Anonymous wrote:Princess Diana playground and fountain are musts with children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, you'd love it with a three year old. We did it twice around that age.
However, if you can find someone who really could take him for a while, I'd suggest you go for five days and leave him at home. Five days in London is enough to see lots (you could do some while DH is at meeting and then explore together on the weekend).
I'm considering this, but since we both work full time and don't have a ton of time off, we're (okay, I'm) hesitant to leave him at home! He misses his Daddy so much when he travels (at least once or twice a month; I basically never travel), and I think it would tear him apart if we were both gone. I know he'd be fine, but I'd also really miss him and fear I wouldn't enjoy myself as much as I could, although I grant a trip without your kids is very different from the very same destination with kids! Since I'm pregnant, it's not like we'd be out on the town every night anyway. I'll have to try and gauge what DH wants to do.
(It's a temporary thing associated with a move.) London is super fun with kids. London Eye, Princess Diana playground, Covent Garden and the transportation museum, Harrods, even double decker bus rides were all so much fun WITH my then-2 year old.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you'd love it with a three year old. We did it twice around that age.
However, if you can find someone who really could take him for a while, I'd suggest you go for five days and leave him at home. Five days in London is enough to see lots (you could do some while DH is at meeting and then explore together on the weekend).
Anonymous wrote:We did it with a 3yo last fall -- it was fantastic. We didn't use a stroller or carrier at all, just made sure that the days were varied and had myriad backup plans for each day. I'm not exaggerating when I say we averaged 6-7 miles a day for a week on foot. That said, we hadn't really used a stroller at home for about a year, so he was accustomed to walking, but not those distances. I think it was all so new and exciting that he just kept moving and didn't want to miss anything.
Jet lag was only an issue the first day, but that was for all of us!
Do it! Have fun!
I have learned that you have to plan differently/more loosely with a toddler in tow, but travel, at least with this guy, is never as hard as I think it's going to be.