T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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376.1 | music?? | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Wed Sep 26 1990 15:31 | 14 |
| Hmm, I'm not sure how this ties in with cutting eye teeth...
The thing that we have found works wonders for car trips (though
admittedly we haven't done anything longer than 4 hours) is to
play children's music - hopefully you have a tape player in your
car! It's amazing how the baby can be crying and just turn it
off the minute Raffi starts.
I also pack juice (bottle as it really comforts my son) and crackers
and bring along a small basket of favorite books and toys.
Good luck!
Carol
|
376.2 | Votes for music, breaks and nursing | WINDY::SHARON | Sharon Starkston | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:01 | 22 |
| Another vote for music, though settling 8 month old Alex requires
us singing the songs. I end up making up a lot more verses to the music
of songs he likes. And singing them in silly tones of voice.
We don't often take long car rides, though we have done a few three
hour plane rides. I can imagine it is wicked boring for a little one.
I do stop at rest stops and let him get some exercise if he is fussy
and take advantage of what room there is on a plane to move around.
Are you nursing? I haven't had to try it yet but you can nurse a child
in a rear facing car seat with you strapped in next to him/her. A
great way to sooth or put to sleep and still continue the trip.
I think if I were going to attempt a long car trip I would travel at
night/naptime and respect the child's tolerences. Or realize it
doesn't fit his capabilities right now and travel by plane, invite the
relatives to my home, or not go. I think a battle that you "win" at
this age only tells the child you don't value him/her enough to take
care of them.
IMHO,
=ss
|
376.3 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:16 | 22 |
| I found out early on that this great kid I have in terms of eating,
sleeping and temperament just didn't like being restrained in a vehicle
for any length of time. So, all 2+ hour trips are scheduled around
naptimes. We learned the hard way that late afternoon was a hellish
time to be in the car, especially for Ryan, so we avoid that like the
plague. I still don't have the guts to do over 3 hours, because he
becomes such a noodge.
I will say, though, that at age 2, he's become much better and even
during 2 hour trips where he's awake the whole time, as long as I have
a big bag full of toys to keep passing back to him, one by one, he's
fine.
Make sure that his car seat is the right size -- I have a friend with
an awfully big infant whose car craziness completely went away when
they put him in a more comfortable car seat.
Also try breaking up the trip - 5 hours, unless the middle of the
night, is a looooong time for child to sit still. That's why I haven't
done the 5+ hours to Philly to see my sister :-)
|
376.4 | | TCC::HEFFEL | If I were a whale, I'd beach myself! | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:51 | 66 |
| Whoa Nelly! What an appropriate question to ask right now! I just
returned from driving 1500 miles with Katie who turned 16mo while we were
traveling. Most of the mileage came in two 550 mi chunks from Greenville, S.C.
to Pittsburg and back. So over the last week (+/- a day or so) we had two
10 hour trips and two 2 1/2 hour trips.
Sounds like Katie is a better traveler than your little one, but still
10 hours is an ordeal for an adult much less a toddler no matter how well they
travel. Here's what we did (didn't) and why (not):
1) Music - Kate loves Raffi. A Raffi tape as a change of pace helped.
2) Crackers - Low salt and whole wheat Hi-hos kept her full and busy without
being a total disaster nutritionally or a nightmare logistically.
3) New toys - Small enough to play with in the carseat, complex enough to keep
her busy for longer than 30 seconds, bought explicitly for the trip and not
brought out until on the road and frustration was setting in.
4) Infrequent but lengthy stops - As long as she was content/sleeping we did not
stop (even if our bladders were bursting :-) ). (The more stops, the longer it
takes to get there, dragging out the "unhappy" time.) When we did stop we made
it worth the stop. - diaper change, drink, run around... We ate lunch at a McD's
that had a playground and spent an hour there.
5) Drugs - Yes, I'll be the evil one to first mention this. Several friends
mentioned giving their kids Dramamine to help their kids sleep in the car.
I wasn't terribly comfortable with the idea. Gary and I talked about it and I
suggested that since we had a 15 month checkup comgin up, we ask the doctor what
he thought of this. Gary didn't think the Doctor would condone drugging her.
When we broached the subject, he said, without batting an eye, "Actually, I'd
use Benadryl myself." We gave her a dose right before we hit the road and one
right after lunch. It helped her stretch her 1 to 1 1/2 hours naps to 2 1/2 to
3. An *enormous* help! (Yes, I'm embaressed that we actually did this. Yes,
I'd do it again given the same circumstances. Better embaressed than facing
murder charges for throwing her out the window over the New River Gorge Bridge.)
6) Drove during the day - When Katie was 4 months old, we made the same trip
and drove overnight. The trip itself was hell for Gary and I. We had trouble
staying awake to drive, yet we couldn't sleep enough to actually get any rest.
On the way up this wouldn't have been so bad, because we'd have the grand-
parents to look after Katie while we took a nap, but getting home, we would
have been stuck with a well-rested, wide-awake toddler while we tried to
sleep...
7) Drove - didn't fly - When Katie was 7 months old, we flew to Pittsburg at
Christmas. What with getting to the airport 1/2 hour before the flight, the
transfers, checking and picking up baggage, it took just as long (longer in fact
on the way home due to some bad weather) and we had less flexibility as to what
we could take, when we could leave, when we could stop, plus it was Expensive!
(This Christmas, everyone is coming here, I ain't budging from my house!)
8) Did NOT sit in the back - Your mileage may vary on this one. It probably
would have been a little easier to keep her occupied, but I didn't want to set
a precedent. Katie is VERY routine oriented. Anything that is done twice,
becomes a ritual. One trip up + one trip back = two = ritual. I don't want to
sit in the back until Katie is in college :-) so I stayed up front.
Soooooo happy to be home!
Tracey
|
376.5 | Some ideas - good luck | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Thu Sep 27 1990 08:01 | 38 |
| The one car trip we did with our son at 20 months over 3 hours wasn't
too bad. We started out early in the morning (7:00) and his normal
waking time was about 8:00. We just threw him in, pajamas and all,
favorite blanket and no diaper change. He was awake for about 15
minutes, being very quite and fell back asleep until 9:00. He had
juice, Dunkin munchkins (a real treat) and some fruit then. We didn't stop
until about 11:00 when I had to go to the bathroom. Then he got a good
break, changed his diaper and clothes. We only had an hour or so after
that. He did sit alone in the back. We had plenty of things to
entertain him - raisin boxes, toys, etc. And we spent time talking to
him - looking for animals. Music would definitely be a requirement now!!
Definitely travel during a sleep time, hoping he will fall asleep.
If you have a bench-seat up front, maybe put his car seat up there
but he might try to get at you or it might be too tight for the driver.
You could even sit in the back with his seat up front as a last resort
(I do it every day because my son gets car sick now).
Even a dosage of Tylenol might be enough to relax him and get him to
fall asleep. Yes, some pedis do prescribe baby sleeping pills but there
are over-the-couter alternatives that work as well (as the previous note
pointed out).
I'd avoid driving at night because all you need is to be tired yourself
and have a screaming kid too!! Any parent would lose it real quickly!!
Maybe get one of the carseat "busy boards" so there is entertainment in
front of him. If you're switching car seats again, don't do it the day
of the trip. Try it out first.
Pay attention to the temperature in the back as well. There are usually
only very small vents so it will not be the same temperature as the
front. He could be too hot or too cold. Dress him comfortable - sweat
suits or pj's all the way!!
Hope these help.
Andrea
|
376.6 | | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Thu Sep 27 1990 22:22 | 11 |
| Could it be that your child is "car sick"? I used to get this
way when I was young. Lived on Dramamine for all our family
vacations. One thing that was certain to make me sick was
drinking any kind of acidic juice prior to travel like OJ
or grapefruit juice. Maybe a flat Coke or ginger ale.
Does your child's car seat sit high enough for him to see
out the window? If he's got a "dashboard line" in his
line of vision he might be getting uncomfortable from
seeing partially non-moving scenery and partiall moving
scenery.
|
376.7 | FWIW | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:57 | 2 |
| Ginger is also good against car sickness - as in ginger snaps.
|
376.8 | lucky i guess | ELMAGO::PHUNTLEY | | Tue Oct 02 1990 11:03 | 18 |
| I guess I am extremely lucky, Joshua has been back and forth to
Denver (8 hours) at least 5 times since he was born. He is now
15 months old and still seems to travel fairly well. Most of the
trips were made in the car with only Josh and I. Some lifesavers
were toddler pretzels, a special tape with songs about "Joshua",
comfortable clothes, juice boxes, and McDonald's playland about
half way between Denver and home. I also talk almost nonstop to
Josh about everything that comes to mind and Josh seems to enjoy
conversation. I did diaper changes when I stopped to go potty myself
unless the smell indicated otherwise. Josh's seat also sits high
enough to see out the window and there were great distractions along
the way--cows, trucks, signs, etc. I did keep him in the back seat,
which is his normal station in the car. One more tip--I hung a
clothes bar across the back seat with all kinds of hanging toys,
etc. And believe it or not--3 trips were made in the heat of summer
without an air conditioner!!!
Pam
|
376.9 | Some like it, some don't | ABACUS::SCHUBERT | | Tue Oct 02 1990 12:13 | 14 |
| Some baby's like the cars/trucks, some don't. Mine is in the
'don't' catagory. Since Alex's first ride in the car (at 2 days
old) till now 3.5 yrs old, he is terrible. We took a ride up to
Portland Maine and we (the parents) went nuts. We took all his
favorite foods, i.e. raisens, apples, juice boxes, celery, carrots,
then we pack his favorite toys, i.e. blocks, coloring books,
stuffed toys, etc....he lasts about 45 minutes and then starts
complaining. We made lots of frequent stops, took us about 4
hours to get there verses 2 hours normally.
We have never, never found a way to please him in the car. We
have also changed car seats, changed position of the seat and
he just doesn't like riding in the car or the truck we own. Not a
pleasent thought, but some kids just don't like the motion!
|
376.10 | ex | TPS::JOHNSON | | Tue Oct 02 1990 12:27 | 17 |
| We just returned from a long weekend in Vermont (3.5 hour ride)
with our active 11 month old that HATES being confined
(especially in a car seat). He was an angel!
What made the ride successful was MUSIC. A few months ago
my husband was at his wits end. They have a 20 minute (each way)
ride to and from daycare each morning. Steven would moan, groan
and whine both ways, everyday...I had heard that kid's love music
in the car, so I bought "them" a "Sharon, Lois and Bram" tape.
It did the trick! It definitely made the difference on our
trip also. When the tape wasn't playing, Steven was not as
happy as when the tape was playing.
It's worth a try!
Linda_who_can't_stop_singing_Little_Rabbit_Foo_Foo_after_hearing_it_all_
weekend!
|
376.11 | kiddo may be lonely and bored | EDEN::P_MAILLY | | Wed Oct 03 1990 11:15 | 13 |
| We frequently travel to Vermont, which takes three hours. We do what
most of the other noters do, but when my son really starts to get
cranky, I sit in the back and play with him. I think some of the
problem is that he's lonely and feels left out. I can't really blame
him, its not much of a view looking at the back of someone's head !
He likes it if we read a book together and he can turn the pages and point
to the pictures. Its the hands-on participation and company that
soothes him. He seems to know this is reserved for the long trips because
he doesn't expect anyone to be in the back with him normally.
I have to admit I'd rather be up front snoozing, but this way makes for
a happier kiddo and the over-all trip is usually quite pleasant.
|
376.12 | Another who hates car seats | VAXUUM::FONTAINE | | Wed Oct 03 1990 16:24 | 14 |
| These notes are VERY helpful. I'm going to try the kiddy music one (as
soon as I get a Raffi tape or something fun).
Andrew HATES being in the car too. The problem? It's too confining.
The way he reacts is like "to be confined is to die". I see it the
minute his butt hits the seat and the seat straps go on. Instant
discomfort.
He normally won't even fall asleep even if we travel at bedtime for
him.
Nancy (who hates to hear, "oh but he'll sleep in his car seat on the
way home" and who has to travel to CT with him alone next weekend!)
|
376.13 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Oct 04 1990 12:25 | 57 |
| I have a little trouble relating, as my kids were both among the
(I _think_ great majority of) babies for whom a car ride was the only
guaranteed colic cure, and they have loved most all car trips ever
since. But maybe some of our favorite pastimes would help others.
As infants and toddlers, most of their formal education occured driving
back and forth to homecare or pre-school. They acquired half their
vocabulary in the car. They learned to count in the car. They learned
color names in the car. They sharpened their powers of observation in
the car. As one object of attention, I strongly recommend fire
hydrants as a source of endless fun and education over many years.
Learn the name. Learn to spot them. Compete to spot the NEXT one
first. Name the colors. Learn to count them. Learn that different
towns have different distinct color patterns, and thus learn local
geography. Learn some useful engineering (how they work, how they are
connected . . .). Now, I grant you that hydrants are generally not
available on the interstates, and the like, but much of this is
transferable. School busses are immensely fascinating to pre-schoolers
(and even now, at age 4, I know that on field trips Eric and his
classmates are MUCH more excited about getting to ride on a bus than
they are about the destination), and sorting trucks by color and
function can be endlessly fascinating. On long haul trips, many of the
higher mental powers first developed on hydrants can be immensely
strengthened when focussed on license plates. And while both boys
learned the alphabet from books, they definitely learned to read whole
words from street signs: STOP | NO PARKING | SLOW | BUMP. On a
looonnnngg trip last summer, Eric first had the insight that he could
decode words phonetically from the letters; he did it with the word
EXIT. He was so please and proud that he pointed out every sign the
rest of the trip with EXIT in it, and in doing so also spontaneously
taught himself to decode double digit numbers, thanks to the wonderful
work of the Maine Turnpike Authority ( EXIT 19 | EXIT 20 | ... EXIT 31 |).
Signs generally have a clear advantage over hydrants in nighttime
visibility, wherever you are. Another great pastime in the dark is
competing to see who can stop the most vehicles with a burned out
headlight (the technical term for which is "paddiddle"). Anyone
spotting a police car paddiddle is instant champion. And, of course,
there's no need for reliance on visual stimuli. My kids and I have
exchanged and invented more riddles, puns, and silly jokes in the car
than in the rest of our lives put together.
Music, as others have suggested, is a wonderful companion, but as our
involving and creative alternative to tapes (not to mention that I've
never had a car with a tape player!) we sing our own. I don't think
we've ever gone more than three straight hours without repetition, but
I bet we could. I'm afraid if I had to loop a Raffi tape for three
hours I might feel compelled to hurl myself under a moving van (which
is not a criticism of Raffi!).
Develop your techniques right and you can add 50 points to your kid's
IQ, improve their disposition and sense of humor, and get them to the
point where they won't let you stay home. Of course, you may go
bankrupt paying for gas, and become decrepit from lack of exercise, but
you can't expect a free lunch.
- Bruce
|
376.14 | More! | CIVIC::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Thu Oct 04 1990 12:33 | 11 |
| re: .13
What GREAT ideas! I always run out of things to look for after we all
get bored with "I see You see" (aka "I see something green"), fire
hydrants are always around (or are they, now I want to go look!)
I'd like to hear more of your ideas about expanding our children's
minds with simple activities - maybe in another note? - when you have some
time. I really believe in this, but don't know much about it.
Jane
|
376.15 | count mailboxes too! | SHRMAX::ROGUSKA | | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:52 | 22 |
| re: .13
Bruce, have you been hiding in the back seat of my car for the
last five years?
We also look for/count mailboxes, works if your not on an interstate.
Another pastime Sam always enjoyed was making up a story. Some
times they were just variations on stories he knew, Winnie-the-Pooh
etc, or sometimes it was "tell me a story about a mommy, and a daddy,
and a little boy, named Sam...." When they are a little bit older
you start telling the story and let them fill in the blanks.
"Once there was a silly old bear named Pooh. He lived in the (Sam
would pipe up 'the hundred acre woods'). His friends were ( fill
in the blank)" I always liked this one because *I* didn't have
to think about all the details!
I think that STOP was the first word Sam learned to spell, beside
his name, because of all the STOP signs we have on the way to daycare!
Kathy
|
376.16 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Oct 04 1990 14:04 | 21 |
| Well, I'm not sure I'm clever enough to anticipate what activity is
going to expand the mind in what new direction. Example. We
certainly liked to play the "I'm thinking of something green . . ."
game, in the car, and it turned into an unexpectedly interesting
adventure in moral development. When we started this, sometime in his
twos, I think, Eric would sometimes "cheat" by changing his choice if I
guessed it right. I was confronted with the problem of how to approach
conveying to him that this was "wrong" (and I didn't even have my trusty
Kohlberg Moral Development Scale handy!). I at least deluded myself
into imagining that I did a creditable job of teaching him about mutual
trust by a combination of pouting, blantently cheating myself, and
talking about it. Anyhow, he stopped cheating!
- Bruce
{ p.s. Bonus tip for the day: If you're lost some time, and spot a
black fire hydrant with a silver top, your probably in Lexington, Mass.
On the other hand, if it has been painted into a red, white, and blue
Uncle Sam, you've probably been teleported into some Mid-Western town
in the year of the Bicentennial. }
|
376.17 | other things to talk about | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Oct 10 1990 10:20 | 43 |
| Music is out for us because I have trouble driving with the radio
on -- it's too much of a distraction. When Kat was little, we
couldn't have afforded a supplemental tape player anyway.
If you are on the interstate, a good source of interest for most
kids is tractor-trailer rigs. You can speculate about color,
content, destination. You can make up stories about the drivers:
what they do at home, what they're going to do with the load, what
happens when they meet space aliens just over the next hill --
your imagination is the limit.
Another thing that kept Kat occupied for hours when she was about
four was looking things up in her 500-word picture dictionary.
I'd name an object and she'd look it up. If she didn't find it,
she'd tell me "It's not there, Mommy," and we'd try another one.
If she found it, she'd tell me, "I found it, Mommy," and we'd try
another one.
Counting items typical of the area you're passing through can be
fun -- barns, or silos, or radio antenna, or Minuteman missle
installations, or oil wells, or peanut sheds, or . . .
Tell stories. Round-robin stories are fun -- one person starts
the story, the next person tells the next part, and so on.
Talk. Ask about their opinion of the Persian Gulf situation or
whether they should build a new firestation in town or whatever
the adults around you are talking about. They will have opinions.
You'll be surprised. Talk about "What would you do if . . ."
situations. Talk about what you used to do when you were little,
not in a preachy way but as sharing stories. Tell tales of your
ancestors or others in the family. Ask where they want to go for
vacation or what they want to do when they grow up.
I agree with Bruce about the contributions signs make to
children's reading abilities. The first word Steven could read
was STOP, and he noticed and understood when someone vandalized
the sign at the end of the street to read SLOP. He was three at
the time. Other early words he learned from signs include
LECHEMERE, MCDONALD'S, BANK (we go past several in downtown
Nashua), and HOSPITAL.
--bonnie
|
376.18 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Oct 10 1990 10:51 | 8 |
| This may have been mentioned but for older kids road alphabet is
a great game to pass the time. Any stationary letters (ie. not
license plates or bumper stickers on moving cars) are usable. The
first person to get to "Z" wins. You call out the letter and the
word when you spot it. Divide the players up to the sides of the
road. We played that you couldn't reuse a word, but I'm sure you
will come up with your own rules.
Linda
|
376.19 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Oct 11 1990 09:51 | 8 |
| re .17
Bonnie's comments on Steven reading signs reminded me of my
stepdaughter - she and her Dad were driving somewhere when she was
about 4, and being a good reader she enjoyed reading signs. The tough
part came when she saw a sign and then asked her Dad, "what's EXOTIC
DANCING"? :-)
|
376.20 | It really passes the time | SLSTRN::HAY | | Thu Oct 11 1990 15:20 | 13 |
| .18
My husband and I - just the two of us - play the "alphabet game"
whenever we take drives of longer than an hour! It's really fun,
though sometimes I wonder if he's paying enough attention to the road
when he's driving. ;-)
The competition is sure to get more challenging and fun as our
child(ren) get 7exit
older!
Cheryl
|
376.21 | | NAVIER::SAISI | Sister of Sappho | Thu Oct 11 1990 15:33 | 3 |
| re .20, we played it well into teenagerhood on Sunday drives to my
Nana's house in East Boston. I still remember "Q-Kappy's Liquor!"
Linda
|
376.22 | More word games | PENUTS::MWHEELER | Meg Wheeler, DAS IS | Fri Oct 12 1990 08:25 | 6 |
| A variation on the alphabet game that my husband and I play is to take
the three letters on the license plate of a car and try to think up a
three-word phrase that applies to the car or driver and begins with
those letters (e.g. [123-CMS] => Car Moves Slowly).
Meg
|