Doll Stroller - Dolls - Toys and Games


When did you get your daughter her first baby doll stroller?

I was thought about getting my daughter a baby doll and a not enough baby doll stroller for Christmas. She will be 15 months old on Christmas Day.
She's about 29 inches unbelievable right now, so she'll most likely be about 31 inches on Christmas.

Would 15 months be too without delay? Most of the strollers I've found are rated for 2+ years.
♥Mom to 5girls and #6is our boy!: That's the true stroller I am thinking about getting my daughter! lol


I am getting one for my daughter this Christmas and she will be almost 20 months by then. I grasp she is ready because she has a pink plastic shopping handcart that she loves pushing around and filling up with her toys. She is not too into dolls yet but I comprehend she will love the stroller. I think Aisling will be old enough by Christmas:)



Toddlers and a doll stroller

This is my 17 month old daughter in her doll stroller being pushed around the living lodge by her 22 month old friend. Whats the funniest part ...

Once it was the British, now trash is enemy at Bread & Cheese Creek

John Extensive moves with steady ease through the waters of Bread and Cheese Rivulet. Each sloshing step is a testimony to optimism.

His rubber-soled waders antiquated an endless trail of cast-offs. Christmas lights. Vodka bottles. A skateboard. Cheap flowers. A circuit board. Rusted metal. A bra. Swift food wrappers and soda bottles. Shoes. A wheelbarrow. A swimming group ladder. A wheelchair, a bike, a stroller and a ridiculous several of shopping carts.

Yet Long sees a brook that's on the mend.

"There's less trash all the time," he said with a grin.

Long leads a new volunteer group called Quite Bread and Cheese Creek, which has rallied more than 450 volunteers to seize the creek of such eyesores and direct attention to its needs. Six cleanups since 2008 have produced more than 44 tons of rubbish, including 138 shopping carts and 15 tons of metal.

"I lack that creek to be as beautiful as it was when I was a child," Long said. "It tempered to to have all these minnows, and I'd catch them for bait and then go fishing with my grandfather. I'd turn little sail boats and race them down the bay. Now there's all this broken glass and shopping carts. It shouldn't be like that."