Cool, thanks.We checked two carseats last August. They gave us bags. It's super easy.
Does this bag fit any car seat? If this can be purchased do you have a link to where I can find one?The baggage allowance...this recently changed.
http://http://www.southwest.com/travel_center/infants.html
IT used to be you could check two pieces of baby gear and it would count toward one of your checked baggage allowance. Now you can check a stroller and car seat in addition to your 2 pieces of luggge.
We have a bag for our car seat. It has wheels and straps on it. I put it on like a back pack when taking our car seat with us. IT's how I get the seat form the van in the long term parking to the terminal. Also how I get it from the baggage claim to the rental car shuttle. It has kept the seat from getting wet when it rains and keeps it clean.
Thanks for that insight I've begun looking at stroller bags and there seems to be a nice assortment out there.I bought mine at Babies R Us. It fits the Evenflow carseat we have, although it is rather snug.
Honestly without the bag I have no idea how we would manage. We usually have 2-3 suitcases, a stroller, diaper bag, backpack carryon and of course our toddler!
Yeah I read that you can check it in at the gate, which like you said might be a better chance of it not getting damaged as much.I far prefer checking carseats (and strollers) at the gate. Less time for them to get dropped and mangled. Sure you have to wrangle it through security and the airport, but it's worth it to me.
I checked a seat twice...the second time I actually watched seats and boosters coming down the carousel chute/ramp thing, and seeing them tumble and crash down just made me ill. That's why I gate-check now.
I would STRONGLY recommend taking your seat on board, and not checking it. Baggage handlers are infamous for throwing/dropping (sometimes from heights) luggage, and they take no special care with car seats. Having your seat visibly damaged is actually not the worst case scenario... More likely is the fact that your seat would have cracks or stress not visible on a once-over and those would make it much more likely to fail in a crash.
Your child can sit comfortably in their seat on the flight, and then you have the peace of mind of knowing that the seat still has its integrity.![]()
Thanks for that insight I've begun looking at stroller bags and there seems to be a nice assortment out there.
Well my wife preferred not to buy a seat for her and keep her as a lap child for this trip since she said she would end up in her lap anyways. I'm not going to argue with the DW.
If you're going to haul it to the gate for checking anyways, you can ask your gate attendant if there are any empty seats on the plane. If there are, I believe they will allow you to use them for your child's seat. If not, then you can gate check it (although again, I wouldn't recommend it, because it may cause the seat not to be crashworthy after that point. Gate checking removes some of the risk, but the seat can certainly still be mishandled.)
Also, safety advocates recommend using a seat on the plane if at all possible -- it's not so much the drop from ten thousand feet to worry about (as that will be fatal for everyone,) but rather the runway emergencies and especially turbulence, which can easily rip a child from their parents' arms and send them tumbling into the ceiling or several rows away. I'd never thought twice about lap children before getting a major carseat education and then becoming a CPST (tech,) but now the thought of having a babe in arms makes me shudder.
It's totally your choice to make, but it might be worth relaying these items to your wife so that she can make an educated decision.
Depending on your seat, it may fit through the scanner or it may need to be hand-wanded, so leave yourself a bit of extra time. You can buy a luggage cart, a device to attach it to your rolling carryon suitcase (and put your kiddo in it for use as a stroller!), or even bungee it to your stroller to haul it through the airport.![]()