Jackson4 said:I will be traveling in August to WDW with an infant and was wondering if there are indoor baby care areas where I will be able to breastfeed my 3 month old?
MommyPoppins said:Each park has one Baby Care Center. They are really nice, but not practical at all for using each time your baby will need to nurse. LOTS of people on these boards will give people a TON of crud about nursing in public, but it is your right and if you can do it descreetly then nurse your baby anywhere he/she needs to nurse. If you aren't comfortable with that than I would suggest pumping in the morning and bring bottles to the parks. I don't understand why people get SO bent out of shape because of moms breastfeeding their babies when there are dozens of woman walking around with more than enough breast showing.![]()
DVCLiz said:Just curious - has anyone ever nursed on the Tomorrowland Transit Authority ride? My nursing days are well behind me (DDs 11 and 16!) but I thought the last time I rode it, "Gosh, once around for each side and this would be a great and private way to nurse - people in the opposite car pass so quickly that I doubt they'd even notice!" Just a random thought...
There are lots of little nooks and crannies where I think you could discreetly nurse - places like the seating area near the bridge to Liberty Square, the English garden behind the United Kingdom, loads of places in AK, and all the baby care centers. Plus attractions like Hall of Presidents or American Adventure, the France movie, etc. Good luck!!!
MommyPoppins said:If you aren't comfortable with that than I would suggest pumping in the morning and bring bottles to the parks.
Tink0513 said:No....only when you have your complete breast hanging out, nipple and all and you don't even have the courtesy to use a blanket or something is the only time I get bent out of shape!
pjupton said:Hmmmm... I doubt most women could pump enough for an entire day of bottles by just pumping in the morning. And most would need to pump at roughly the same time the baby had those bottles to keep their supply up or to relieve engorgement since baby would be drinking a bottle instead of nursing. That's IF her baby even takes a bottle. Then there's the job of keeping the bottles at the right temperature during the day, finding a place to pump, keeping up with the stored milk from pumping during those missed feedings...
Sounds like a lot of work to me. Opening a nursing bra and latching baby on seems quite a bit easier.
I found that most people, Tink0513 excepted, are bothered much more by a screaming baby than a nursing baby.
So I have to step in here, having once been a seven-year old child who saw her first breast on Tom Sawyer Island. We came around a blind corner and there she was, just sitting on a bench with it hanging out. Yeah, she had been breastfeeding, but not at that moment and she wasn't covering ANYTHING! I didn't even understand what she was doing -- so I asked my mom, who just loved having to explain this to me at this moment of all possible times.EsmeraldaX said:There are a lot of quiet areas where you should be able to feed your baby discreetly. We noticed quite a few women on benches in rather out of the way places and no one seemed to mind. IN MK we noticed a few women on Tom Sawyer Island which tends to be very quiet during certain times of day.
leighmidd said:If you want to breastfeed in the park, that is just fine, I have no problem with that. But please, just cover up your big ole' ****ies...no one wants to see that and we can't help but look, it's like a very scary train wreck.![]()