What You Get
- For $15, you get one panda, ladybug, or monkey BlanKid Buddy from Cabeau (a $29.99 value).
- For $29, you get any combination of two BlanKid Buddies (a $59.98 value).
- For $42, you get any combination of three BlanKid Buddies (an $89.97 value).
- Extra $5 shipping fee for each BlanKid Buddy ordered.
To get this deal, use the buy button on this page.
Overview
Cabeau's versatile, machine-washable, animal-inspired BlanKid Buddy backpack performs quadruple duty as a bag, travel pillow, blanket, and tangible imaginary friend. In backpack mode, kids stow toys and more inside a removable water-repellent inner pouch, quick-access outer pocket, and wrinkle-free garment bag primed for preserving freshly pressed mini tuxedos. In transit, tuckered-out tykes can slumber under the plush blanket, keeping coverage secure with a Velcro-fastened travel pillow.
Features
- Panda, ladybug, and monkey shapes
- 30"x15" blanket for kids aged 3–8
- Travel pillow for crick-free car naps
- Velcro fasteners for secure fit and easy removal
- Outer pouch for quick access to stowaway frogs
- Water-repellent inner pouch
- Machine washable
- Click here for more information
How to Get Your Goods
Step 1.
Purchase your Groupon using the buy button on this page.
Step 2.
Locate your redemption code, which differs from the Groupon number and can be found in the center of the voucher. The voucher is viewable in the mobile app or by going to My Groupons and clicking the print link.
Step 3.
Visit the product page and select your chosen number of BlanKid Buddies as specified on your Groupon and BlanKid colors and select 'Add to Cart.'
Step 4.
In the shopping cart, enter the redemption code located in the center of your Groupon into the 'Discount Codes' field and select 'Apply Coupon' then proceed through checkout.
Step 5.
Enjoy!
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Archaeology
Archaeology is the science of digging up dirt to find morsels of broken ceramics and delicious bones to make history soup. Here’s a guide to executing an archaeological dig:
• Any location can be an archaeological site if you dig deep enough. Sift through your neighbor’s trash to find a wealth of information about how humans survive and where the catalogs go after you circle everything you want and leave them on your neighbor's doorstep.
• Digging for bones used to be outsourced to dogs, but ever since they embarrassed us at the dog park, humans have done our own digging. Be sure to bring a shovel, a trowel, and an insatiable need to destroy an earthworm's habitat.
• Archaeologists collect human bones to remind us that everyone in the past was a spooky skeleton until humans evolved to have flesh in the late 1950s and souls in the early 1990s.
• When an archaeologist finds a pottery fragment, he must also find the other fragments of the jar it came from and reassemble them, or risk being the only archaeologist who has never drunk mead from an ancient jar.
• Use carbon dating to find out how old fossils are. Carbon dating is a process in which scientists take fossilized carbon on a date and ask it questions about the 1970s to find out if it is old enough to remember that time period.
• If you can't find any fossils, make some of your own by putting a lizard in a tray of wet clay.
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