16 answers

Does Anyone Have Any Tips on 8 Hour Car Ride for Thanksgiving?

We are taking our 4.5 month old to the bay area ca. to see my parents for thanksgiving and this will be her longest car ride ever and Im a little nervese about it because Ive never had to stop and feed or change her on the road before or keep her entertained. Does anyone have any tips to make the trip easy and not so stressfull for both of us? The trip is about 8-10 hours. thank you O. P.

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Thank you so much for all the wonderful tips from everyone, Wow the trip was so easy she was so great. We left right when it got dark and she was such a good travler, she did not cry one time and it was so easy to feed and change her in the back seat,we stoped every 2 hours and still made it to nor-cal in 9 hours we got really lucky with traffic there was none. thank you again O. p.

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I know its passed Thanksgiving, but if you travel again you can always try traveling at night. My husband and I leave either at my childrens bed time at night or early, early morning before the sun comes up. Depending on how long the trip is. If you do that the kids just sleep the whole way. Its a relaxing drive. Take Care, T. Q

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I had to take my baby to Oklahoma at 6 weeks then back to Idaho at 4 months. The only thing that saved me was having my mother with me in the back seat of the car. Since the carseat had to face backward, he was much happier that he could see someone. I have done a lot of driving with him since that time alone, and always loaded a huge bag of toys to have in the front seat with me. As soon as he dropped one toy and started crying, I would hand him the next toy. By the end of the trip, they were all in the back seat with him! One lifesaver toy I bought was a toy that lights up when you push a button. I bought it at Target for less than $4 and it has been worth more than $100.

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Go purchase Baby Einstein, Baby Motzart or Bethoven. those are best for babies and get a portable Dvd player, she will love that during fussy moments, I agree with the other posters go at night so she can sleep most of the way. The lull of the car should keep her asleep all night. I also agree with the other poster too, sit with her during fussy moments and talk to her play with her. Good Luck. S.

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Don't worry, it will be fine. It will take a little longer to get there with the frequent stops you will have to make, but make sure she isn't too hot and but isn't too cold. don't over heat her with blankets just because you are in a car. A car can get hot for a baby without ever thinking it. I took my kids to colorado when she was only 2 months and my son was 2 and we did have to make more frequent stops but it wasn't bad at all. Just made sure to have plenty of bottles and maybe even a warmer just so you have one in the car ready to go. You Will be fine. Don't panic, it will be a adventure.

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I know its passed Thanksgiving, but if you travel again you can always try traveling at night. My husband and I leave either at my childrens bed time at night or early, early morning before the sun comes up. Depending on how long the trip is. If you do that the kids just sleep the whole way. Its a relaxing drive. Take Care, T. Q

1 mom found this helpful

Hi there O.,

My daughter Sara was about 5.5 months when I took her on her first long trip of 10 hours from Northern California to Idaho. I couldn't agree more with the other ladies night drive is the best. At the time I didn't have a portable DVD player but I did have childrens music on CD that seem to help keep her calm. I was acutally driving myself (hubby stayed home to work) so I had to make more stops than expected. I did drive at night and she slept most of the drive just waking up for a bottle and diaper changes. Good Luck on your trip! Have a great thanksgiving.

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We did the drive from ID to the Bay Area when my son was 6 mo old and he was a lot easier than I thought he would be. We left at 7:30 am got coffee and hit the road. Surprisingly, he stuck pretty close to his usual schedule. At your daughter's age, entertainment is going to be soft toys or rattles, and seeing your face every once in a while. In terms of feeding, if you are exclusively breast feeding, your trip will be much longer as you will have to stop to feed her. Our is on a bottle and so we would pull over, I would jump in the back, we had all the stuff handy for me to make a bottle, and I would make it and feed it to him while he was still in his seat, husband driving. We would change him at the same time we would make our own potty stops. If they had a changing table where we stopped, I would use that, and if not, on the seat of the car. We would keep the radio off or low during his naps and once used a warm bottle to help put him to sleep. Also, I kept in mind that if it took longer or wore us out, we could stop in Reno, but we didn't need to. Good luck, it will likely be easier than you think!

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I travel every other weekend to Couer d alene,ID which is an 8 hour trip and let me tell you plan on taking lots of breaks with kids! You can plan on what ever time it takes to normally get there plus 2 to 3 hours extra. Bring an extra blanket so you can change baby on the seat in the back...this helps cut time also have a few bottles ready to go in a cooler when it is about time to feed again take one out and set it above the heater on the dash this will warm it up just enough and also limits the amount of stops you have to make to make bottles or breast feed. If you formula feed you can always bring warm water in a thermos. hope this helps and have a safe trip

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My kid was a marathon nurser. He wanted to nurse at an hour at a stretch always, not conducive to road trips. I got a car power adapter for my breast pump and could sit in the back seat, pump and then immediately give it to him in a bottle while my husband drove.

The one thing about that is make sure she is used to bottles before you get in the car. And make sure you have extra bottles.

4.5 months she should be mostly sleeping or wanting to look at things. Toys on her car seat, and a bunch of toys you can hand her that she can play with. I think she's too young for videos.

And relax, if you're a few hours late it's not the end of the world. Remember it's supposed to be fun.

1 mom found this helpful

Get up early on the day of your trip and wear her out (playing), then hopefully she will fall asleep. Stop every two hours to change/feed (unless still sleeping). Halfway through the trip make a pit stop and wear her out again, hopefully another nap will follow. Repeat as needed. Once she gets a little older a portable DVD player is a fantastic invention for parents who have to travel. We got one from my husband's parents last christmas and we have worn it out with multiple drives and plane rides. It has been a life saver! Hoever, she is probably too young to care much about that yet.

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