I was idly pondering charitable and worthy causes on the Ice Bucket thread and it occurred to me that being a Foster Parent is probably a very honourable thing to do and charitable. I had a quick read up about it and learned that Foster Parents get an allowance so it not really a charitable activity.
Then it occurred to me that I don't know and as far as I can recollect, have never met anyone who is a Foster Parent.
Anyone here a Forster Parent, present or past? How'd you get on with it? It seems it could be quite a challenging experience.
I was a foster carer (no longer called parents in the authority I worked for), for 5 years. It's not charitable because they ask that you are not working - to be there for the child(ren) full time. Often one partner works but not the other.
It IS very challenging, very rewarding, very intrusive at times (due to social workers coming to your home often, contact for the child(ren) etc). BUT overall very fulfilling. I was fostered as a child so that was the draw of my interest, the assessment alone took nearly a year and goes right through your life history with a fine tooth comb, so be prepared to be completely open. We've also had a lot of visits from the police (not at our doing but the children who were with us being involved in drugs or staying out overnight / running away from time to time - it happens and still makes me feel a failure admitting it but we were respected carers so I'm sure they'd have told us otherwise had it been a reflection on us).
We only stopped fostering because we no longer had a spare room (our 3rd child arrived). We did ages 0-18 years so had a lot of babies who went onto adoption, some middle aged children and teenagers - and yes we fostered well over double figures in the 5 years due to some placements coming in to care on a temporary basis.

the older ones have a lot of baggage but the babies come with a whole heap of things you don't associate with tiny babies, we had a drug addicted baby who was weaning off, and a baby from a psych unit mother and baby ward who had no attachment so that was urgently needed to ensure baby formed the right mental schemas for positive attachment in the future. Then of course there are children with sexualised behaviour due to sexual abuse etc. However, social services are supportive in helping you identify areas you can't work in and will help you avoid these - there was a foster carer in our training course who felt she couldn't cope with looking after a child who had been sexually abused - not the childs fault but she wouldn't be able to cope knowing what had happened. We personally never refused a child, even with complex needs.
Hope this gives you a bit of insight of our experience and why it's not charitable in the sense that it's paid.