Thursday, August 18, 2011
It's the Most Wonderful Commercial of the Year
This Staples commercial never fails to make me laugh out loud, but seeing it in late August makes it that much sweeter. Hey, why does school start in August outside the Northeast?
Monday, August 15, 2011
One-Day Sale: Wednesday 8/17
The other day, one of my Facebook friends suggested we do a coupon code. She is so smart, and maybe a little clairvoyant, because every summer we do have a one-day sale. It's on WEDNESDAY, August 17th: Use coupon code ONEDAY to save 20% on everything in the store.
Summer's almost over and school's already started down South. You know fall and winter are not far away, so when it comes, be ready to keep your little one warm AND safe (not to mention that this is the last general coupon code until March 2012)!
Subscribe to this blog and/or friend Car Seat Poncho on Facebook to be notified of the latest sales, coupon codes and safety news!
Summer's almost over and school's already started down South. You know fall and winter are not far away, so when it comes, be ready to keep your little one warm AND safe (not to mention that this is the last general coupon code until March 2012)!
Subscribe to this blog and/or friend Car Seat Poncho on Facebook to be notified of the latest sales, coupon codes and safety news!
Labels:
car seat poncho,
coupon,
sale,
save
Monday, August 8, 2011
Lovely New Color Combinations
Coming in September to the Car Seat Poncho store -- Navy Blue & Pink, and Purple & Lavender (the unanimous winner of last spring's color survey). I just saw the samples, and they are gorgeous!
Labels:
car seat poncho,
lavender,
navy blue,
purple,
winter coat car seat
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Android and iPhone Website!

The Car Seat Poncho now has a mini-site optimized for viewing on Androids and iPhone screens!
Here's the link to the mini-site.
To see it the next time you are on your phone (if you aren't already), go to the Car Seat Poncho main website and click on the ANDROID and iPHONE link in the lower left corner.
Let us know what you think by posting to this thread, to the Car-Seat.Org sponsor forum, or on our Facebook wall.
Labels:
Android,
car seat poncho,
iPhone
Friday, July 15, 2011
Kansas City Skywalk Disaster - 30 Years Ago
Thirty years ago this weekend, 42 people were killed and more than 80 injured at the Kansas City Hyatt, when a set of indoor bridges collapsed onto each other and then crashed onto the lobby floor. It was a disaster of unseen proportions, as the lobby and bridges were filled with people attending the hotel's popular weekly tea dance. Many of the 1,500 guests were there from out of town, to attend conventions scheduled to begin the next day.
About 50 people were standing on the fourth-floor walkway and about 100 people were on the second-floor walkway, with up to 200 people standing in the lobby beneath them. The fourth floor walkway tore from its bearings and crushed the second one, tearing it down. Then both bridges crashed onto the lobby floor. Investigations revealed that critical changes to the bridges' designs made the tragedy unavoidable.
Read more about the disaster and efforts to finally commemorate the lives of the victims: http://skywalk.kansascity.com/articles/sections/disaster/
About 50 people were standing on the fourth-floor walkway and about 100 people were on the second-floor walkway, with up to 200 people standing in the lobby beneath them. The fourth floor walkway tore from its bearings and crushed the second one, tearing it down. Then both bridges crashed onto the lobby floor. Investigations revealed that critical changes to the bridges' designs made the tragedy unavoidable.
Read more about the disaster and efforts to finally commemorate the lives of the victims: http://skywalk.kansascity.com/articles/sections/disaster/
Monday, June 20, 2011
Hyperthermia happened again... yesterday.
A 2 year old girl in the Atlanta area died on Monday. She was left in a daycare van for at least 2 hours before she was found:
http://www.ajc.com/news/clayton/girl-2-dies-in-982501.html
http://www.ajc.com/news/clayton/girl-2-dies-in-982501.html
Labels:
forgetting children in cars,
hyperthermia
Kids in Hot Cars, Part 2
Do tinted windows contribute to hyperthermia deaths for children left in closed vehicles?
According to David Bell, the inventor of the VizKid, they certainly don’t help. Tinted windows (now standard in the second and third rows of minivans and SUVs) are great for the comfort and privacy of backseat passengers, but they also make those passengers invisible. So if the driver or other adult leaves the car in a hurried or distracted state, he or she could not see the child from outside the car. Nor could anyone passing by -- people who could literally have been a life line for that child.
Bell’s invention, the VizKid, is a visual cue to drivers and passers-by that a child is in the back seat. After seating and buckling the child, the driver lifts the VizKid upright and buckles it into the front row passenger seat. Ideally, when the driver leaves the car and takes the child, the VizKid goes down again. If the driver is distracted when s/he exits the car, but sees the VizKid before walking away, tragedy avoided. If the driver does leave, someone else could see the VizKid in the front seat and rescue the child before it is too late.
Check out the VizKid and Visible Kids LLC here.
According to David Bell, the inventor of the VizKid, they certainly don’t help. Tinted windows (now standard in the second and third rows of minivans and SUVs) are great for the comfort and privacy of backseat passengers, but they also make those passengers invisible. So if the driver or other adult leaves the car in a hurried or distracted state, he or she could not see the child from outside the car. Nor could anyone passing by -- people who could literally have been a life line for that child.
Bell’s invention, the VizKid, is a visual cue to drivers and passers-by that a child is in the back seat. After seating and buckling the child, the driver lifts the VizKid upright and buckles it into the front row passenger seat. Ideally, when the driver leaves the car and takes the child, the VizKid goes down again. If the driver is distracted when s/he exits the car, but sees the VizKid before walking away, tragedy avoided. If the driver does leave, someone else could see the VizKid in the front seat and rescue the child before it is too late.
Check out the VizKid and Visible Kids LLC here.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Kids in Hot Cars, Part 1
Each year, about 40 children die from heat stroke (technically called hyperthermia) after being left behind in a motor vehicle.
An excellent study led by Jan Null, a meteorologist at SFSU, shows that hyperthermia does not just happen on blistering hot days. Even on a relatively mild day, the temperature inside an enclosed car increases 50 degrees within the first 30 minutes. In other words, a child left inside a car on a 70-degree day could soon be suffering in 120-degree heat.
Here is the link to the study data: http://ggweather.com/heat/index.htm#home
The full article, as published in Pediatrics: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/116/1/e109.full
I find the maps most fascinating. They show children hyperthermia deaths in almost every state (even North Dakota or Wisconsin) and almost every month of the year. Heart breaks, each and every one.
Related posts:
Babies Forgotten In Cars
Babies Forgotten In Cars, Continued
An excellent study led by Jan Null, a meteorologist at SFSU, shows that hyperthermia does not just happen on blistering hot days. Even on a relatively mild day, the temperature inside an enclosed car increases 50 degrees within the first 30 minutes. In other words, a child left inside a car on a 70-degree day could soon be suffering in 120-degree heat.
Here is the link to the study data: http://ggweather.com/heat/index.htm#home
The full article, as published in Pediatrics: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/116/1/e109.full
I find the maps most fascinating. They show children hyperthermia deaths in almost every state (even North Dakota or Wisconsin) and almost every month of the year. Heart breaks, each and every one.
Related posts:
Babies Forgotten In Cars
Babies Forgotten In Cars, Continued
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