountain Buggy POD Clip-On High Chair in Chili Inglesina Fast Table Chair in Orange Ingenuity™ Baby Base 2-in-1™ Booster Seat in Peacock Blue Chicco® Pocket Snack Portable Booster Seat in Mod Mint Booster & Hook On Seats Booster seats help turn any kitchen chair into a baby feeding seat. Feeding boosters can be easily attached to virtually any kitchen chair to keep your toddler at an appropriate sitting height at the table. This collection is designed to be used once toddlers have outgrown their highchair and look to graduate to the grown-up table.




Inglesina™ makes their seats lightweight and easy-to-fold so you can bring it with you on the go.For many parents feeding their kids is a bit overwhelming, especially in the beginning.  It’s really straight forward when they are babies, right?  Milk, then baby food.  Things start to get a little tricky when real food is introduced and the bottles and baby food are weened away.  Those babes turn into toddlers and the eating transition can be challenging.  I’m not just talking about how to get them to start eating table foods, I’ve already covered that in: How to Transition Your Baby to Table Food.  It’s all the other things that come along with this transition like when, what, and where to feed them…. when and how do they feed themselves… how long should they sit in a high chair… etc.  Okay, if you weren’t overwhelmed already, I am probably overwhelming you now!  Obviously, I am going to walk you through the most common mistakes parents seem to make and how you can avoid them to get your kid’s eating started with a good foundation.  




As an early intervention occupational therapist, these have been common problems I’ve helped parents with over and over again, and they are mostly simple things that the Pediatrician doesn’t have time to tell you or may not even know.  Staying on Baby Food Too Long Going to get this one out of the way first. Generally speaking babies should be starting to eat table foods around 8-9 months and should be done eating baby food by their first birthday. Of course there are exceptions to this, especially if your child has developmental delays.  Each child is an individual and I do want you to follow their lead, BUT often I see parents sticking with baby food way too long because it is easier or THEY are uncomfortable exposing their child to more table foods.  You may think, where is the harm in it? Although most kids will move onto table foods fairly easily, some can get stuck in a rut and refuse table foods if they are kept on baby food for too long.  If you need more help with this transition check out part one and two of How to Transition Your Baby to Table Food.  




Abandoning the High Chair I know the big high chairs can be cumbersome in kitchens and the trays are annoying to keep cleaning, but these seats and their ability to confine, ahem, I mean keep you child safe are the best bet for a while.  Babies have learned to associate eating with this chair and toddlers are notoriously distracted.  If you try to have them eat at their own little table or at a big table before the age of 2.5 you are most likely going to be in a constant struggle just to keep them sitting at the table and their eating habits will surely suffer.  There is nothing wrong with keeping your kid in a high chair or booster seat with a strap until they are 3.  If you never stray from this they won’t ever know the difference, sitting in a high chair or booster is all they have ever know.  Once you let them kneel on a big chair or don’t strap them into the booster, it could be very difficult to return to the original set up.This is my favorite strapped booster seat, I’ve used it for all my kiddos, until 3 years old and beyond really.




Once you do move to strap-free eating situation, lay the ground rules quickly about staying seated. If you child insists on getting down, meal time is over for them. Make sure they understand this and follow through. Click here for more info on setting up a schedule and spacing meals apart.UPDATE: Check out 8 Steps to Keep Your Child Seated at Meals and to make sure your child is positioned correctly in the booster you are using you’ll definitely want to head over to The Best Seated Position. You’ll find helpful pictures and the highchairs and booster seats I use and recommend. Constant Snacking I have to admit, this is probably my biggest pet peeve and the most prevalent error parents make. (Warning: stepping onto my soap box)  Somehow our culture has evolved to constantly feeding our kids, most of the time we do this to pacify them. We hand them crackers or cookies in grocery stores, doctors offices, cars, parties, and even church to keep them quiet.  It doesn’t always stop there, in the beginning it can be hard to find a schedule for eating that works and leaving food out all the time can seem logical, or meal times become stressful and schedules are abandoned because it seems easier.  




It may be easier in the short term, but in the long run it will become more difficult to get good eating habits established. When kids are given snacks endlessly, the message sent is that we don’t need to sit and eat together (yes, even if it is just a snack) and that we can eat whenever we want.  I think it is important to teach kids to respect meal time in its own right so they can develop healthy eating habits for life.  Constant snacking totally defeats this, and as I have discussed previously, snacking usually ruins their appetite.   In my day job (as an occupational therapist), I see huge changes in a child’s eating when the family moves to structured, spaced out meals. At home, I also see a dramatic difference in my kid’s eating when they have snacked too frequently.   Toys at the TableNo toys at the table might seem obvious to some of you, especially parents with babies that aren’t really trying to pull this stunt yet. I assure you there will be a day when your toddler is insistent and will ultimately throw a tantrum just to have the truck or doll at the table with them.  




In the moment, it is very easy to give in because you are exhausted and don’t have the battle in you.  However, this is a battle worth fighting, even though that toy may be keeping them in their chair it will mostly distract them from actually eating. Sometimes it helps to place the toy in a spot where a child can see it (sometimes that makes it worse!). Either way, once your kiddo knows that you mean business about no toys coming to the table, they will stop trying.   *If your child is receiving feeding therapy, some therapeutic strategies employ the use of toys at meals. Eating Alone Eat with your kids, often when we start babes out on baby food they are on their own schedule and we focus just on feeding them at their own meal time.  This should be short lived, if ever a scenario at all.  If possible it is a great habit and benefit to the baby to eat meals together.  As they start to eat multiple times a day and begin table foods, try to find a way to have your eating schedules coincide.  




Serving your kids solo means them missing out on a variety of social interactions, as well as the powerful tool of modeling.  These mini-me’s just want to emulate us, and while we all know that they observe everything that we are doing, we often forget to apply that to eating. They notice that the broccoli is on our plate and what we like to eat.  Not to oversimplify, but If your kid never sees you eating the broccoli, they might not eat it either.        Please don’t fret if you have already begun some of these habits, my hope is that this information will empower you to make some changes that will lay the groundwork for good eating habits throughout your child’s life.  Although it may take a little more time to undo some of what I discussed here, you can get back on track by slowly making changes.  Pick one thing to focus on at a time and be patient! If your looking for more help on establishing good eating habits click here, here, and here. Follow me on facebook for quick tips and ideas.  

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