https://breastfeedingusa.org/content/article/does-your-older-baby-still-need-night-feedings-0
I saw this article posted on Kellymom's facebook page about night nursing patterns varying by mother-baby pair. It talks about small versus large storage capacity for milk, describing these characteristics:
After baby’s first month, a mother with a large storage capacity may notice that her baby:
• Is satisfied with one breast at most or all feedings.
• Is finished breastfeeding much sooner than other babies (sometimes just five minutes).
• Gains weight well on fewer feedings per day than the average eight or so.
• Sleeps for longer-than-average stretches at night.
If this describes your breastfeeding experience, your baby may already be sleeping for longer stretches at night than other babies you know. But if after the first month of life your baby often takes both breasts at feedings, feeds on average longer than about 15 to 20 minutes total, typically takes eight or more feedings per day, and wakes at least twice a night to breastfeed, your breast storage capacity is likely to be small or average.
I pretty much fit all the characteristics for small to average capacity, and we do a lot of night nursing still at ten months.
No real question here, but I was just curious what others' experience had been.