16 answers

Traveling to Hawaii

We are traveling to Hawaii for 8 days with a 4 month old. This is our first vacation with the little guy! I am planning to breastfeed approximately every 2-3 hours (execpt during the night). My question is, will changing time zones affect my milk supply? My son is currently sleeping 8 hours and I'm very worried about changing this wonderful sleep pattern! Also, any advice on what travel items I should/shouldn't bring bring for baby? Is a stroller really important? I don't want to over pack, but I don't want to be kicking myself for not bringing something important. One more thing, we are taking the red eye for the way home...was this a good or bad choice??
Thanks in advance for your help!
~T.

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Hi T., I have been traveling with my 4.5 years old since he was 6 month. Yes, I did always over packed and never sorry about it. To enjoy your Holiday you will need everything you use on daily bases. Your little guy will sense all the changes and that might change a lot for you and him. If you use a stroller, take it. If you are going to use a crib there I would take his sheets, blankets and etc. They can sense the difference in the smell. He will need his toys, too. Try to keep everything as close as possible to his daily routines - feeding and sleeping times, what he sees, what he smells and etc. Also, remember, the adjustment time even for 1 hour change (like the day-light change) takes about 2 weeks, so do not "work" on that. If you are happy and calm there will be no changes in your milk supplies, if you worry, there might be some difference but not too big. Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful

Hi T.,

We actually did the same thing at the beginning of March, our baby girl was 5 months old. Breastfeed David on the take-off and landing to help with ear pressure. Changing time zones doesn't have any affect on your breast milk supply. It will only change your babies schedule slightly by you altering it to accomodate for the flight and new time zone. The first day will take a lot of flexibility and maybe mean keeping the little one up slightly longer or feeding them a little later in the day so that the next morning you can wake them up within an hour of their normal wake time. By the end of day 2 you should be on your normal routine.
Definitely take baby medicines like tylenol, gas drops, nose saline, etc just in case. We took our baby monitor with us and were so thankful that we did. We had rented a condo with a pool so during her morning naptime, we left the monitor on in the condo and my hubby and I went down to the pool. We just bought regular diapers there instead of taking up that much suitcase space. There are places on most of the islands where you can rent baby equipment if you wish such as a pack-n-play, swings, exersaucers, high chairs, etc. Just search baby rental equipment. We used akamia rentals.
Our baby liked the hot tub more than the pool and the ocean was a little loud/overwhelming/scary for her with the waves and cool water. We still took her to the beach everyday but it took quite a few days for us to figure out how to spend more than an hour there without a fussy baby. We left around naptime where she would fall asleep in the car on the way, then when we took her out, covered her with a blanket and left her in the carseat so she would keep napping. Then my hubby and I could enjoy about an hour or so of hanging at the beach boogie boarding, snorkeling (one at a time naturally), etc until she woke up and it was time to eat again. Then I fed her and she would have approximately another 1-2 hours of happy baby time.
Buy swimmer diapers before you go. They will still be big but necessary. When baby is done in the water, we found it helped to change her out of all wet stuff within a few minutes. Sand is an issue as it gets everywhere but if you can get to a beach that has a shower, use it to rinse the sand off you before feeding baby.
You can gate check the stroller and the car seat if you want. The stroller may or may not be helpful depending on how much you plan on walking around town/shops/etc. We were very glad we brought ours. Oh, another thought if you like to watch the sunset. We found sunset to coincide with fussy time so we would watch the sunset on the beach or at a nice outlook and then go have a nice dinner out while baby slept in the stroller next to us versus trying to handle a fussy baby at dinner and miss the sunset while annoying other eaters.
It takes a lot of flexibility and ingenuity to make it work so that your whole family can enjoy the trip. If something doesn't work, try again. It took us about 4 days to get in a groove to work around naps, baby, and our desires. If you have more questions, let me know.

L.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi T.,
First, have a fabuluos trip! =0) Here are a few tips to help (we've travelled to Hawaii and other places with two young kids...): a stroller, in addition to a Baby Carrier of some sort, will be helpful (the stroller can be gate-checked and can serve many purposes), car seat (you don't need it on the plane, but if you plan to drive anywhere, you do!), books and toys for your son to enjoy (we always get them one new thing for a new trip...even something small, or a new book or something...Dollar Tree is great for this), loaded diaper bag, complete with an extra, light-weight blanket; a pacifier or other such item(s) for him to suck on. Key: make sure he is sucking on something for the ascent and descent (nurse him, give him a bottle, or a pacifier, or, your finger...just something; if you're going to nurse/give him a bottle, try and time things so he'll actually be hungry at the time of ascent and descent). Finally, rest assured that it is much easier to fly with a 4 month old than a six month and up-old. Most of the time, the 4 month old will either nurse or sleep. =0)
Also, for yourself, you might want one of those neck pillows; it's a long flight. Take a hat for your son, too. The travelling won't affect your milk supply in any way, but his sleep schedule may change for the first day or two there and the first day or two back; this is normal; most people's sleep schedules are thrown off just a little by travelling. Any change in routine for a baby will do this. =0)
Have a great time! Let me know if I can be of any more help.
Be strong and laugh often,
L.

1 mom found this helpful

Definitely bring a stroller and a car seat. The airline will let you carry on both of these items, at least the stroller for sure. I wouldn't sweat the milk supply issue, your body will adjust. And expect that his sleep pattern will get out of whack. That's just part of traveling, it happens to every one.

1 mom found this helpful

When I traveled with my first son when he was little I left the stroller at home. Instead get a child carrier that goes on your back. You have both hands for dealing with luggage, ect, and it is so much more convenient when you are traveling around your vacation spot. We used this for out trips to Germany, Ireland, around the states, you name it! The backpacks can be pricey, but if you like to travel, or hike, they are worth every penny. We got one that was sturdy enough to last until our son was almost 2.

1 mom found this helpful

T.: I travelled to Hawaii when my daughter was 3 months- with the time change, I just made sure I kept feeding her the 2-3 hours I would normally. And maybe even more due to the heat- so they don't get dehydrated. Yes, bring a stroller as I assume you will be sight seeing etc? And a baby carrier comes in handy too :) And make sure the hotel has portable crib for the baby, if not I found a portable crib made by Eddie Bauer at Target. It folds down flat with handy strap- looks like a laptop bag once flattened. That was helpful. It's basically a box with no top. I just put blankets on the botton to cushion it and she took naps in there. Bring hats for baby to cover from the sun. Check with your Pediatrician about sun block for baby. I hope this helps- HAVE FUN!!!!!

-Steph

1 mom found this helpful

Hi T.,

I just returned from a 10 day vacation to Kauai with my husband, our then 6 month old son Jack and a bunch of family. It was a wonderful vacation and so conducive to being there with our little guy.

I didn't notice any difference in my milk supply and his sleeping was great if not better. Though daytime naps were a little less due to all the activity - he made up for it at nighttime.

It was so fun to be able to let him crawl around in nothing but a diaper - unless he was in the sunshine in which case he looked like he was going on jungle safari with the big trunks, swim shirt and hat. But in the shade, naked as can be.

The warm weather did him well - he started crawling there, standing up too.

So for packing, a stroller is a definite. Take a sling or bjorn - but, when it's warm it's more pleasant for him and yourself if he's in a stoller and not hanging onto you. Don't pack a bunch of pajamas, even in an air conditioned room he probably won't need them. Jack slept in a onesie and his sleep sack, and just the onesie when napping during the day. A light jacket is nice for evenings - we didn't really even need that.

Lastly, the red eye coming home - we did that too. I was anxious about that but it turned out great. The key was a dose of baby Tylenol, a few teething tablets and a meal upon takeoff and voila! Jack slept the whole way home.

Have a great vacation and relax, it'll go smoothly.

W.

1 mom found this helpful

When we've travelled I've had no trouble with milk supply. We just switched my daughter to the time zone we were in as soon as we got there. In some ways it was easier for her as she slept more of the flight.
Stroller or Not? Do you have a baby bjorn or sling or something to carry your son in? How much walking will you do? Some areas aren't stroller friendly so a baby pack may work better but think about what you realistically use at home and in what conditions.

1 mom found this helpful

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