Family, Motherhood, Personal Life Kara Bosworth Family, Motherhood, Personal Life Kara Bosworth

Barf Bags, Cheese Clots and Nap Time Nooky: My Comprehensive Guide to Traveling Abroad with a Toddler

I’m a planner. I’m a “check-in on a Southwest flight the second you’re permitted to” person. I’m a “get to the airport 2 hours early even though I have TSA pre-check” person. I’m a “line up the SECOND they call your boarding zone” person. I’m not calm until my flight takes off and I can watch the flight tracker to confirm there will be an on-time arrival. 

Decker in ruins. Literally. Such a crabby patty after waiting in line for an hour and a half.

Decker in ruins. Literally. Such a crabby patty after waiting in line for an hour and a half.

Admittedly, I have some control issues. And my poor husband is victim to my travel neurosis on the regular. It has been said that there are two types of people in a relationship: the “Here’s your boarding pass, itinerary, and packing list” person and the “Where are we going again?” person… and it’s safe to say I’m the former. So preparing for a trip abroad, which I could not FULLY plan due to the nature of the World Cup playoff brackets, was an extreme sport for me. After three weeks in three different countries with my three year old, here’s my best advice:

1.   Opt for Housing over Hotels. 

Book VRBO or Airbnb with a closing/locking bedroom when you can. Laundry facilities are essential when you’re dealing with a carsick kid or a pee accident or swamp-ass clothing from walking around all day. You can minimize your luggage this way - which comes in handy for trains/planes/and tiny European automobiles. Closing doors make it easier to put the kid down for naps and still maintain a healthy vacation-worthy sex life in a separate room. Although naptime “bathroom-boogie” can also be accomplished if you remember to bring your portable white noise machine and you aren’t stuck with a TINY European bathroom. Book your rental lodging around a hotel with the highest “Walkable” score on TripAdvisor so you don’t have to worry about driving in a foreign country or putting your kid in a cab without a car seat. 

A little stroll to our VRBO from the gelato shop.

A little stroll to our VRBO from the gelato shop.

2.   Rent car seats and buy a cheap umbrella stroller abroad.

You don’t wanna haul carseats across cities and through airports. It’s easiest to rent a car and pay to include the age-appropriate car seat. Unless your kid is young enough still and you happen to have a Doona Stroller, don’t even bother. If you’re going to be doing a lot of walking for a tour, either wear your child or just pick up a cheap umbrella stroller.

Florentinas.

Florentinas.

We wore Decker in Paris because it was the beginning of our trip and we were so grateful we brought the Lillebaby – which lets your kid essentially sit in a supported Piggy Back Ride (up to 50lbs). By the later part of our trip, we purchased a cheap umbrella stroller and it was so nice to have it - it folded up tightly and stored easily. Try to backload the heavy walking activities for the later part of the trip so you don’t have to worry about exhausting yourself from baby-wearing or transporting the stroller across multiple trains/planes. If you want to bring it home at the end of the trip, it’s just one checking situation vs. lugging it all over if you’re moving locations on your trip.

Strollin’ with the homies.

Strollin’ with the homies.

 

3.   Start each day with an opportunity for the kid to burn some energy.

Whether it’s park time, a walk around a museum, or a dip in the pool… give your tiny human the opportunity to expel some of their endless energy. If they get a chance to move their bodies, they’ll be more inclined to sit peacefully on an iPad while you’re enjoying a seven course Chef’s Tasting Menu with Wine Pairings. After they’ve burned some energy and eaten, naptime arrives just as the buzz from the rosé kicks in and you can attempt naptime nooky! Everybody wins!

Swiss movement.

Swiss movement.

 

4.   Bring extra outfits for the plane ride. It’s not excessive, it’s insurance. 

Four outfits for each kid, two each for you and your partner. I wish I could say this is “JUST IN CASE OF EMERGENCY” but you’ll likely use them all before arriving at your first hotel. Because kids. Pee, water, food, barf, or snot – none feel good for 10 hours on a flight.

And if the airline loses your luggage, you have clean clothes to get you through until your bag is back in your possession. If your kid’s freshly potty trained or in diapers: Bring one diaper/pull-up for every hour you are expecting to travel (including time to and from airport/plane/lodging) plus two in case of delays or lost baggage. Only bring enough diapers for the first three days of your trip and buy the rest there. Or do what I did and pack diapers for the whole trip to save space for all the clothes you’re GOING TO buy and put in their place – just don’t tell your husband that’s what you’re doing.  

Parenting on a Plane 101: iPad & Headphones.

Parenting on a Plane 101: iPad & Headphones.

 

5.   Don’t throw all your healthy habits out the window.

Keep taking your probiotics and vitamins and make sure your kids are doing the same. Cut down on nastiness by Clorox wiping your area on public transit – because kids are freaking disgusting and will always lick a seat or tray table given the opportunity. And, for the love of God, mix in a vegetable. We made the mistake of letting Decker overdose on parmesan with EACH bite of pasta while in Florence and Rome – because 1. It was hilarious, 2. She was eating and quiet and 3. We were pretty much doing the same because the parm was top notch. Well after five days of no bowel movements from the kid, she projectile vomited not once but twice on our trek home from Europe. She had a pretty fierce cheese clot and the constipation was REAL. Don’t be us. Force some veggies, smoothies, oatmeal, eggs, any fiber on the small humans. We know better, they don’t. 

Gordes

Gordes

6.   Make exceptions. 

We brought pacifiers which we’d been done using for over a year, we laid down with her to put her to bed, we let her watch the iPad at fancy restaurants, we put her in a Pull-Up even though she’s potty trained, and we carried her more than a 3.5 year old needs to be carried.

We made exceptions to some hard house rules – rules that we’ve worked really diligently to set. But kinda like how you can have booze at the airport at 10:00am, and you can wear pajamas in public on an airplane, traveling has its own set of rules and we extended those allowances to our kid. We knew it would be overwhelming, scary, exciting, and over-stimulating for our daughter to take on EIGHT different sleeping locations over the course of three weeks, so we let her have the comfort of a pacifier even though she’d kicked the habit a year and a half prior.

We did what we needed to do to make the trip happen, and she loved every minute of it – truly. That being said, the second she heard the pilot announce we were landing in Jacksonville, she actually SCREECHED with excitement:

“THAT’S US, MOM! THAT’S OUR HOME! WE’RE HOME IN JACKSONVILLE!!!!!!”

And had tears of joy in her eyes. So while there is something magical about showing your kid new cultures, places, and experiences… there’s really nothing like coming home. Especially when you haven’t pooped in five days due to heavy cheese abuse abroad. 

If you have any specific questions about traveling with a three year old, or kid questions about Provence, Florence, Rome, Lyon, Paris, Geneva, drop them in the comments.

IMG_5637.jpg
Read More