The only thing that bothers me is the fact that he's crying throughout the day - I'd bring something from home (a lovey, a sippy cup, a picture of you - or one of your scarves or t-shirts) - if he's still crying in the middle of the day next Friday, I'd find somewhere else. At that point, IMO - and experience - there's something wrong - not necessarily with the daycare (although that is the case more often than most moms want to acknowledge), but between the daycare and your child. Yes - if you didn't intervene, eventually he'd stop crying - but not because it's better, or he's more comfortable - just because he has come to the understanding that you don't care and you won't help him. Suffer in silence, so to speak.
We've been to several daycares, my children and I - an in home with my oldest, and he cried EVERY SINGLE DAY. He was crying EVERY DAY I picked him up. So many freaking warning signs. Then one day I walked in and he was scaling a changing table with a 5 month old on it, and no adult in site. That was our last day.
We switched to a center - he cried for four days, and then he didn't want to leave. As in, he asked to go to 'KK' on Saturdays.
My second baby was born - the center doesn't take babies, the in home provider I was going to use for the baby offered me a cut rate for both, and I switched my son. My oldest was miserable. He begged not to go back, and got very physical with the kids and the provider during the week that I made him go. My baby was also miserable. My oldest child went back to his 'KK' - although the provider told me I was 'giving in' to his demands. HA. As soon as I found another in home for my baby, I moved him as well. The first and second providers lost their licenses in the next year. The third home - 'Kia' - was a dream. My baby smiled when he saw her, and was smiling almost every day when I picked him up. Horribly inconvenient location, excellent provider. When he was old enough, he switched to 'KK'. He cried two days - now he loves it too.
Why so long winded? Because I feel like it's important to know that a GOOD DC relationship is so comfortable for the baby. I feel like parents need to acknowledge that sometimes it's not convenient to do what's best for our kids - and that DC can be excellent, but it takes some work on our part.
S.