In La Tania, we offer childcare for children aged from 6 months to 12 years old. We have a kid's club for the older children and look after the younger ones in their chalets.
Our experienced Childcare Manager will organise your rota for the week, meet the children's parents and decide who you will be looking after. You will be working in a team with 6 others. To look after the children we use the UK nanny : child staff ratios. The children you look after only stay with us for a week so you will get to know them very quickly.
Lead by the Childcare Manager, you will entertain the children - whether it be arts and crafts inside, playing snowballs outside or going on a bus journey to another village to visit soft play.
We like to keep it exciting! You can send text updates and photos to their parents during the day until they are picked up after skiing! You will work from 9am-5pm on a rota decided by the Childcare Manager. At 9am you will start a fun-filled day of activities for the older kids or you might be looking after babies who could still be asleep!
Applicants must be enthusiastic individuals with plenty of initiative and thrive on every day being different. We are looking for people to come and work the whole season from December until the end of April Do you have what it takes to work for us?
Then we would love to hear from you, apply now! Toddlers are a different matter: they love the snow and may well be extremely excited at the prospect of going on an airoplane, etc.
But babies? Get real. You know it makes sense. Agree completely, Jonny. Wait till the kids can join in as well before taking them skiing. We started to ski when ours were all old enough to ski our youngest was 4, nearly 5. They had great fun in ski school in the morning as did we , then we took them out in the afternoon, tailored to their ability levels. That improved my skills no end. Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:.
Most families with Nannies dont palm the children off on them 24hrs a day, most do exactly the same as other parents etc, they just have time to do their own thing aswell and maybe even get a few nights to go out together as a couple rather than "mum and dad", that was certainly the case with the families I nannied for.
I don't see what the problem is, surely little wifey stays at home and looks after the kids, whilst hubby continues with his annual ski trip? Jonny Jones , I also do know the definition of selfish and find it hard to believe that everything you do is totally for the benefit of your newborn and there is not a hint of selfishness in any of your own actions. But, equally I think that in this context the word selfish is inappropriately used. I believe that it is important for the parents to have quality time together without the children and individually, in my opinion, this will make them better parents, not worse.
You do it your way, I'll do it mine. Also, can you provide any information to the contrary, that shows that placed with professionally qualified nannies in a dedicated nursery, a 6-month old child is less happy, less safe, less contented or developmentally disadvantaged.
As far as I'm concerned, I am the best father they will ever have. And anyway, there was nothing wrong with that creche and I can fully believe the nannies when they said that the dope that they were smoking really did relax the children in their care. My kids have grown up fine. When my 14 year old gets back from the abortion clinic third time this year!! I shall have to edit her post though as her language can be a bit coarse at times and had she not missed school so much her spelling would be better too!!
Replying to you will give her something to do, as since that ASBO kicked in, she's not going out so often. Still, she's a great kid and she knows that despite how much I beat her up, that deep down I love her. Ray , has your daughter considered her glittering potential as a ski nanny? We've gone for the Kramer option though it was suggested by my wife! I suspect that if I used the term 'little wifey' I'd soon be in trouble though When we do eventually take the little one with us though, I suspect we'll take it in turns to look after her rather than use a nanny or a creche.
Ray Zorro ,. Jonny Jones , Can I extend a virtual handshake across the ether - I don't think our views are totally opposing!! I participated on the other thread earlier in the year and my views haven't really changed. We took our very young daughter on our ski holidays twice last winter. On one holiday she had 1-to-1 care and on the other she was in a creche. Based on those experience we'd have no hesitation putting Beth in a creche again I probably wouldn't go for 1-to-1 care again though.
And we're going to do the same this winter - 2 holidays, one with Ski Esprit and one with Ski Beat. However, I agree with Ray, I think there has to be a balance between what is good for your child or children and what is good for you and your partner.
This is probably the only instance in which we put our own interests first. But in doing so I genuinely believe that all of the family will benefit. Of course, if we thought she would hate the creche and be miserable the entire week then we wouldn't do it. She's going to meet new children and be exposed to a different environment. I hope this will be a positive experience for her too. You do have to be careful with these creches. Our daughter joined one in Hinterglemm, Austria, when she was 3 and cried and cried.
So we took her out of there after only half a day. Conversely, a few years later, she had a great time with an all-day nursery in Arc though admittedly she had a little sister to play with then. Language is probably a factor. I guess Lucy was mixed only with German-speaking girls and boys in Austria and felt abandoned in a strange environment. The best childrens' facilities I ever saw were in Vail, Colorado.
All-day fun, based on a specialised building from which snow activities were organised, but with lots of indoor stuff too. The Arc facility is very established and good, too. Looking back at all the experiences the girls are now teenagers, so it's a while ago I'd recommend spending a few hours on snow with a year-old. They get mini skis, no poles, and you take them to flat snow with a very gentle slope.
They learn to walk around on skis and you let them do very short gentle straight runs out to the run-out where they stop naturally. Make them stick their arms out for balance, like aeroplane wings.
Mix it with toboganning. Video it all. It makes a wonderful memory - for you, and the child. David Goldsmith , I fancy doing what you suggest on a short weekend trip to the snow with my family. I'll be doing a "proper" ski weekend with friends but I'd love to spend a couple of hours over a couple of days doing this as well and I'm sure that my daughter will love it.
Last winter I bought her a pair of strap-on plastic toy skis and she spend hours walking around the house on them and when it snowed at home she loved going for a walk in the snow with her skis on.
Unfortunately I missed most of this because the snow meant that it took me over 4 hours to get home from work and when I got home she was in bed.
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