Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took our behemoth Nextfit on a much longer flight. If it's FAA approved they have to try to accommodate you. Ours was tight and forward facing he kicked the seat in front of him (I did my absolute best to stop this, but he wasn't even two yet and I had restrain him which caused screaming), and rear facing, no kicking but person in front couldn't recline. That shouldn't be a problem for a 1.5 hour flight, though. I was glad we had our seat there, though, because the time change had him sleeping in the car a lot.
Ugh. You sound pretty high maintenance.
+1
When my kids kicked the seat in front of them, I would lean over and put my arm between their feet and the seat back. Yes, it was uncomfortable for me---but it was my kid, so I needed to be the one to take the kick, not the stranger in front.
Another option, if you are flying with another adult, is to place the other adult in the seat in front of your kid, so they are being kicked instead of a random stranger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took our behemoth Nextfit on a much longer flight. If it's FAA approved they have to try to accommodate you. Ours was tight and forward facing he kicked the seat in front of him (I did my absolute best to stop this, but he wasn't even two yet and I had restrain him which caused screaming), and rear facing, no kicking but person in front couldn't recline. That shouldn't be a problem for a 1.5 hour flight, though. I was glad we had our seat there, though, because the time change had him sleeping in the car a lot.
Ugh. You sound pretty high maintenance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took our behemoth Nextfit on a much longer flight. If it's FAA approved they have to try to accommodate you. Ours was tight and forward facing he kicked the seat in front of him (I did my absolute best to stop this, but he wasn't even two yet and I had restrain him which caused screaming), and rear facing, no kicking but person in front couldn't recline. That shouldn't be a problem for a 1.5 hour flight, though. I was glad we had our seat there, though, because the time change had him sleeping in the car a lot.
Ugh. You sound pretty high maintenance.
Anonymous wrote:I took our behemoth Nextfit on a much longer flight. If it's FAA approved they have to try to accommodate you. Ours was tight and forward facing he kicked the seat in front of him (I did my absolute best to stop this, but he wasn't even two yet and I had restrain him which caused screaming), and rear facing, no kicking but person in front couldn't recline. That shouldn't be a problem for a 1.5 hour flight, though. I was glad we had our seat there, though, because the time change had him sleeping in the car a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely check the seat. We've done it a lot and never had any damage. Use the CARES harness on the plane. Your child won't have room to put her legs down if you put the carseat in the airplane seat -- IME, it pretty much fills the entire space in front of the seat.
You can't see the kind of damage that people are talking about, until the carseat fails in an accident.
The one time I traveled with a toddler under 3, I put his carseat on the plane. He had a lot of experience with how to behave in the carseat, so I figured why mess with something he knew. It worked out fine, but of course I don't know how would have done without one. Maybe equally well.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely check the seat. We've done it a lot and never had any damage. Use the CARES harness on the plane. Your child won't have room to put her legs down if you put the carseat in the airplane seat -- IME, it pretty much fills the entire space in front of the seat.