May 20, 2012

Babysitting

For many young people a write of passage is when you are now at an age where you no longer need a babysitter and are old enough to become that babysitter. Babysitting is an opportunity to  earn that extra cash that every teenager can use. Some teens are ready for this responsibility and take to it naturally, while others kids are a little more cautious, uncomfortable, and maybe even a little nauseated at the thought.

New to babysitting there is much you can do to become more comfortable and help things go smoother.

1. If asked to babysit particularly if the child is a baby, consider asking if you can first spend some unhurried time with the child and parent so you can learn the baby’s routine. Don’t try to do any training  just prior to the time you are expected to babysit as the parents will be rushing around trying to get ready to leave.

2. Some babysitters get very alarmed when babies cry, spit up, have strange colored BMs, or refuse more than two bites of their strained carrots. Ask the parent to explain ahead of time the usual quirks of  their baby so you will understand what’s currently normal in the child’s world.

3. Young babysitters are often not as attentive as the parent. You must understand that you are being given a very important adult type responsibility and take that responsibility seriously. Ask the parents to help minimize any potential “risks” you see by closing doors, putting up the baby gates and not leaving things out or on the floor that could pose a choking risk.

4. Ask the parents to explain to you and either take notes or ask the parents to give you a note that you can refer to later as to their expectations and anything special you need to be aware of. If the parents expect things to be done on a particular time line ask them to write this down or take your own notes.

5. The first time you babysit a child you have not taken care of before it is best to do it only for a few hours and make sure you have a contact phone number for the parents.

6. If you have a cellphone add the parents contact numbers to it. Ask if you can call or text them if you have any questions.

7. Babies and young children have short attention spans and require constant attention and they generally aren’t that good at entertaining themselves for longer than 3 minutes. Change toys, change rooms, change positions, change the channel.

8. Don’t invite your friends over to the house where you are babysitting and don’t neglect your responsibilities by spending your time on the computer or cellphone instead of caring for the child. As you should easily recall from your own childhood experiences it only takes a few minutes out of your sight for something to potentially go wrong.

You may have younger siblings and therefore have some practice or perhaps you have never been around someone under 2 1/2 feet tall. But once you  get instruction and encouragement and some practice under your belt you just might find yourself being that preferred babysitter for the next several years.

Jobs for Kids and Teens

If you are a kid or teenager and looking for a way to score some extra cash, you may want to consider getting a job. While getting a job may sound like a drag, there are actually some fun job options out there that you may find enjoyable. Not sure what kind of exciting jobs may be out there? Well, here’s a look at some fun jobs for kids and teens that you may want to consider checking out as a way to earn some cash.  Some of these jobs may only be suitable for older teens while others will also work for kids and tweens so discuss them with your parents.

Walking Dogs
Enjoy hanging out with your pooch? Well, there’s a way to turn that into cash and have fun too. Check with neighbors who have dogs. Ask if they need someone to walk their dog. Many people are willing to pay to have someone else walk their dog each day. You’ll enjoy getting to know the canines on your street and you’ll make some money too.

Lawn Care Jobs
Enjoy gardening or working with plants and nature? Well, there are many different types of lawn care jobs out there. If mowing sounds boring, check into jobs where you can take care of flowers or do other landscaping style jobs. Many people are too busy to keep up with their landscaping, and this may benefit you.

Babysitting or Tutoring
If you enjoy hanging out with kids, babysitting or tutoring can be a fun way to make money. If you have neighbors or friends of the family that have kids, consider seeing if they need a babysitter. Great in a particular subject in school? You may be able to make some money doing some tutoring.

Sports Instruction
Sports instruction is yet another fun job opportunity. If you’ve mastered a sport, you may be able to instruct others and charge for it. Check with parents in your area to see if perhaps they may want their child to have some instruction in the sport you’re an expert in.

Assisting a Veterinarian
Many veterinarians look for assistants that can help out with the animals. Often animals need someone to take them outside or the vet may just need some assistance in the office dealing with the animals. If you enjoy animals and you’re considering being a vet someday, this is a great way to make some money. So, check with your local vet.

Use Your Drawing Skills
For those that are great artists, drawing skills may be able to make you some money. Check around with local businesses that may need artwork done or people looking for artwork done for parties. You can easily spend a few hours working on some artwork and bring in some cash.

Job articles for teens and students

Start a Worm Farm For Fun and Profit

Are you looking for kids jobs? Do you live in an area where people use worms for fishing? Raising and selling worms might be a perfect way for kids and teens to pick up that extra money! It cost you little to nothing to get started. It is environmentally helpful and will not require a lot of your time. Check it out and see what you think.

A typical household’s waste is around 40% organic matter. Things like fruit and vegetable scraps, food scraps, tea bags and coffee grounds. All this can be recycled by worms and turned into beautiful, rich, chemical-free compost which you can use in your garden or around your potted plants. Keeping this organic matter out of landfills would not only reduce the volume of rubbish sent to landfills but also reduce methane, a greenhouse gas which contributes to global warming.

Once you’ve finished the initial set up of your worm farm it’s just a matter of collecting your organic matter in a separate container and dumping it in the worm farm instead of the rubbish bin. You’ll be helping the environment and in exchange getting a valuable product that your plants will thrive on. And aside from the one-time set up and occasional harvesting, the worms do most of the work.

How a worm farm works

* The worm farm is housed in a bin, or more exactly, a series of stackable bins lids. You can make your own from a variety of materials or buy a ready-made kit, usually made of plastic, which often come complete with worms. The worms start off at the bottom unit. As organic waste gets added the worms eat their way up through the bins, leaving worm droppings, also known as ‘vermicast’ behind them. The vermicast is a very rich, top quality compost that can be used in your garden or potted plants.

* At the bottom is a collector tray. The second by-product of this process is a liquid, which is sometimes called ‘worm tea’ or ‘worm wee’. This liquid makes a fabulous liquid plant food when diluted with water in a ratio of 1:10 (1 part liquid, 10 parts water). The worm farm kits usually have a spigot on the collector tray to make it easy to drain off the worm wee.

* You add organic waste. You add organic waste in the form of kitchen scraps, leaves, grass clippings, shredded paper. As the worms eat half their bodyweight a day, turning their food into compost, the layer of compost beneath them builds up and they literally eat their way up through the bins.

* When the worm farm is almost full, harvest the vermicast. When the bottom unit has filled and all of the worms have moved up into the units above, you remove the bottom bin, and the next bin up now becomes the bottom bin. You can use the compost to as a natural fertilizer, top-dressing or mulch in your garden or containers.

What composting worms like
* Dark, moist (but not wet) living conditions.
* Constant temperature range. Position the worm farm to avoid direct sun for any length of time, or high temperatures. If you live somewhere with cold winters use an insulation jacket over the bins in the winter.
* Good air circulation. Take care to not overfill the bins with waste material.
* A mix of dry and wet waste. If your fruit and vegetable scraps are too wet, mix in some dry material such as shredded paper or egg cartons, or toilet roll cores, dust from sweeping or the vacuum cleaner, hair clippings.

What composting worms don’t like
* Too much water. If their environment is getting too waterlogged make sure you drain off the liquid at the bottom and add more dry material like shredded paper and egg cartons or cardboard.
* Too much acidity. Some foods, like onions, garlic, lemons make the environment too acid, so go light on those foods.
* Too much waste material above them. Even though the worms can burrow underground they still need air. If you have too much waste above them, especially if it’s getting damp and packed in, it can cut off their air supply and the worm farm will start smelling bad. If you have large scraps like lettuce or cabbage leaves chop them up and mix with shredded egg cartons or cardboard to keep the waste light with lots of air spaces. If you have more waste than the worms can keep up with you can put the excess in plastic bags and freeze it. Then defrost and use it when the worms need more food.

What can be composted?
* Food scraps (except meat, fat and dairy products)
* Grass clippings (in moderation, too much can clump together and cut off the air circulation)
* Leaves
* Seaweed
* Farm animal manure
* Untreated sawdust and shavings
* Vacuum cleaner dust and floor sweepings
* Hair clippings
* Shredded paper and cardboard (avoid glossy paper such as that found in magazines)

As long as you provide the right conditions, regularly feed them and drain off the liquid, your worms will continue eating, breeding and providing you with the best natural fertilizer for your garden and plants. So kids, why not start a garden too and sell your vegetables to friends and neighbors?

Pet Setting an Interesting Job

As teens, tweens, kids and young adults finding ways to make money can often present quite a challenge.  Youth are faced with many challenges from their school and activity schedules to lack of employment and transportation in their area to the child labor laws of the community, state and federal government. Pet sitting f or friends, relatives and neighbors after school, weekends or during vacation breaks provides what can be a fun and rewarding money making idea.

Pet setting isn’t just about making money though money may be your end goal.  In order to be a good pet sitter, you also need to have a good understanding of what types of situations you can handle regarding the care of someones pet, and those that you cannot. With this understanding the end result will than be rewarded as kids make money!

There are a variety of ways that pet sitters will care for someones pet. Sometimes they will visit a few times a day, staying about 30 minutes while they care for the pets basic needs. Other pet sitters will stay overnight or perhaps you will take care of the pet in your own home.

Regardless of how the pets are cared for, it’s important to be aware that pet sitting does not always go as well as planned. Before you even accept a pet sitting job you will want to have the permission of your parents just as you would with any other jobs. If your parents do not know the people or the pets well they will probably want to meet them before you even take on the job.

Most people may think it’s easy to be a pet sitter. After all, the only thing you have to do is make sure the dog or cat or other pets have fresh water and receive their daily food allotment and if needed take them outside to relieve themselves a few times during the day.

Yes, it’s true, the life of the pet sitter does seem rather easy. Yet, there are situations that a pet sitter needs to be aware of that could actually become very dangerous.

Sometimes having to care for dogs, especially outside dogs, can become very dangerous because outside dogs can be very territorial. Most owners know their dogs well enough to know whether there is any danger for the person who may need to come into their home to take care of their pets when there away.

This is not where the problem is. The real problem comes in when the pet sitter is required to take care of the dogs by entering their yard to provide them with food and water. This is where the pet sitter needs to have extra caution. Before accepting a job where you must deal with outside dogs, you need to make sure they are well behaved and well socialized.

If there is more than one dog, and you enter their yard, the situation could become very dangerous. If you become fearful and the dogs sense that you don’t belong there, they could see you as a threat and even decide to attack.

Trying to cope with a nervous dog, or worse, several nervous dogs can become a pretty scary situation.

Always stress to the owners that it is important for them to be honest with you and tell you how well socialized their dogs are. You may want to ask if any of their dogs have any tendency to be aggressive. Do they jump up on people? Do they get nervous when someone enters the yard? Do they have any problem with strangers coming into their territory?

With some of the larger breeds, you may want to have a test run when the owner is hidden away from the house, yet close enough to help out if needed. You can test to see how the dogs will react when you enter their territory while they think the owner is away.

Before you enter the yard, you need to take note of how the dogs behave. Do they seem nervous or anxious? Or are they thrilled to have a visitor? If your gut tells you it’s not safe, you should not to accept that job.

It’s better to be safe than sorry. Pet sitters really need to understand that it’s not always a good idea to take every job. Before taking on any pet sitting job, make sure you meet with both the pets and the owners. Ask questions about how well the dogs behave, what types of problems the owner may have or have had in the past.

This is not only the time for the pet owners to interview you, it’s your time to interview them as well. Never accept a pet sitting job if you do not feel comfortable with the pets or the owners.

Most times pet sitting is truly a great job to have. Just remember that all jobs are not for all pet sitters. Sometimes it’s best to say no.