16 answers

Taking Our 8 Month to Spain for Christmas

We are flying to Spain for an eight day Christmas trip this year. Our daughter will be 8 months old at the time of the trip. We would love some advice from those of you who have traveled internationally with babies! Are there any secrets to surviving the flight? Does she need a passport? How do we handle the time change? Does she need to be in a car seat if we catch a cab? Any wisdom you can offer will be much appreciated!

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You have gotten great advice on this. The only thing I would add is to try to keep her on her little schedule as much as you can while you travel. Try to feed her at about the same times, nap at about the same times, and go to bed at about the same times. The closer you keep her to her normal schedule the happier she will be on the trip.

1 mom found this helpful

Does she need a passport? Only if you wish to bring her back! How else would they know she isn't kidnapped?

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We took our son to Germany when he was 4 months. It was great.
You will need a passport, so go online and down load the application, you can fill it out at home. You and dad will both need to be at the application site with ID and baby's birth certificate. You can find the nearest passport location on the same site. http://travel.state.gov/passport/forms/forms_847.html
Do this early. We turned in the application when he was 5 weeks and got the passport a week or a few days before we had to leave and I was panicking and on the phone with them everyday until it showed up. Not all places that provide passport photo options will be able to accommodate infant passport photos, so call ahead. Make sure you can get the picture the same day.

You will have to pay for infant traveler, but it will not be as high as your seat and you will not get a seperate seat. Call the airline now to find out what they will need from you.

Do not take too many toys. That will be a lot of stress on you and the baby will not need it. Bring her favorite book (1 or 2) two of her favorite small toys that can fit in the diaper bag and maybe one extra for the hotel room. If you have family there, you will be surprised at how much you will not be holding and entertaining your child. Plus you will probably want to buy things there, so if you bring too many things to begin with, you will have a stressful issue going back. Always remember Rule #1 in traveling, "What ever it is, you can always buy it when you get there."

"Get a car seat." We brought ours and found out we did not need it (there was one already in the car), but we brought it and felt good about it. Traffic rules are different overseas. Imagine getting into a car accident in Germany while the both cars are going over 130 MPH with a baby not in car seat. Even if the laws permit no car seat, do not let your family go through the pain that might be caused if you do not have one. You can find a car seat tote at Babies r us. You can carry it as a backpack or wheel it. It will make traveling with the car seat easier. It was the only item we checked it.
http://www.toysrus.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2910024

Surviving the flight: Do not let her sleep before the flight. Make sure you skip that nap. I repeat, SKIP THE NAP BEFORE THE FLIGHT. Do not go to the airport too early. She skipped that nap, so she will be a bit cranky and you will not be advised to put her to sleep. Start claming her down after you found your seat. Then let sleep baby lay. Make sure you keep her and yourself hydrated through the flight. During the flight, when she is awake, make sure you walk with her when its safe to do so. She will need the circulation and the motion to keep her clam. Make sure you are calm. That is the most important thing. Get plenty of sleep and make sure you are completely packed with luggage by the door or in the car, the night before. Take things slowly the day of. This is important because if you are calm you can handle anything she needs you for. If she is fussy during the flight, its OK. If people are looking, its OK, your first priority is her not them. Make sure you whisper comforting words in her ear, even when she may be crying at a higher level. One of you need to be calm. She will feel your calm and feed of it and she will hear your soothing words and be assured by it.

Have fun and God Bless,
P.S. I did not mean for it to be this long, forgive me.

2 moms found this helpful

I've taken my kids to Ireland several times (by myself), including when they were infants. Here goes:
1. yes you need a passport and appy now.
2. I'm assuming you are not buying a ticket for her - so you will get the front row seat with fold out "bassinet". Helpful for space, but not sleeping. Good thing is she's not mobile, so keeping her occupied shouldn't be to hard.
3. Don't assume that you can find what you need (medicine wise) so pack tylenol, diaper rash cream etc in your luggage.
4. Be aware that different foods/climates and even the diapers that you buy abroad can affect your baby's digestive system and could lead to diaper rash (thus the cream)
5. You will need a car seat, each country has own laws - but do not allow yourselves the luxury/ease of not having a car seat. Driving in Europe is very different - you'll feel better if you have one.
6. TRy to get her back on her schedule asap. She will need more frequent naps at the beginning, but getting her into the same routine as home is huge. Lots of exposure to daylight, and do physiclly tiring things right after naps.
7. Pack in carryon a couple of toys and diapers, two bottles (you can ask the flight attendents to rinse them in really hot water immediately after use. Don't overpack your diapers. Diapers are bulky and with everything else for a baby - you need the space. Some airports do sell individual diapers at a huge cost. Just start watching now. How many bowel movements does she have a day, can you go 3 hours without changing? CAlculate up how many you think you need based on observations - and then add 2 for emergency.

Have fun.

2 moms found this helpful

Hey. :)

Yes, she needs a passport. Easy at the post office. Start tomorrow, though, so you don't run out of time before Christmas. They have passport backups sometimes.

She'll not need her car seat on the flight, but will most likely for the taxi. (And you will feel better having one for her. Driving in foreign countries isn't always as safe as we'd like.) Do you have the kind of stroller/carseat combo that clip together? If not, I'd buy or borrow one. The airport will be much easier if one of you is not carrying her constantly and you can put both the stroller and the carseat at the door of the airplane when you board. They'll store it under for you and you pick it up right at the door of the airplane when you deplane. Then one of you can put carryons under her stroller and push her and one of you can deal with luggage.

On the plane - just realize it'll be long. She'll cry. It's OK. Take her favorite pacifiers if she uses them. Take her favorite book and toy and blankie. People are forgiving and like babies.

It'll take her some time to adjust to the time there and then also when you get back. Try to get her on the time schedule there, but her little body might not go for it as fast as yours. Just have patience and know you all may get less sleep than you'd like and plan a few down days when you get back if possible to rest try to get back on your here schedule.

We've taken an infant to West Africa and preschool/toddlers to France and have had good experiences. :)

2 moms found this helpful

Hi S.,

I remembered that I had seen questions about flying with infants before, and have found 2 of the threads I had access to: one is for international travel and one for domestic. Between these two there are tons of advice.

http://www.mamasource.com/request/14943107624151810049

http://www.mamasource.com/request/1619891584789118977

Yes, I do believe you must have a passport for your baby. Start now without delay. You can pay extra for quicker courier service with the documents. When I had my infant son's passport made to go to a wedding we were to attend in Scotland when he was 4 months old, I had to hold him on my head to get the passport picture! LOL! At least you already have a SS# - we applied for his social at the hospital the day after he was born, and still only received his passport a week before we were to fly out - talk about cutting it close!

What you do need to check is whether or not you need visas. I doubt it, but you should be absolutely sure about that.

Have a lovely time in Spain!

All my best,
D.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi S.,
I would definitely take a car seat! Regardless of what the car seat laws might be in Spain... you use a car seat because you're concerned with her safety, not just so you'll be in compliance with the law, right? Besides any cabs you may take while over there, you'll also be eating at restaurants which may not have highchairs, etc., and a car seat is a handy, comfy, safe seat for her to have for lots of different scenarios. Have a great trip! I'm soooo jealous!

1 mom found this helpful

Hi, S.. In my experience traveling with young children is much easier before the age of 1. We were stationed in Iceland from 2004 to 2006, and left the States to move there when our daughter was 3 months old. She did have to have a passport at that time. The tricky part was getting a passport photo of her with her eyes open, as she was only 2 weeks old when we applied for the passports (at that time we had to send the passport photos in with our application package). If things are the same, then yes-your baby needs a passport 100%.

The car seat issue, I am not sure about, but in Iceland they did require them. The cab drivers didn't seem to care if our daughter was in one or not, so if we traveled by cab, (usually just around the base before our car was shipped to us) we did not have her in a carseat; which at that time was an infant carrier/carseat. I am not sure if the 'rules' are different in a different European country, but that is all I know about the carseat question.

The flight could not have been easier with her when she was that small. I was nursing, and I just made sure that she was nursing at take-off and at landing, so that the change in cabin pressure didn't bother or scare her. And then as luck had it, she slept through most of all of the flights, only waking to nurse, which was when there was another take-off or landing. Worked out perfectly.

If your baby is not nursing or taking a bottle anymore, I would suggest a drink that you have to kinda work at to get out of the bottle, like one that you can buy that water goes in with the little pull-up top. Also, I took 2 or 3 NEW toys that she had never seen before, and allowed her to open them on the plane when she was closer to 2. I waited until she was getting bored or cranky and then when I gave her those, she was happy and quiet for hours (the flight from Iceland to Baltimore was 6 hours, and then we had to travel to FL from there). Also, I make sure to have a crazy amount of snacks for her, even now if it is just a road trip, and she is 4 now. I am not sure about rules for taking what liquid your baby would need, but if it is in a bottle, you can buy these little screw-on caps that will fit just about any type of bottle, and then you have a bottle of water or juice that she can suck on to help with her little ears. Here is the website: simplygoodstuff.com
I have heard that the airlines have very strict rules about liquids onboard, but these may help if you have to settle for what they have to sell to you while you are in flight, these will work as long as oyu get bottled water and/or juices.

Also, if you have a seat for your daughter, take her carseat along, and then she will have a comfortable and familar place to rest, and you and your husband will also get a little break if she is able to sleep in it. Plus, you will have it if you find you need it once you get to Spain. If you do not have a seat for her, they can check it as unusual baggage, or something like that, and it is usually fine. We have traveled both ways, and we prefer to have the carseat with us.

1 mom found this helpful

It's been years since I've traveled overseas with little ones, but I can give you a few tips:

1. Yes, she will need a passport.
2. The airline will also probably expect you to bring a carseat and buy a separate seat for her. That's changed since the time I traveled, so I'm not sure.
3. You will need plenty of distractions for her. I love that age, but they are wiggly. Make sure you don't change her routine too much. (I got the bright idea of trying to wean my 2-year old while we were traveling. Not good.) Bring toys, books, etc. I'm not sure about snacks and bottles these days in terms of security. You'll have to check ahead. Also bring her favorite blanket or whatever. Hopefully she'll sleep during part of the trip.
4. I haven't been to Spain yet, but my son lives there with his Spanish wife and their two little girls. They're in the countryside and it's a very healthy place for kids.
5. Have fun!

1 mom found this helpful

You have gotten great advice on this. The only thing I would add is to try to keep her on her little schedule as much as you can while you travel. Try to feed her at about the same times, nap at about the same times, and go to bed at about the same times. The closer you keep her to her normal schedule the happier she will be on the trip.

1 mom found this helpful

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