Jump to content

Nurseries in Dulwich/Herne Hill - Advice appreciated


alexjj80

Recommended Posts

Good morning,


I am expecting my first and I've heard from some friends that you need to get your child/bump (!) registered for nursery schools asap as the waiting lists can be very long.


It's so confusing trying to find out which are the 'best' and by that I mean those that really care for your little ones and they come home to you well and happy.


Any advice on local nurseries in the North/East/West Dulwich or Herne Hill areas greatly appreciated.


Thanks so much :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You'll find various threads on nurseries. My personal favourites are the baby room at Bright Horizons, Mother Goose on Upland road and Little Jungle near Goose Green. Put name down after you've been around to visit and get a feel. Don't panic, after baby is born is fine!!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think it depends what you want from the nursery and when. Are you expecting to return to work full-time and need full time childcare while your baby is under one? Are you looking for a more part-time arrangement? Is cost an important issue?


Are you thinking about a bit later down the line?


I ask because we used a range of options to fulfil a range of purposes and some of them worked better than others: we used a childminder for a short while (18 momth old) but I wasn't sure that felt right, then a lovely local nursery when my second child was born (eldest was about 2 then) part-time, then a mixture of nursery and nanny (ofsted registered and brought her own baby, so a kind of nannyshare). That was lovely but was down, in no small part, to the loveliness of the nanny. When she had her second child we tried it with another who was absolutely AWFUL.


We both work freelance so could be flexible about how and where we worked (very lucky in a way but other childcare issues around that flexibilty too). We didn't every use a school nursery.


What I mean to say is nursery isn't your only option.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you so much to all of you for all the great and valuable advice! So sorry I've not replied sooner, but didn't receive notifications and wasn't aware people had replied.


It's all quite daunting getting it right with your first when you have no experience to fall back on, so thank you.


bawdy-nan that's really interesting feedback and a nanny would indeed be a great option but as you say it all depends on finding a really good one and I imagine that's not easy. Where is Mrs Doubtfire when you need her?! :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nannies are great but generally the most expensive option. First Steps Montessori was a fab nursery for my first, they generally take little ones from 15/18 months, though my one didn't join until age 3. Childminders also good option. I hear YeeHaa on Friern Road v good. They're childminders but have staff so nice balance between childminder/ home environment and nursery for stimulation/socialising with other children.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd absolutely recommend Nelly's too. My son attended a few nurseries (first one went bust and then we moved house), Nelly's was by far the best. Their facilities are good, the staff genuinely care and the staff retention was great. He had the same 'key worker' for his whole time there. Believe me, this is unusual. If you can get in to Nelly's, go for it.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I had no idea about the sourcing of the paving stones - where is the info on this? The extension of the paved area seems completely unjustified- plus, there is a cycle lane right thru the middle so there are bound to be some near misses with pedestrians. 
    • That's really awful. There must be someone further up the management chain who could be made aware of this? 
    • I'm assuming that anybody who has a cat can afford  its food, litter, vets' fees etc. Nobody was saying that two quid is "nothing", but it's cheaper than some brands of cat litter, so was hopefully useful to the OP. Still, hopefully your post made you feel better 👍 🤣 We still don't know why there was a bag of cat litter at the bus stop! Surely it would be rather difficult to take it away unnoticed if the owner of the cat litter was  also at the bus stop? It's not like someone distracted your attention and picked your pocket and you didn't notice till some time later! But what is also confusing me is, if the OP knows where the thief lives, why don't they go and ask for their cat litter back?
    • The market is only there for a few hours on Saturdays! Surely all street markets are "a bit tatty"! That seems a strange reason to close a road permanently to traffic!  There is already at least one seat  in North Cross Road (which seems to be quite well used),  apart from those for customers of The Palmerston,  and several of the shops in the road have greenery outside 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...