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“But since then, we have not been filming, we have not had any film crews in our house. And we have decided that what’s best for our family right now is to not continue with the show." Eric was shocked to hear the number but he knew that it was important for all the boys to feel like it was their special day too. As a result, he let them invite everyone that they had wanted at the party.
Opening the front door for their kids, any confusion at the surprise turns to joy as they spy the miniature horses, pigs and rabbits waiting for them in the yard. In a video they posted to theirYouTube channel in July 2021, Eric and Courtney Waldrop answeredtheir fans' questions. The couple explained that TLC first approached them about doing the series when Courtney was still pregnant with the sextuplets, and they weren't sure how it would pan out. "We made the decision that, 'Okay, we'll do it, we'll give it a shot, and if it ever becomes something that's hard on our family, that's hard on our kids, then we'll stop,'" Courtney explained. After years of renovations, the Waldrops finally move into their new home.
Lindsie Chrisley Gets Emotional Over Christmas Without Her Son
They initially agreed — although they admitted that filming was a "full-time job" and it would be a challenge to balance it with the demands of parenting nine children. “There are only so many hours in a day, and it was honestly just too difficult,” Eric explained. However, one thing that she was concerned about was what the older boys — Saylor, Wales and Bridge — would think of this plan. Last year, the boys had to celebrate their birthdays with the sextuplets and she was not sure if they would be ready to do that again.

And as evidenced by the supertease, potty training six babies on portable potties is no small feat. It’s been seven weeks since the coronavirus put a halt to everything. For the last two months, the family hasn’t been filming. They’ve been taking some downtime to reconsider everything and now they’re back. The family had started construction on their home before everything hit and so that drew out the process, making it longer than originally planned. The family was just so happy that some things were done that they were moving back in before everything was finished.
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And so Courtney’s friends told her she should get them because that will help teach the kids how to read. Additionally, there are Eric and Courtney’s long-term financial worries, as Courtney considers the prospect of returning to her old job as a teacher. “A first for the network, we began this journey with Courtney and Eric even before the sextuplets arrived, when they already had three boys in their brood. At the beginning of the series, we meet Courtney already in the 25th week of her pregnancy -– which is an advanced stage because multiples are generally born within the 30-week gestation period. Due to the sensitive nature of such a rare pregnancy, the sextuplets were admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit right away.
0 commentsLast month, the Waldrops told PopCulture they were happy to be in their new home after months quarantining in their mobile home while renovations were completed. Even during the tough times, Courtney said she tried to look at the silver lining when it came to being stuck at home. "Quarantine was hard, but it was good, because it did slow life down," she explained.
The Real Reason TLC Canceled Sweet Home Sextuplets
While we wait the release of ‘Sweet Home Sextuplets’ Season 3, check out the clip below. If you have not seen the series and love reality television, then head over to TLC to catch all the episodes of the first season. Once all the babies were safely home, "Sweet Home Sextuplets" focused on Eric and Courtney Waldrop's everyday challenges as a sudden family of eleven. In addition to their active sons Saylor, Bridge and Wales, they now had six healthy babies who kept them busy with diaper changes, feedings, and demands for attention. The show chronicled everyday challenges like birthday parties, potty training, getting through flu season, and living in a small mobile home while their larger house was being built. The Waldrops also own a small farm with cattle, sheep and chickens, making their schedule nonstop.

As far as next season goes, we are sure that TLC must have been encouraged by the response that the last two seasons have received. So, it is quite likely that the network will renew the show for a third season. If everything goes as expected, our best guess is that ‘Sweet Home Sextuplets’ Season 3 can release sometime in May, 2020. The odds of conceiving sextuplets are extremely low, even with fertility treatments, as experts testify. This is why it was a very special occasion when Eric and Courtney Waldrop, who both live on a sheep farm in small-town Alabama, discovered that Courtney was expecting six babies all at once.
The boys did not seem happy and Saylor seemed disappointed with the idea of celebrating all birthdays together. He did not like the idea of having the sextuplets while celebrating his birthday with his friends. Courtney tried to assure him and the boys that they would be spending their birthday at a place where the boys will have a chance to enjoy the trampoline while the sextuplets would have a bouncing house. Courtney and Eric take the babies on special individual dates, revealing surprising facets of each baby's personality. Wales and Bridge have their first karate test, but Bridge makes a shocking decision.
Sandy said all six children won’t be on the same level. She found some to be 21 to 24 months and others to be 18 months. Hopefully, Sandy can come up with a program for them to help them because four of the sextuplets did need additional help. They weren’t where they needed to be for their age groups. Maybe after they see Sandy for a while they’ll get to know where they need to be. They spotted some mugs at a shop and the mugs detailed what they were for on them.
Else she’ll be reminded of it each time she brings Saylor for his visit and that wasn’t the only she had to worry about. Courtney and her husband Eric have noticed that in terms of their younger children it was their daughters who were more advanced than their sons in their speech. Courtney would like for a speech pathologist to come in to make sure the boys where they needed to be. She was happy to be back in her home with her family and the kids’ new bathroom was great when she was washing up the sextuplets. Blu was perhaps the most difficult child during this time.
As Courtney had expected, they were able to have a nice time where the boys enjoyed their time while the sextuplets had fun together. "You know, in all honesty, we may not normally do this, but for the last several months, we've not done any activities really at all," Courtney explains to the camera. Last summer, the Waldrops took to their YouTube channel to update fans on their family and the future of their show — and the update left fans disappointed but sympathetic.
"Life is going to always throw you curveballs, you know, and with the coronavirus, who knows when it's ever going to end," she wonders. "So you just got to lean on the Lord and know that he's going to get us through each and every day." Courtney and Eric Waldrop are ending the summer with a special surprise for their nine kids!

Eric added, "We know it's for the best for our family, and we're very happy right now." As is typical for premature babies, the sextuplets stayed in the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit for weeks until they were strong enough to come home. Rivers and Rawlings were the first to leave the hospital, after 53 days, via Courtney's Facebook page, and the boys were the last to leave at 72 days. But that was only the beginning of the family's ongoing adventure.
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