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Archive for the Tag 'travel'

Entertaining Kids in a Confined Space

A long-haul flight with a toddler is the fear of many a parent. In my experience, preparation is key to survival! Here are some suggestions:

  • Request the bulkhead row. It’s only a few extra centimeters of leg room, but can be enough for a toddler to get down from his/her seat and just be a kid
  • Pack a big bag of distractions (suggestions below)
  • Pack lots of snacks!

Distracting the Easily Distractible

Here are some suggestions for entertaining your child on a flight:

  • Pipe cleaners
  • Play dough
  • Modelling clay
  • Post it notes
  • Stickers
  • Crayons and paper (triangular crayons that won’t roll off the tray table are a great investment!)
  • Books
  • A (small) favourite toy
  • Small toy animals or dolls
  • Imagination games
  • Puzzles
  • Felt story board
  • Scissors and paper
  • Glue, to add to the cut-up paper
  • For the older child, paper crafts like origami
  • Beads and string, for the traveller who won’t eat them ;)
  • Dyed pasta with holes and string for beading if your young traveller will take a bite out of everything (dye them first with food dye if you want to get creative). These probably won’t survive until you come home again, but at least one leg of the journey will be entertaining (and fashionable!). Encourage your child to make LOTS of necklaces for all the child-loving people on the flight ;)
  • Snacks, snacks, snacks!

Eventually, your child will wish to leave his or her seat. Most people understand that and lots of walking up and down the aisle will almost certainly result in many a kid-friendly traveller saying Hi to your little one. I am yet to meet a hostie who didn’t love kids ;) I’m sure that decorating the entire cabin crew with pasta necklaces will entertain a whole plane full of people!

 

Encouraging Sleep

The easiest way to survive a long-haul flight is for your child to sleep through it. Walking them up and down the aisles in a front carry is one way to send them off to sleep. Breastfeeding your child to sleep in your seat is another way that’s very useful. I’ll confess freely that I’ve never gotten either of my children to sleep any other way under the age of two, but I’ve heard that some kids find the motion in the plane soothing like the car and will just nod off. My hopes are with you on that one!

 

What entertained your child on a long-haul flight or car trip? How did you get them to sleep? Leave a comment and let us know!

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Travelling with Special Dietary Requirements and How Do I Carry All That STUFF?

Part Two in our series on travelling with kids, we’re going to take a separate look at these two (related) issues.

 

Travelling with Special Dietary Requirements

 

Whether you’re gluten free, dairy free, vegan, avoiding additives, or on any other diet; travelling with dietary restrictions can be tricky, but not impossible. You can order a special meal for your plane trip, but please be aware that these are not always foolproof. Contamination is possible. If you are very sensitive, you may wish to consider bringing your own food.

 

The plane trip aside, finding safe food in airports or at your destination can be difficult. Since it’s a very specific issue to each diet, I’ll concentrate only on generalities.

Take snacks. For the first day or so of your journey, you can pack alot of your own (perishable) food. A cooler bag that folds down and a number of small plastic (leak proof) containers are a good way of transporting it. Yoghurt frozen in its tub, frozen peas, frozen corn and frozen berries are all icepack-and-snacks, keeping your other food cold while they defrost. Some of the following are big hits with our kids when out and about:

  • Fruit
  • Chopped cucumber sticks, carrot sticks
  • Dips like hummus and guacamole
  • Yoghurt
  • Cheese and crackers

 

After the first day or so of your journey, you will need to buy perishable food in your location. However, it’s a good idea to have some non-perishable food on hand that you can use when you’re either not sure you have something safe available or are pressed for time. Things we like are:

  • Muesli bars
  • Cans of tuna
  • Crackers
  • Rice cakes
  • UHT milk in single-serve containers
  • Shelf-stable cheese (this is loaded with sodium, so I use it as an occasional treat only)
  • Cans of corn
  • Dried fruit
  • Nuts (diet permitting)
  • Honey/Jam/Vegemite/Peanut butter (as above)
  • Pre-cooked rice packets
  • Just-add-water macaroni and cheese (again with the sodium)

 

Most diets accommodate fruit, and this is easy to buy in most places. However, it’s not easy to wash if the water isn’t fit for drinking. Fruit that is peeled before eating (mangoes, banannas, oranges etc.) is safest.

 

How to Carry All That STUFF?

If you’re travelling with kids, then you have three main categories of stuff to accommodate: bottoms, outsides and tummies. As above, the little tummies can be kept safely full if you can carry enough of your own food. Plastic containers and a cooler bag are one way of carrying food. Depending on your location and your family preferences, buying a small bag of frozen peas every morning before leaving for the day might be one way of feeding and cooling!

 

Bottoms can require special care and the items involved with it can be quite bulky- wipes, nappies etc. My suggestion is to pack minimally. Even in third world countries, you can buy disposables if you need to. Don’t bother with a changemat- use your carrier instead!

 

Outsides- the wee folk have a habit of creating loads of laundry when you’re out and about. My best advice here is to lower your standards. Take as little in the way of spare changes of clothing as necessary and if there are stains or the children spill something, don’t worry unless they’re cold! You’re on holiday, give yourself a break too :)

 

Once you’ve decided which items are absolutely necessary to carry, you need to decide how to carry them. One of my favourite methods over the years have been large (home made) messenger bags slung over the shoulder and around the wearee. A one-strap back-pack is a recent acquisition and that can be worn threaded through the carrier you’re wearing in most cases.

 

Lastly, consider weights training before you go ;)

 

Where have you been? What did you eat? What did you take?


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Babywearing in the Air and at the Airport

Part One in our series on travelling with kids, this post looks at babywearing in the air and at the airport.

Why Babywear? Why not use a Stroller (as well or instead)?

I am one of those parents who will do almost anything to avoid taking a stroller out in public. I’ve gotten over my (ill-judged) shame of using one, but I really prefer not to. Strollers are big, they don’t maneuver through doorways, corridors, crowds or stairs very well. If you have to take one through security, you may have to pull everything out of it, fold it, send it all through the xray machine (hopefully sans child) and put it all back together again at the end.

 

If you feel more comfortable with a stroller, then by all means use one! You can check it at the gate, although be aware that the carrier will not warant that your stroller will make it to the other side free of damage. Personally, the only use I see a stroller as having in this circumstance is (a) it’s ability to carry loads of stuff and (b) its ability to put a baby to sleep. Since you’re limited by the airline as to how much you can take part (a) is largely irrelevant. A good carrier will take care of part (b) for hours. I don’t find a stroller worth the trouble when travelling.

 

On the plane, your stroller is useless! Backwrapping with a long wrap on a plane is really difficult in my experience, so I’d recommend a mei tai instead. Front-wrapping with a pre-tied carry is fine, but not as quick as a mei tai. Sitting with a sleeping child on your lap with a mei tai is a great way to manage a long-haul flight. Put the baby to sleep with long walks up and down the aisle (and avoid deep vein thrombosis at the same time), then sit! Alternatively, breastfeed your child to sleep in the carrier and watch a movie ; Ring slings and pouches are also great for quick ins-and-outs, especially on the plane, but I like to have a carrier on hand that can handle long-term airport napping.

 

In light of recent events, if you are travelling with a very small baby, please be aware that the need for safe cosleeping applies on a plane as well as on land. Sleeping while you are babywearing is not safe with small babies. I believe that with a toddler it is unlikely to present a danger if you are seated on the plane, however. If you are travelling with an infant, ask for the baby bassinette when you book your ticket so that you will have somewhere safe to place the baby when you need to sleep. Travelling is exhausting for parents too!

 

Security: Yours, Babies and Theirs

Babywearing in the airport (or any other crowded public venue) gives your child security when dealing with the unfamiliar. Whether you’re in an unfamiliar country, timezone or routine, this security can be important to help your child adjust. Knowing that you have a sure-fire sleep maker on hand can help your child adjust to time zones and save your sanity as well. You also have the security of knowing your toddler (or preschooler) can’t get lost in a crowd when they’re tied on!

 

Unfortunately, there is no coherent policy on babywearing at security checkpoints. Some airports will require you to remove the child(ren) while others won’t. If you are asked to remove the child from your back or front, it will be because the security personnel are checking for weapons/explosive devices. There are several suggestions you can use to help negotiate the situation if it’s going to make life very difficult for you to remove your wearee:

  • Explain that your carrier is only made of cloth (where applicable)
  • Suggest that the security person, in addition to waving the metal wand over the carrier, touch the carrier
  • They may be satisfied with placing a hand between you and the baby to make sure your child isn’t packing heat in there ;)

Sometimes, they won’t be satisfied with these suggestions. You will have to remove the child in these circumstances. Try to time the security run for when the child is neither sleep or in a run-away mood. Easier said than done. I recommend bribing with interesting snacks ;)

 

Managing Luggage: Some Combinations

One of the harder things about travelling with children is managing luggage. I have travelled solo with both one and two wearees and here were some combinations that worked well for me:

  • Baby on back, messenger style nappy bag containing grown-up items as well, rolling suitcase
  • Toddler on back, baby on front, messenger nappy bag, rolling suitcase
  • Large backpack on back, baby on front, rolling suitcase

Whichever carriers you use, make sure you’re comfortable with using them in confined spaces and remember that if you don’t do back carries, learning to do them BEFORE travelling is a great idea!

 

Our next installment in this topic is on travelling with special dietary requirements and How Do I Carry All That Stuff?

 

Have you worn a child in an airport? What was your experience with security? What was your experience with carriers?

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Have Kids, Will Travel: A Series

We travel alot with our two kids. They like it, we like it, but we’ve learnt some lessons along the way. This post starts a series on travelling with kids and will cover the following topics in the coming weeks:

  • Babywearing in the airport
  • Entertaining kids and babies in a confined space for an extended period (and encouraging them to sleep)
  • Travelling with special dietary needs and how can I carry all that stuff without a pram?
  • Babywearing while overseas

Oh, the places you’ll go! Where have you been?

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Kandy

Welcome to the Carnival of Breastfeeding! Our theme this month is “Personal Stories” and my story of traveling to one of my favourite places, nursling and wearee in tow, is below. If you’ve arrived here for the first time, you might want to check out our series on breastfeeding hands free. If you’re a regular, make sure you check out the other carnival participants below.


He stirs beneath the mosquito net. He edges closer, still half asleep. I know it must be close to four since the monks are chanting in the grey pre-dawn and the valley is silent but for their hum. He breaks the stillness, demanding my sleepy attention. I roll closer and feed him. He drifts off to sleep and I am left listening to the Buddhist cannon chanted across the valley.

 

An hour and a half later, the Imam chants the call to prayer and his voice sounds across the town. The Buddhists have finished their praying before the Muslims have begun and my little one has felt the passage of time too. He edges closer, pressing himself into me. As the sun is dawning, I feed him again, listening to the Imam’s prayer, piercing and clear as the day brightens.

 

By the time the church bells begin to toll, I am out of patience with my nursling. His father has taken him away and I luxuriate in my loneliness beneath the mosquito net listening to the bells ring out from just down the hill.

 

After the Christians have finished, a new hymn begins. Staccato and impatient, a language all of its own, the car horns signal the beginning of a new phase in this valley’s daily round of devotions: commercial enterprise and the accompanying traffic chaos has begun.

 

This is Kandy, Sri Lanka. There is no other place like it.

 

 

 

These sounds are a morning ritual in Kandy, an  ancient city tucked into a valley in the mountains of central Sri Lanka. Those frequent night-time and early morning feeds were our personal experience of that cultural ritual.

 

My son is Sri Lankan by descent, though Australian by birth, and in the New Year holiday of 2007-2008, we traveled back to the place of his father’s birth to introduce him to his extended family and his second home.

 

 

Travelling in a foreign country with a small child can be a challenge at best. Travelling in a poverty-stricken foreign country can add a new dimension to that challenge. We were lucky enough to take our son at a stage in his life when he was still worn and breastfeeding regularly. All too regularly at night, alas, which is one of the reasons I’m so very familiar with the sounds of Kandy in the early morning!

 

 

Breastfeeding helped us negotiate the intricacies of travel in several ways. Firstly, we never had to worry about clean drinking water for him. He drank water when it was safe, but if it wasn’t convenient to find it at any given point, there was a ready-made drink on hand. As a toddler, he ate solid food and was very familiar with the local cuisine, but there were inevitably some changes and differences. Breastfeeding allowed us to make up any nutritional gap. Breastfeeding also provided an important part of our routine that helped him cope with the changes that traveling entails.

 

Breastfeeding was a way for me to connect with the other mothers in the family. We were vastly different people from vastly different places, but our children were all fed in the same way. In a country where extended nursing is the norm and poverty is rife, it’s obvious that breastfeeding provides an important protection for infants and small children. There was a respect for the process that we shared on both sides of the cultural divide, but at the same time it was just a normal part of mothering.

 

 

The other major part of our traveling experience was babywearing. I remember tucking him up into a wrap one tropical night in Negombo and feeding him to sleep as our relatives chatted about us. The mosquitoes were ravenous that evening (and dengue fever was rife), but the wrap mercifully protected most of him from their attention, acted as a light blanket in the tropical weather and screened him from outside distractions as he drifted off to sleep in an unfamiliar place.

 

 
From his vantage point on our backs, our son was able to experience the full richness of Sri Lanka for himself. Whether it was getting Kozy with the elephants, attending temple for the first time with his father or walking the beaches at sunset, our son experienced all of it.

 

Like breastfeeding, babywearing was certainly useful from a practical standpoint. Negotiating multiple airports with a toddler who’s not just out of his time zone, but totally out of patience is much easier when you’re not juggling a pram. At our destination, however, babywearing was essential.

 

As a traveling rule of thumb, any street that’s just as likely to have elephants in the traffic stream as motorbikes is probably not a place where toddlers should roam freely and prams run easily. Another important piece of information for travellers: elephants do not follow road rules. Because when you’re driving an elephant down the main (one way) street of a major city against the traffic, it’s up to the rest of the city to get out of your way.

 

We are returning to Sri Lanka again this year with our son and our younger child. Another nursling, another wearee. More elephants to avoid and monkeys to fend off. Poverty to attempt to explain, thousands of years of history to observe. There are more memories to be made, more experiences to share. I’m quite certain I’ll be breastfeeding and babywearing on this trip, once again. I don’t know if I’ll be doing those things in tandem, but the unknown is one of the wonderful parts of traveling.

 

 

 

Other Carnival of Breastfeeding participants who are sharing their stories today:

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