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  • Babble Talk: The Beautiful Pacific Northwest

    Babble Best is at it again -- helping identify the best travel spots (or beach toys, or audio books) to make your parenting job much easier and more fun.  Sally Farhat Kassab highlights the best places for families in Washington, Oregon, and British Columbia.

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  • Flying with Kids Just Got a Whole Lot Easier

    If you are brave enough to travel by plane with your children this summer, CBS's The Early Show recently profiled some products and tips to make your flight a little less crazy.

    The program mentioned a vest which attaches to your seatbelt that keeps your baby on your lap and out of the overhead compartment when the plane hits a pocket of turbulence. For those of you who do not feel like dragging a toddler and a car seat through a busy airport, there is a portable restraint system available that only weighs a pound.

    One of the many tips the segment provided was to keep your baby's bottle chilled by storing it in an ice-filled air-sickness bag. Here's a bonus tip from me: you can also stash your airplane bottle of vodka there until your kid finally falls asleep.

    Unfortunately, the program did not state how to pack a playard, a box of diapers, pool supplies, a ton of beach towels, forty-eight changes of clothes, and all the other crap needed for a vacation with a toddler.


  • Babble Talk: La Dolce Vita con Famiglia

    After getting hitched on a small island in Greece, my wife and I spent our honeymoon in Italy -- hiking through small towns and drinking wine for five straight weeks. It's a fantasy of ours to bring our daughter there someday and show her all the people we met, all the romantic villages we explored as newlyweds, all the hotel rooms where we ... well, she'll figure it out someday.

    We've put it off, however, because while we might enjoy a tour of a prosciutto factory or the romance of a truffle hunt, Emmeline would probably be bored to tears and tantrums. Thanks to a handy new Tuscany travel guide from Babble, we may not have to wait as long as we thought.

    From easy bike rides (I would never, ever bike on those crazy two-lane roads where people drive 90 mph, however) to fantastic public parks, the Babble guide to Tuscany offers a million things to do for families in five towns -- from Lucca to Sienna. If you're planning a trip in the near future or just want to relive a little romance with a tike in tow, check it out.


  • Madallie Makes Traveling with Kids Easy

    madallieIt isn't often that I come across a truly unique kids' products site, but when I do, you're the first to know. Like now. Today's fabu du jour is Madallie, the children's online travel store.

    Madallie's motto is "turn your kids into happy, patient travelers with Madallie." (Wait, wha-? Really? Really.) The moms behind Madallie have tracked down the most creative toys, comfort dolls, activities, books, games, backpacks and more to keep your kids occupied, and (more importantly) keep you from losing your shiznit, whenever you're on the road. Even if it is only to soccer practice.

    What I like best about this site is that everything is all in one place.  You don't need to go to three different stores to get everything you need for traveling. If you have a trip coming up (and even if you don't—Valentine's Day is around the corner) you must check out Madallie.  You'll be glad you did.  And so will rows 26-34.


  • Travel "Tips" to Avoid Getting Ejected from Plane

    I'm beginning to feel for the Kulesza family -- or those people, as they will evermore be known. Those people who got kicked off a plane. Those people who couldn't control their daughter. Those people who destroyed countless travel plans delayed others for a whole 15 minutes. Those people who just can't seem to escape the glare of national headlines.

    This weekend, Yahoo's front page offered "helpful tips" for families across the country with a taunting headline: "How to avoid becoming the family that got kicked off an airplane after their 3-year-old threw a tantrum." The subtext? They suck. And they deserve another round of bashing disguised as a self help travel tips article.

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  • Kids At Mardi Gras? One Dad Says Yes

    Michael Schuman tells Chicago Tribune readers that despite what you might assume, a trip to New Orleans for Mardi Gras is a great family vacation. But the Mardi Gras stereotype of debauchery and boobies is a reality, so you need to plan your fun accordingly.

    Schuman took his pre-teen children to Mardi Gras last year, and offers a wealth of insight and advice to anyone considering a visit or willing to reconsider taking the kids along, describing the best neighborhoods and parades for kid-friendly fun. His tips include practical potty concerns, the etiquette involved in picking up beads off the ground, and a reminder to be prepared with snacks and activities in case there's a lull in the parade action. Schuman also made a research visit to the French Quarter without his kids in order to verify that yes, naked drunks are indeed a real part of the Mardi Gras mythos (what a mensch!).

    Schuman notes that while New Orleans is not yet up to pre-Katrina status for many residents, lodging and amenities for visitors are, and tourism dollars will help get the city back on track. Can't you taste the beignets already?


  • Bait and Switch: "Vacations" with Children

    As Denver makes way for the 2nd snow storm in less than a week and the nice people at Denver International make preparations for the next group of live-ins with their cots and sponge baths and mugs of Starbucks, I wonder once again what fool would ever travel by plane in winter, let alone with children.  Then I realize, that fool is me.  And about 2 million other people each day.

    Hope springs eternal at the beginning of most vacations.  You pack the bags (and bags and bags), you make the arrangements for time away from work, you bid farewell to the same old routines and look forward to the something new every vacation offers.  For most of us vacationing with kids, we realize this "something new" won't most likely involve Paris or the Caribbean, but we make peace with the fact that at least the loving grandparents might watch the kids so we can go out of an evening.

    The biggest mistake one can make is to believe this vacation will be restful in any way.  Kids, lovers of routine, often don't sleep well, eat well, or behave well when in a new and different environment.  Add in sugar, showing off, more sugar, and sleep deprivation and it's a wonder any of us survive at all without serious vacation-induced drug and alcohol problems.

    Add to that the cheery helpful articles in every vanilla magazine for parents, and you have a recipe for serious motherfucking rage.  I don't need a checklist to know that if my flight gets bumped and it takes us 13 hours to travel a distance that should have only taken 6-8, my kids will be strung out and I'll be in a terrible mood for a week. 

    We'll survive this trip, like we've survived the others.  But next time, we're leaving the kids at home. 



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