Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Flew over with my two small boys (2 & 3yrs old) last year - an hour into the flight my youngest barfed his milk heavily and extensively all over the place - stank like hell but cleared 3 seats around us so we had room to spread out a bit.
He was ok - just baby milk barf.. Not everyone was as pleased as us :eek::eek: |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Yep, my then 2 year old projectile vomited over the man next to me. He was very gracious about it though and bought me a glass of wine.
Mr Weeze missed the whole thing as he luxuriated in business class. |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Weeze
(Post 9977107)
Yep, my then 2 year old projectile vomited over the man next to me. He was very gracious about it though and bought me a glass of wine.
Mr Weeze missed the whole thing as he luxuriated in business class. I used to travel often enough to buy my personal flights in business with airmiles but alas no more (although it's really a positive as I don't travel away from home as often as I used to). |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Bink
(Post 9977113)
I used to travel often enough to buy my personal flights in business with airmiles but alas no more (although it's really a positive as I don't travel away from home as often as I used to).
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Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Bink
(Post 9977113)
He travelled in Business without you...:eek: (opens big can of worms)
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Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Request an exit door seat. Should have more room, you can then have baby sleep on the floor rapped in blankets (assuming turbulence free) or play.
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Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Weeze
(Post 9977257)
In fairness, he was on a business trip and I was the tag along with our daughter. He offered to ask the man to switch up to business class who was sat next to me, but I told him to not to bother. Wish I bloody had though and we could both have suffered. Continental were shite. Hardly ever came round with drinks, no snacks and couldn't be bothered. I had to sneek into business class to ask him to steal some snacks for our daughter. And, when I went through the curtain he was enjoying a hot fudge sundae from an ice cream cart :sneaky:
I've always had fairly good service from Continental. For me, it's BA I can't stand. I find their staff to be pretentious and stuck up for the most part and they're so friggin' expensive (mainly applies to their Business class). I'm allowed to fly business for work with the exception that I'm not allowed to fly BA unless it's the only feasible route. |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by kimilseung
(Post 9977271)
Request an exit door seat. Should have more room, you can then have baby sleep on the floor rapped in blankets (assuming turbulence free) or play.
Having said that, I think we are going to bring a blanket and find him somewhere to crawl around for a bit if he needs too. |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by sir_eccles
(Post 9975844)
Not tried this myself (as our isn't due until June and I am dreading that first long haul flight) but I have heard that some people use Benedryl.
Obviously check with your pediatrician first in regards to using any such medication. |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Bink
(Post 9977286)
We have a bulkhead seat with extra room but not an exit row. I don't think we would be allowed an exit row seat (no children this row sign)
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Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Weeze
(Post 9977298)
Yep, dead right no kids allowed. They are a bit funny sometimes about the rows you are allowed to sit in that aren't exits as well as they like you to be near the emergency floating cot locations.
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Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Yorkieabroad
(Post 9977315)
The other thing we've been moved for (when we used to fly "kid in lap") was out of rows with insufficient oxygen masks....apparently most rows have 1 mask per seat (makes sense) and only certain rows have an extra mask to cover for additional infants. I think it happened twice, both times after boarding, and both times out of non-bulkhead rows. The cabin staff were not amused that the check-in people seemed ignorant of the requirement.....
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Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Ohhhh....dont get me started on that!
We normally fly back to the UK on KLM as its the easiest way to get up to Teesside. When it was KLM NW we always had a problem with seats. There are normally 5 of us travelling, 2 adults and 3 kids, and the norm was for us to be seated on 3 different rows, usually 4-5 rows apart. Once I was travelling on my own with the 3 kids (ages 1, 3 and 5 at the time) and they still managed to put us on 3 different rows, with the 3 year old even in a different section of the plane! It was always left to the cabin staff to sort out because the ground staff were totally incompetent. Last Christmas after the Delta merger, was the first time in probably 10-12 flights that they have ever sat us together from the get-go. Hopefully a sign of things to come! |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by sir_eccles
(Post 9975844)
Not tried this myself (as our isn't due until June and I am dreading that first long haul flight) but I have heard that some people use Benedryl.
Obviously check with your pediatrician first in regards to using any such medication. |
Re: Transatlantic Travel with a Baby
Originally Posted by Weeze
(Post 9977107)
Yep, my then 2 year old projectile vomited over the man next to me. He was very gracious about it though and bought me a glass of wine.
Mr Weeze missed the whole thing as he luxuriated in business class. Daughter thinks that cattle class is much better since they serve food in little packages rather than straight onto the plate. Best thing for me to bring on a plane is stickers, pens, coloring books, iPad and a few 'new' knick knacks which get whipped out about once every two hours. But daughter is now 5 and a veteran traveller. Only dodgy flight I had with her was in the depths of Nepal from Kathmandu, but hopefully on a transatlantic flight you should be fine. |
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