GEAR UP: Travel with children often involves toting or rolling them around
Published 4:56 pm Wednesday, July 2, 2008
After almost 10 years of traveling around the country and to Europe with children, I have learned this: Less is more.
All that stuff you hear about packing little toys for kids to unwrap on the airplane or stocking up on travel games to play in the car is, in my experience, pretty much useless. I live and die by the portable DVD player, two if your kids are at an age, as mine are, when they will fight about the air molecules they breathe.
Books are good, but remember it’s always fun to buy books on your travels. Ditto for crayons and a coloring book.
Here, based on this mom’s experience, is a brief guide to good travel stuff.
CARRIER
For infants, I swear by the Baby Bjorn Infant Carrier ($79 to $99 at www.babiesrus.com), which keeps your hands free, the baby warm and takes up no room.
When we went to Paris with our 2-month-old, we didn’t bother with a stroller (which is a pain in any city with a subway or metro — all those steps). Because it was winter, we also got a Baby Bjorn carrier cover ($39 at www.babierus.com), which kept little Darby warm and dry.
For older kids, if you are going to do a lot of hiking, a Kelty Child Carrier backpack (Pictured, $119 to $240 at Sport Chalet, www.sportchalet.com) is a must.
Yes, you tough dads can go miles with a kid on your shoulders, but when that kid falls asleep (and he or she will), you are balancing a sack of cement on your head.
STROLLER
When your baby is too heavy or squirmy for a Baby Bjorn, you need a stroller, and if you’re going to travel a lot or go to places with cobblestones or off-road walking, you should invest in a really good umbrella stroller.
I have a Chicco C6 ($59.99 at www.amazon.com) that works well, and Maclaren has great lightweight portable urban strollers (www.amazon.com, $174.95).
CAR SEAT
The great debate — take or rent. I say take. You can check them with your luggage or at the gate, and nothing’s worse than renting an infant seat you don’t like or trust. Also, the car seat guarantees you have somewhere safe to put an infant when you’re in your hotel room or apartment, which is nice.
For older kids, a very cool thing is a Gogo Kidz Travelmate ($89 at www.gogobabyz.com) — a car seat that turns into a stroller by pulling out a handle and wheels. Although it’s too low to the ground to act as a real stroller, it is great for airports.
And if the airline allows it, putting a car seat in the plane seat makes things much easier. Your child is more secure, for one thing, and there is a soporific effect about a car seat that cannot be overlooked.
GROBAG
These British zippered blankets are like big sleep sacks, and they come in handy because they will keep a child as warm as any blanket and not fall off during the night or get lost during the flight.
Get a size up from your child’s regular size, and it will also work in a stroller. At $55 (www.amazon.com or www.gro-group.co.uk), they aren’t cheap, but they’re worth it.
