Maybe they only have 1 car and are coming straight from some other activity or are headed somewhere right after. Or maybe they both work and want to spend time as a family on the weekend. Maybe their kid has special needs you don’t know about and they want to both be there in case the kid can’t handle the venue. Who knows. You can put a cap on the number of people who can RSVP in an evite and be express about your space limits if you really want to limit it. |
Take advantage of what? A cupcake from the grocery store? A bag of cheap favors from Party City? Please let us know what these people are taking advantage of when they pay for another kid to play at SkyZone at the same time as your party. |
I think it depends on the age gap. My older 2 are close in age, I’d never try to bring my 5 year old to a play place where my 6 year old was attending a party b/c I know the 5 y/o would want to tag along (especially when the younger one is used to playing with some of the older kids when they come over, so there is somewhat of a “mutual friend” situation going on). But like an 18 month old or young 2 y/o who will be totally entertained in the toddler area and is used to the older kid doing their own thing? Yeah I could keep my young toddler entertained in the little kid area and buy them their own snack/treat (a lot of play places now have cafes). |
This. Cutting it close like that would stress me out, I'd just rather have some leftovers at the end than not enough (as someone else noted, it's always a crapshoot how much people eat). |
Well, why make lunch for the younger sibling when they can get it for free at the party? |
Nobody is making some huge plan to scam you out of a slice of Dominoes pizza and a grocery store cupcake. Some of you really live your lives thinking like this? |
Thanks for finally admitting what most of see. We know that the part crashers do this. |
Then buy your own pizza? Nobody wants your toddler at a big kid party. But you’re in the public part so how could this be an issue? |
I’m in the process of planning parties for 3 kids in the next month. Party venues often don’t allow outside food and they give a certain amount of pizza for the party guests. If there are extra people, there won’t be enough food or drinks. I remember when we were first going to parties, I wondered why parents were so cheap and did not even have drinks for parents. I remember leaving a party hungry and thirsty and thought parents were so rude. Now I get it. I booked a party for my child and the party includes 4 pizzas. They clearly say we cannot bring any outside food or drinks. |
I once had a party for 24 kids. I invited my child’s class and then a few family friends. I had a party for 24 kids. I remember I had exactly 24 favors. Many favors come in packs of 8 and I bought 3 packs. One family brought their entire family so 3 extra siblings. This is it about a cupcake. It is just rude. I wonder if these people have never had a birthday party before. |
They just like to act brand new like they don't know how it works. It's never just one, it adds up. And then to get indignant about their tackiness: "what's another cupcake?"
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We've all had those parents who bring the much younger sibling who then asks for food and a party bag and gets upset when there isnt enough for them. |
| This summer I had a family bring a teenager to a 9th birthday pool party. Not only did I have to pay for him to get in, but he ate a large portion of the cheese pizza that was the preference of all the kids at the party. So now I have annoyed and hungry kids on my hands. |
m I don’t even have a toddler, but what is your point here? You don’t want a toddler to play in a public area? Not one person has said it would be okay to bring a toddler expecting to be served food or participate in the party, but there are a handful of posters who think parents have a premeditated agenda to snag a piece of pizza. |
Yes this was rude of them, but not really relevant to OP’s scenario. … |