May
30
2011

Kids Eat Free!

When and Where In Canada

Kids Eat Free!

Check out Gav Martell's blog post for the top 8 places in Canada where kids eat freeYour wallets can thank us later!

We've been sucked into ordering off the Kids Menu the few times we've gone out to a restaurant, only to have buckets of food left at the end of the meal after Z barely pokes at his Macaroni and Cheese, Chicken Fingers or Grilled Cheese. Of course what happens then? Well, WE clean his plate and end up eating waaay too much. One of the biggest traps new parents fall in is eating off their kids' plates - easy way to gain 10 lbs.


For the first three or four years, your kids should easily be able to eat off your plate. Restaurants go overboard in portion sizing these days, and if each of you can cover off a couple of the kid's fave food groups, you should be able to get the whole family fed.

Hint: One person orders rice, the other orders fries, or someone orders pasta. Easy peasy. (that's Zacharie nibbling on some of my wife's Cactus Club Teri Chicken Bowl in the photo).

However, if you've got an older child who NEEDS to have their own plate at the table, then check out the list of restaurants where kids eat free in Canada.
 

Boston Pizza
Kids eat free any day of the week with an adult meal purchase of $10 or more at participating restaurants.

Denny’s
Kids eat free on Tuesdays and Saturdays from 4-10 pm at participating restaurants.

Joey’s Fish and Chips
Kids eat free on Sundays at participating restaurants.

Montana’s Cookhouse
Children eat free on Tuesdays at participating Montana’s restaurants.

Pizza Hut
Children eat free on Tuesdays at participating restaurants.

Swiss Chalet
Children eat free on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday at participating restaurants.

If you know of a place not mentioned, please put it in the comments!

 

Check out Gav Martell's blog post for the top 8 places in Canada where kids eat free. Your wallets can thank us later!

May
28
2011

Stupid Bloggers And Their Stupid Blogs

Real People Write What You Read

Stupid Bloggers And Their Stupid Blogs

2009-09-11 helijet ride

I've written my own parenting blog for about 18 months now and the discussion on that site has been honest, open and constructive.  I've written about some controversial things, and yet even when I struck at the most sensitive chords of someone's life, the conversation never degraded to name calling.

Last fall I started writing for Man Of The House and was exposed to a wider audience. That's when the comments on my commentary started to slide downhill.  It was in reaction to a post called "The Forgotten Second Child" where I talked about how the excitement and awe can wane the second time around the milestones of a child's life.  It was an honest explanation of a feeling I was having and the readers let me have it:

Nathan: Most people who have kids don't do it for their novelty.... They are going to cost you so much more than the goldfish you should have gotten.

Julie: Hopefully you don't have a third

Jessica: I wonder if your deathbed conversation will have quotes from your articles that expressly state you could not express interest in the life of the child you created

Matthew: I can't even comment upon this appropriately. Take a hard look at yourself.

Not exactly the most inspiring or uplifting commentary.

This spring Erica Ehm extended me an invitation to join the Yummy Mummy Club community.  She became aware of my DadCAMP site when I started engaging in the conversation on YMC.  One post in particular, about banning children from Facebook, caused me to write a rebuttal on DadCAMP.  Erica enjoyed the fact that I had an opinion and wasn't afraid to share it. 

I was asked to bring that opinion to the YMC and after a few light and breezy parenting pieces; I dug in with some editorial last week about how parents are perceived by others in the community. I quoted some very ignorant men who are frustrated by parents barrelling through crowded markets and, while discounting the language the men used, I sided with them.

My thesis is that parents are the ones bringing a fresh variable to situations and we are the ones who need to mitigate our behaviour.  I flew alone with 2 boys under 4 this weekend.  The computer assigned me seats in rows 7 and 3 on each flight. Both times I changed them to the last row of the plane to have fewer people to bother and to be nearer the attendants and bathroom.  Are row 3 seats better?  Sure, I like to get off the bird quickly too, but for the sanity of those around me, I went to the back.

Those are the sorts of behaviours that we, as parents, need to take on.  We need to be empathetic.  We need to realize that our children are the disruptive force and make pre-emptive strikes to society around us.

That was my thesis, anyway.  The commenter's had different agendas:

Jodi: I call bullshit.

Amanda: Where do I begin. How about, shame on you?

Underthecovers Mother: Reading your bio I see that you have accomplished quite a bit in your life, so I would assume you would have some valid things to say. But in this blog entry, I would be wrong in assuming so.

Kim a proud mommy: This article speaks volumes about the type of person you are.

Darryl: if you are so selfish to think this way you don't actually deserve to have children because you would make a shitty parent.

Rebecca: What a load of crap!

Leah: I'm really disappointed that YMC would publish something with such a negative tone.

Sarah: This article is terrible!  I have no idea why this would even appear in an e-mag such as this.

Felicia: Ohhhoooohhhooo.....don't get me started! I am showing great restraint, by not commenting!

C: Nasty nasty nasty. Very disappointed and just took this website off my list of reads.

Aaron: you can effing deal with it.

Chantal: all you have done is annoyed the H-E-DOUBLE HOCKEY STICKS out of good parents who worry when they go out

So I've gone from a small site with an open and intelligent discussion to two broader audiences where people don't necessarily know me personally and are taking liberties with language in the comments.

I can only think that it's because people don't think that bloggers are human or that there is a person on the other end of the "return" key reading your commentary.  I tried to respond to each comment made to me on YMC to show that you can't blindly spout off in an emotional response thinking you're just writing something "on the internet." 

Perhaps it's because most people online hide behind handles and nicknames and are basically anonymous as they spew their abusive commentary back.

So let's break the ice and get to know each other.  Let's try and add a personal level to this relationship so the conversation can be constructive instead of destructive.

Hi, my name is Buzz.  It's not my real name, but it's the one I've used professionally for more than 20 years, so it's what I go with.  I was born in Ontario, raised in BC and live in Alberta.  I have two beautiful boys.  My second wife is Jennifer.  My first marriage lasted 13 months and you don't really want to hear about it.  Jen is the mother of my children and has sacrificed all she has ever known to follow me around the country in my pursuit of a broadcasting career. 

I've run 4 marathons and continue to train and support Team Diabetes.  I don't have a personal connection to diabetes; it's just something I'm trying to use my small "c" celebrity to support.

I taught myself HTML one rainy day in the fall of 1995 and have been on the internet ever since.  I'm an information junkie and the web sates my thirst for news and, to be honest, makes me thirsty for more.  I love writing to share my opinions and promote discussion and to learn more about how other people think and to question my own beliefs.

I hope you'll contribute to the same.

"
May
26
2011

Father Friendly Shower Gifts

Don't Forget Dad!

Father Friendly Shower Gifts

Father Friendly Baby Shower

Men don't get the whole "shower" thing. A bunch of hens getting together to shower a friend in gifts because a big event is happening in their lives? Big deal - can't we just go golfing and have a barbecue?

Shower season means all sorts of cucumber sandwiches without the crust will be served alongside diaper cakes and blue or pink martinis.

There's something to remember when you're headed to a shower (baby showers specifically) - that child did not come via Immaculate Conception - a man was needed to make this magic happen. So, as we head into Father's Day season, it's time to bring some father friendly gifts to the shower.

Man Cans: Simply put, these are candles for men. They're available in testosterone friendly scents like bacon, campfire, grandpa’s pipe, and new mitt. The best part is the idea comes from a 13-year old who still makes the candles in his kitchen.

Superhero Onesies: Men don't understand the onesie thing. We really don't. My wife says you can never have too many, I'd agree if that meant we could have the entire set from the Justice League of America.

Rock A Bye Baby: Newborns like lullabies to softly drift them off to sleep, but is it necessary that they be so sappy? Rock A Bye's discs have lullabied the music of U2, The Beatles, Bob Marley, AC/DC and Aerosmith. Dream on, sweet child o' mine, dream on.

Be Prepared - A Practical Handbook For New Dads: Sure, mom will enjoy the entire of What To Expect books, but those are a little too encyclopedic for guys. Be Prepared is simply the best book for expectant dads. There are pictures, the chapters are just a few pages long and it's written in a language we can understand and put into practice when looking after the new bundle.

LG 55" LED HDTV: Because no list of gifts for men can be devoid of a big screen TV. Ever. It's a rule.

"