Sol ☀️ – Feeding & Diaper Statistics

Focusing on the two weeks from April 23 to May 6 compared with April 16–22: daily totals climbed from about 505 mL on April 23 to roughly 635 mL on May 6, whereas the prior week hovered between 410–495 mL. The 3-day rolling average line mirrors this shift, rising steadily in the later period versus a flatter trend earlier. Most of the increase comes from expressed breast milk—formula contributions were modest and spiked only briefly in mid-April—underscoring a clear upward trajectory in overall feeding volume over the past fortnight.
From April 23–May 6, Sol averaged about 7–8 feeds per day, with tight clusters at 6–8 AM, 11 AM–1 PM, 4–6 PM and a main evening feed around 7–9 PM—plus an occasional post-midnight snack. In that fortnight, you see more large bubbles (80–100 mL) at midday and in the evening and a slight uptick in overnight feeds. By contrast, the week of April 16–22 had a similar cadence but almost all feeds hovered in the 60–70 mL range and overnight events were rarer. In other words, frequency stayed steady while average per-feed volume crept up in the past two weeks.
Over April 23–May 6, Sol's per-feed volumes remained tightly clustered around 60–70 mL, with the 60–65 mL bin logging 5–6 feeds per day (and 65–70 mL 3–5 feeds), compared with April 16–22 when that same core bin only saw about 3–5 feeds and the adjacent bin 1–3. In the more recent fortnight, you also see a handful of mid-70s and occasional 80–85 mL feeds on multiple days, whereas the prior week had almost no events above 75 mL. Very small feeds (<50 mL) and rare outliers (≥90 mL) remain isolated in both periods, but overall the last two weeks show slightly higher volume consistency and more mid-range spikes than the week before.
From April 23 to May 6 versus April 16–22, the interval‐between‐feeds pattern stays firmly centered around a 150–210 minute gap (about 2½–3½ hours). In the earlier week, two days even hit seven 180 min intervals; in the past two weeks that peak is six, and the daily average of 3 h gaps slips slightly from about four to roughly 3.5 occurrences per day. Short intervals under an hour or long pauses over four hours remain rare one‐offs in both periods. In other words, Sol's feeding cadence has been remarkably steady, with only a modest spread into the neighboring 120–150 min and 210–240 min bins in the more recent fortnight.
Over the two weeks from April 23 to May 6, Sol averaged about 5–6 soiled diapers per day, down from roughly 6–8 in the prior week (April 16–22). The 3-day rolling average for soiled events fell from around 7–8 to about 5 by early May. Meanwhile, wet-diaper counts climbed: Sol saw 8–9 wet changes on most days in the recent fortnight, compared to 7–8 in the week before, pushing the wet-diaper rolling average up from around 7 into the 8–range before a slight dip toward 7 at the end. In short, soiled events have eased off a bit while wet changes have trended higher in the past two weeks.