dunbarfamily
I'm a proud WDW-loving wife and mama to six
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2007
- Messages
- 1,255
We always fly to Disney, and as a result, have taken lots of different aged kids and LOTS of carseats. We finally came up with a plan that worked several trips ago. My dh goes on the plane during pre-boarding, i.e. when they call the families and those needing special assistance. I hang back with the children until the very last minute. I usually work this out with the gate agent, telling them something like I don't want to be stuck on a plane with tied down kids longer than I have to. This usually gets a laugh, and they will watch and when the last possible minute comes, they'll nod to me and we walk on the plane, get seated, and start taxing a few mins later.
AirTran is terrible. We always buy our seat assignments, which kills me as we need to buy five tickets, but its worth it. One time we didn't, and they had me with the baby in one row, my dh about 5 rows behind me, our 2 year old six rows behind him on the opposite side of the plane, and our 5 year old in the very last row of the plane. When we asked the gate for help, they said to ask the attendant when we boarded, she said we had to figure it out on our own. We felt very uncomfortable asking people to change seats, but it all worked out ok. Erg. Gets my goat though that I have to pay.
AirTran is terrible. We always buy our seat assignments, which kills me as we need to buy five tickets, but its worth it. One time we didn't, and they had me with the baby in one row, my dh about 5 rows behind me, our 2 year old six rows behind him on the opposite side of the plane, and our 5 year old in the very last row of the plane. When we asked the gate for help, they said to ask the attendant when we boarded, she said we had to figure it out on our own. We felt very uncomfortable asking people to change seats, but it all worked out ok. Erg. Gets my goat though that I have to pay.