We'll be traveling to Disney World in May with our three children. Our youngest will have skin grafts that will be healing and we've been told to keep them out of the sun. Since they are on his hand, we can't really cover them with clothing. He'll be riding in the stroller which should keep him shaded plenty. I'm trying to figure out which rides and attractions are sunny, especially the queue areas. I'd appreciate any tips you could give me for keeping the sun off a 14 month old's hand as well. I was thinking of making him a mitten type sleeve from a rash guard shirt but I don't know if he'l wear it.
South Carolina sun is not much different than Florida sun, so anything you are doing at home to prevent sun exposure will also work for Florida.
If you plan to try rash guard shirts with mitten sleeves, I would try them now, so he has a chance to get used to them. If he's OK with them, the rash guard shirts may work better than gloves because they would be harder to get off.
I agree with the recommendation to talk to your child's doctor for one further suggestions. If they did not give you any specific guidelines, this page has some good suggestions for sun protection for grafted skin:
http://www.uwhealth.org/healthfacts...lexMember-Show_Public_HFFY_1116944263497.html
If the grafts are less than 6 weeks old, I would strongly, strongly consider rescheduling. The skin is most fragile then and some of the things you could do later, when the skin is less fragile, might not be OK before 6 weeks.
Even after 6 weeks, I would strongly consider waiting. It's just to hard to keep a 14 month old's hands out of the sun. And if your doctor said to avoid sun, going on a trip that includes many hours of potential sun exposure would not be good for the grafted skin.
A 14 month old is a hard age - they don't understand what you need them to do and most would be quite interested in pulling anything off that you put on to cover the hand - mittens or gloves could get hot and sweaty, which is not good for new skin. Bandages would be a choking hazard if he gets them off.
And, most 14 month olds are still mouthing things - which would mean you would really have to watch to prevent him from wearing off sunscreen.
You should discuss this with your doctor. Sun is reflective and even a stroller isn't much protection regardless of the canopy. If the grafts aren't all the way doen his fingers, maybe a lightweight cotton glove with the fingertips cut off would provide some protection.
The old common sense advice of staying out of the sun between 10am and 2pm when the sun is strongest will help some. You will need to still be aware of the sun angle and whether the canopy on the stroller is actually keeping the sun off his hands or not.
One poster mentioned extra sun shades and I did find a lot by doing a search for stroller SPF sunshade. Those would be worth looking into, but still may not prevent all sun exposure to his hands. Again, you will need to have someone watching the sun angle as you walk along.
Rides like Dumbo, Magic Carpets, the race cars (can't remember the ride name right now), Kali River Rapids, Thunder Mountain Railroad are unshaded. Most rides are shaded even if they're open to the air (like teacups, Jungle Cruise, or the safari ride). Still, for something as important as a skin graft, I would fashion a covering with long sleeved gloves. You never know whether the sun will be at an angle to rest on his hand. Also, you may want to see parades or meet characters, and your son will want to get out of the stroller. I would have a talk with your son and make wearing a glove a non-negotiable.
The issue is not really going to be the lines,it will be more the actual getting from place to place and sun exposure while riding.
Dumbo now has an indoor line, but while riding, guests are in the sun.
The Magic Carpet line is roofed, but while riding the carpets, you are in the sun.
The Tomorrowland Speedway line is partially shaded, but the ride is in the sun. That has a 32 inch height, so he may be too short.
He will be too short for Kali River Rapids and Thunder Mountain Railroad, but both of thm have lines that are mostly shaded or roofed anyway.
also, the other problem is that in May it can get very very hot in Disney. I can't imagine a sweaty toddler, confined to a stroller, with no way to cool off - in the pool, sprinklers, etc.
Yes - it can get very hot and the child will see other kids in the water play areas, where he can't go.