The Commercial Appeal

Now boarding tiny travelers

Tips for easier trip when traveling abroad with kids

- Tracee M. Herbaugh

Some questioned my sanity: I was taking young children on a vacation abroad, mostly alone.

It was just the three of us – my infant daughter, 6-year-old son and me. We’d board a plane in Boston, fly to London and then take a train to Paris. We’d meet my husband, who was there on business, and spend a few days before I returned home alone with the kids.

How would I carry the constellat­ion of luggage? What about the baby’s naps and the early bedtimes? Surely this is no way to experience Europe, friends said.

But I couldn’t quite let go of my adventure-seeking procliviti­es in life before children. I loved to travel to foreign cities and eat new foods. I was determined to keep doing those things.

While researchin­g this trip, I found that my desire to bring the kids abroad was hardly rare among parents.

There’s debate surroundin­g what age children should be when traveling abroad. Some experts say it’s best to start around 5 if you want them to remember the experience.

“Traveling with children is an important part of education, and it really strengthen­s the family bond,” said Konrad Waliszewsk­i, who founded the travel planning app TripScout. “And travel can really stimulate a child’s curiosity.”

Waliszewsk­i, who lives in Chicago, has so far taken his 16-month-old son, Miles, to eight countries, including Egypt and Greece.

Among his tips for families new to internatio­nal travel: Pack light, as in one or two sets of clothing per person. Leave the toys at home. And plan activities both you and your kids enjoy.

“People go too far and do only kidfriendl­y stuff,” he said. “Then they come home feeling disappoint­ed with the trip.”

Be prepared

With my children, there were plenty of bumps on our first internatio­nal trip. When we arrived at the airport, an impatient traveler made snide comments about my kids and our stroller holding up the security line. There’s nothing you can do about rude people – they’re everywhere.

There are, however, steps you can take to significan­tly ease the stress of traveling.

The biggest inconvenie­nce on the overnight seven-hour flight to London was that I had to hold the baby. I didn’t know airplanes had infant beds – at no additional fee. Going back home, I did get a bassinet and the baby slept in it most of the way.

Parents often worry that a child will become bored on long trips. Some rely on electronic devices to entertain children. I brought a set of noise-canceling headphones for my son and hoped the airplane entertainm­ent system worked. If it didn’t, I reasoned, he could find something to do without a screen.

Viktoria Altman, a New York Citybased travel writer and photograph­er, has been bringing her two boys – now 8 and 12– on trips to Mexico, the Caribbean, Ecuador and other countries since they were little. It’s gotten easier as they’ve gotten older.

“The first few times on a flight were challengin­g,” she said. Age 6 seemed to be when the boys could handle the trips better. They bring cards along, and watch the in-flight movies.

“American children are often used to being entertaine­d all of the time,” Altman said. “It can be a challenge for them to accept that being bored is OK.”

Expect mishaps anyhow

No matter how well you prepare, there’s no way to completely eliminate travel stress for you and those around you, said Jodi Smith, who owns Mannersmit­h Etiquette Consulting in Marblehead, Massachuse­tts.

When traveling with infants and toddlers, “anything that can happen will happen,” she said, including spills, screams and dirty diapers. The lattershou­ld never be left on the plane.

“Get a plastic bag and take the dirty diaper with you,” Smith said.

Be polite to flight attendants, hotel staff and others. Hopefully you’ll find kind ones.

“If you’re traveling by yourself with a toddler and you must leave Cheerios all over the floor, apologize to the flight attendants profusely,” Smith said.

There’s no need to apologize for taking your child on a trip. Some parents make goodie bags filled with snacks for flyers sitting near their child. Inside the bag, there’s often a note of advance apology for any annoyances. Smith said that’s a nice gesture, but unnecessar­y.

 ?? | ASSOCIATED PRESS TRACEE HERBAUGH VIA AP ?? CLAY SISK/USA TODAY NETWORK Tracee Herbaugh’s 9-month-old daughter, Madeleine, sits near the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Herbaugh took her kids to Europe last year, despite the hassles. Konrad Waliszewsk­i of TripScout and his family visit the Parthenon in Athens, Greece, in September 2017. At 16 months old, Waliszewsk­i’s son has already been to eight countries. KONRAD WALISZEWSK­I/TRIPSCOUT VIA AP
| ASSOCIATED PRESS TRACEE HERBAUGH VIA AP CLAY SISK/USA TODAY NETWORK Tracee Herbaugh’s 9-month-old daughter, Madeleine, sits near the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Herbaugh took her kids to Europe last year, despite the hassles. Konrad Waliszewsk­i of TripScout and his family visit the Parthenon in Athens, Greece, in September 2017. At 16 months old, Waliszewsk­i’s son has already been to eight countries. KONRAD WALISZEWSK­I/TRIPSCOUT VIA AP

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