Now that we're travelling next month I'm starting to get nervous about the logistics of flying with 14 people. Any tips/tricks/whatever to get through the airport and flight? We will have 4 younger children, 4 adults and 6 teens/young adults. We're flying SW so no assigned seating. I'm planning for my sister and I to board during family boarding with the 4 littles to hopefully be able to sit together, aiming for the back of the plane for proximity to the bathrooms AND so when it's time to deplane we can go last and not hold up the rest of the passengers as we gather our herd. The rest of the group will board at their assigned position and hopefully at least be able to sit in groups of 2. Are young children allowed to sit in window seats as long as it isn't an exit row? We wanted to do the children in window and middle and the adult in the aisle seat to prevent the temptation to get up and go visit siblings lol. We're taking 1 double stroller with us and gate checking it. Ideas for quiet games or something for them to do both on the flight and while waiting in the airport? The littles range in age from 2-7. If we take snacks, do we have to take it out when going through the security checkpoint? Any advice is much appreciated. Thanks!
I would have the teens pair up; where one goes, their partner goes as well; the older teens paired with the younger ones, of course.
Four adults, each can watch a child in the airport; three adults each get a set of teens to help them out with their child. Adult is responsible for the three under their care, and they get help from the teens in their 'pod' with their little one.
Keep the lone child/adult combo as the person who would be checking things with the agent at the desk, etc. They get the worst carry-on...the one with all the stuff to pull out, 3-2-1 bag or snacks, and the stroller; they should have the 'oldest' youngest child.
Pick one location, and designate it as 'home base'. It can be a row of chairs at your gate, or a strip of floor along the window by the gate. That way, if any of the teens get separated, they know where to find your group. Plus, then you can leave carry-ons in a pile with each other, and you don't have to worry about hauling all of them to the bathrooms or to get snacks; just leave a couple people there with your gear!
If the adult needs to hand off their child to someone, (i.e. to go talk to an airline agent at the desk, or use the restroom), the child can join one of the groups of teens/child/adult combos, and everyone in that group stays put at the 'home base' location until the lone adult gets back. If an adult with a teen/child group needs to use the restroom or step away from their group, the lone adult/child combo picks them up at stays at home base until the adult is back.
I'm with the other poster that said keep snacks sealed until passing security. They've swabbed my snacks before; gummies, things like HI-Chews or Starbursts seem to set something off in the sensors. I would have some 'surprises' tucked away, that only come out on the plane...think things like (links):
Magic coloring books (meaning no concerns about broken or lost crayons, or markers making a mess);
Colorforms;
travel games. I know some parents are 'death to electronics' but on planes, sometimes they can be your best friend...just make sure you have them charged and ready to go! Just don't forget the headphones! (I bundle all our charging cords together, in one little bag; makes it easier to get through TSA)
Make sure everyone uses the restroom before boarding, especially those who might need help.
When it's time to deplane, let the rest of the plane get moving, and regroup into your 'pods' before leaving the plane. It's a good strategy for at the parks/hotels too.
Sometimes SW is pretty strict with the family boarding into and out of Orlando, because the majority of the plane would be boarding during FB, and would cause backups doing that. So, at times, they don't even bother with it. We've flown in and out of MCO on SW several times, and all I can say is that was never the same way twice.