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sem
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Topic: Long haul flight essentials Posted: 11 April 2011 at 2:20pm |
What items did you find absolutely necessary when traveling with a baby and what could you have lived without?
I'll be flying to Germany with my then 6 month old. We have a 2.5hr stop over in BKK. I'll be travelling on my own with her so am somewhat limited as to what I can take and carry.
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JD
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 3:28pm |
A change of clothes for both of you. We travelled with ds and twice he piddled everywhere when I was changing him. He hardly ever did that before.
Nappies
wipes
stroller (for in the airport when you are waiting around)
Water bottle for you and drinking cup or whatever you use for your baby
change mat (you may have to change the baby somewhere that is a bit grotty).
Couple of little toys and books
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schnooks
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 3:49pm |
We had 3 stopoers on way to our destination to the States. My SIL gae us one of these
http://store.philandteds.com/phil-and-teds-cocoon-sport-explorer-classic-twin-hammerhead.pro
and I wouldn't hae been without it! Our plane broke down on way home so were stuck in the airport for about 6 hours before being shipped off to a hotel and it was inaluable. Especially watching other trying to hold their babies for so long! We also had a frontpack for when she was awake..which actually wasn't that much!
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kiwisj
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 6:01pm |
I just travelled home from NZ on my own with my two boys so understand keeping stuff to a minimum!
Do you mean what will you need for the flight? Or for the trip in general?
For the flight:
Nappies - one for every hour you're in the air, plus one more is the number I work with!
Wipes
Hand sanitiser
Bonjela, pamol, any other meds your baby is taking. Make sure they're in <100ml bottles and take a couple of medicine syringes
Food - depending on where you're at with feeding you need any feeds/meals you would normally give during that time period. I would take one extra (solids) and maybe two extra milk feeds if you're bottle feeding.
When I travelled with one baby I found it easiest wearing him in my Ergo so my hands were free for other stuff. Then try having just one backpack or something you can wear across your body so you still have your hands free IYGWIM.
Spare clothes - one outfit change for you and at least two for baby.
Planes are cold so take socks!
And muslins/flat nappies
One or two small toys and any comfort items your baby likes
If your baby takes a dummy, put it on a chain/clip so it doesn't fall on the floor
As for while you're away.. anything you can't live without day-to-day TAKE IT or make sure there's one waiting for you when you arrived. We thought we'd be right without a rocker/bouncer for DS2 this trip but ended up buying the Lazy Ted when we had been in Wellington a week and were sick of having nowhere for him to be upright (DS2 has reflux and spews when he's lying down). We also started DS2 on solids while we were away and the LT was good for somewhere to feed him too.
Enjoy your trip!
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SJ
Callum - Dec 2008
Daniel - Oct 2010
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Richtea
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 7:35pm |
I would recommend a front pack, nappies, all in one suits, couple of muslims or cloth nappies, familiar bedding ie sleep sac, couple of toys with no loose parts, jars of baby food, formula - individual packs - if not breeding. Only take one bag and remember you need very little as you'll occupied by the baby.
I did uk and back on my own with a stop in Bangkok and was pleased to have hands free with the front pack :)
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sem
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 7:59pm |
I don't think I'll be breeding on the flight Richtea
Thanks for all the tips so far, I really appreciate it.
I wasn't quite sure how many nappies I'd need. Did you have many left over after your trip kiwisj?
And yes, I just wanted an idea of what to take on the flight as I will be staying with my parents and they are organsing to borrow a highchair and pram etc.
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ItchyFeet
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 8:28pm |
Take way more nappies (and wipes) than you'd use normally. The air pressure changes have a horrible effect on babies bowel! Hence more changes of clothes for both of you than you'd expect!
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tictacjunkie
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 9:22pm |
Lol, breeding. And I've got the giggles over taking "muslims" for baby too. Not sure they'd fit in your carryon! I've heard of these earplug things that you put in babies ears that stop them from experiencing the inner ear pressure thing that often makes under 2s cry inconsolably. Will go have a Goggle on the interweb for them.
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tictacjunkie
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 9:36pm |
Found them- they're called "Ear Planes". There's a website www.flyingwithkids.com, a NZ one, that seems to have a lot of useful info. The NZ earhealth website had a few ideas too, like feeding frequently to encourage her to swallow lots & relieve the pressure in her ears. Hope that helps Susy.
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DesSt
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 9:44pm |
My list would be:
Nappies and a big pack of wet wipes
Change Mat
AIO's
Front pack (a must!!)
A flannel wrap (to use in the baby basinet as a sheet)
Empty drink bottles
Teething ring / pamol (a must have!)
Saline solution for keeping the nasal passage "moist". If it hurts me I figure it must have been hurting DS.
Research the airport/s if you have a long transfer - Some airports have short term hotel rooms which was fantastic for us - showers and naps for all of us in comfort.
I'd also take a dummy even if Emily doesn't normally use one - The only times James has used them was when we were coming in for landing in Dubai and OZ - he normally spits it straight back out but for some reason decided he was going to suck..
ETA: I would also aim to put it all in one back pack to keep your hands free - but found that our follow passengers were extremely helpful!
Edited by DesSt
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sem
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 10:08pm |
What are the empty drink bottle for?
We have about 6 hours or so on the way back in BKK and they hire rooms by the hour in the airport, we will book into that.
Saline solution is a great idea! Never used it and have no idea how to but I always get sore and a bleeding nose so will look into that one too.
thanks for that website ttj!
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kiwisj
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Posted: 11 April 2011 at 10:45pm |
susyl I had maybe 2 nappies left from our 10hr flight (CHC-SIN) last week. I changed the boys into comfy clothes in the gate lounge before we boarded .. and then Daniel filled his nappy as I was getting organised before takeoff  It is WAY better to take MORE nappies than you think you will need! We also seem to have more up-the-back explosions on flights  hence needing plenty of changes of clothes.
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SJ
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tishy
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Posted: 12 April 2011 at 9:34am |
If you've got more than fits in 1 backpack then you've got too much (I used this logic when travelling long haul alone with my then 2.5yo twins)
Just dress her in stretch n grows for the trip. Also at that age I doubt she'll need any toys packed (unless she has a fav cuddly), she'll get hours of fun playing with the seat belts
Having free hands is most important. Definitely a good idea to use a baby carrier for Emily if you can.
If she uses a dummy then take heaps of them. Along with the flight you might not be able to get the same brand in Germany. (We flew to Ireland when my twins were 10 months old, got on the last long haul flight back to NZ with ONE dummy. Luckily another passenger saw the dropped dummy and came on the plane looking for it's owner  )
If you're using formula then you can buy containers that can store pre-measured amounts. It also isn't a problem to take open containers of baby rice.
Edited by tishy
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Richtea
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Posted: 12 April 2011 at 11:22am |
Oops.. For all the spelling mistakes.. Was tired and rushing !
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DesSt
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Posted: 13 April 2011 at 2:46am |
Empty water bottles - the air staff are a little slow at getting very small glasses of water...and it is difficult to go get them yourself with bubs. I don't think they are allowed to give you bottles of water so I take a drink bottle and fill it up in the galley so I don't need to ask constantly.
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maysie
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Posted: 13 April 2011 at 8:13am |
everything mentioned above plus a new book or two and a hand puppet. I kept the toys in an ice cream container
Oh and I also had those plastic nappy bags (for rubbish) so when I went to the toilet to change DD I carried the nappy/changemat/wipes in that rather than carry a whole bag. I think I took 6 nappies for each 12 hour flight (but had a 12 mth old). A couple of old school flats are a must for the seat and laps. The airlines are usually pretty good and often give you a bag of baby stuff too. Plus, when they are serving meals, if your little one is awake you can ask them to hold you your meal for later when they are sleeping
Edited by maysie
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Hopes
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Posted: 13 April 2011 at 8:58am |
The one thing that a number of people suggested to us was baby earmuffs. I thought they were being a bit OTT, until about five people had suggested it, then I thought perhaps it was worth a shot. They were a saviour on our flight home - there was another baby bawling for about five hours non-stop (the poor parents!) and Jacob couldn't settle because of it. I put the earmuffs on - he hated them aand wanted them off, but I held them on and he was so exausted he conked out... and kept on sleeping, not waking straight up in five minutes because of the screaming next door.
They're kind of bulky, though.
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sem
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Posted: 13 April 2011 at 2:44pm |
Thank you so much for all your tips, I'm finding them very helpful!
Does anybody know if infants have a carry on luggage allowance?
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lilfatty
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Posted: 13 April 2011 at 3:28pm |
They have the same allowance as you although it may depend on the airline.
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tishy
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Posted: 13 April 2011 at 3:30pm |
They definitely have the same check in baggage allowance, so I assume it's the same for cabin.
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