Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many hotels will not allow it once the youngest is beyond the toddler stage. It has to do with maximum occupancy limits per room.
Op again. As I said this is the part I find surprising. We stayed in hotels and motels all over the country, till well into my teen years, and I don't ever remember this being an issue. Maybe the places we stayed weren't upscale enough!
NP. Yep, me too! I'm the oldest of three and we always only had one room. Always. True, we were staying at lots of Best Westerns, Days Inns and Knights Inns. Holiday Inns were considered a "splurge". But still, always only one room for the 5 of us, all throughout childhood, even when the youngest was 12. (By that time, I was 18 and not going on cross country family vacation road trips any longer.) We had a rotation of which kid got to sleep on the "rollaway" bed that always seemed to sag in the middle. Was it comfortable and luxurious? Heck no. But having 3 kids was no reason to stay home.
I just recently had my third, and I am certainly not going to get a second hotel room. If that were the case, we would only be able to travel every 3 years or so. I'd rather travel a little cramped than not travel at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many hotels will not allow it once the youngest is beyond the toddler stage. It has to do with maximum occupancy limits per room.
Op again. As I said this is the part I find surprising. We stayed in hotels and motels all over the country, till well into my teen years, and I don't ever remember this being an issue. Maybe the places we stayed weren't upscale enough!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many hotels will not allow it once the youngest is beyond the toddler stage. It has to do with maximum occupancy limits per room.
Op again. As I said this is the part I find surprising. We stayed in hotels and motels all over the country, till well into my teen years, and I don't ever remember this being an issue. Maybe the places we stayed weren't upscale enough!
NP. Yep, me too! I'm the oldest of three and we always only had one room. Always. True, we were staying at lots of Best Westerns, Days Inns and Knights Inns. Holiday Inns were considered a "splurge". But still, always only one room for the 5 of us, all throughout childhood, even when the youngest was 12. (By that time, I was 18 and not going on cross country family vacation road trips any longer.) We had a rotation of which kid got to sleep on the "rollaway" bed that always seemed to sag in the middle. Was it comfortable and luxurious? Heck no. But having 3 kids was no reason to stay home.
I just recently had my third, and I am certainly not going to get a second hotel room. If that were the case, we would only be able to travel every 3 years or so. I'd rather travel a little cramped than not travel at all.
That's sure easy for you to say when you're not the one who's going to sleep on the floor or on a sagging cot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many hotels will not allow it once the youngest is beyond the toddler stage. It has to do with maximum occupancy limits per room.
Op again. As I said this is the part I find surprising. We stayed in hotels and motels all over the country, till well into my teen years, and I don't ever remember this being an issue. Maybe the places we stayed weren't upscale enough!
NP. Yep, me too! I'm the oldest of three and we always only had one room. Always. True, we were staying at lots of Best Westerns, Days Inns and Knights Inns. Holiday Inns were considered a "splurge". But still, always only one room for the 5 of us, all throughout childhood, even when the youngest was 12. (By that time, I was 18 and not going on cross country family vacation road trips any longer.) We had a rotation of which kid got to sleep on the "rollaway" bed that always seemed to sag in the middle. Was it comfortable and luxurious? Heck no. But having 3 kids was no reason to stay home.
I just recently had my third, and I am certainly not going to get a second hotel room. If that were the case, we would only be able to travel every 3 years or so. I'd rather travel a little cramped than not travel at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many hotels will not allow it once the youngest is beyond the toddler stage. It has to do with maximum occupancy limits per room.
Op again. As I said this is the part I find surprising. We stayed in hotels and motels all over the country, till well into my teen years, and I don't ever remember this being an issue. Maybe the places we stayed weren't upscale enough!
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of people on here (me included) don't wish to travel like that.
Anonymous wrote:Many hotels will not allow it once the youngest is beyond the toddler stage. It has to do with maximum occupancy limits per room.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of people on here (me included) don't wish to travel like that.
Anonymous wrote:In all of the "should I have a third?" threads, someone always says that it's so hard to travel with three, because you need two hotel rooms or a suite. I don't get this. I was one of three kids, and we always all stayed in one room with two double beds. Parents got one, two kids got the other and the third got a cot or a sleeping bag on the floor. Does no one do this nowadays? People on here mention regulations about the number of people in a room, but I don't remember this ever being an issue. And we traveled a lot.
Anonymous wrote:That means the third kid is always getting shafted. The kids are on vacation too - why shouldn't they get to be comfortable as well?
We have four kids and always get two hotel rooms.