Anonymous wrote:21:18 - It is when it says "no eating or drinking" and not "no eating or drinking except water."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I commuted for two years with DC on metro. As he got older I had to allow snacks even though I was worried about the germ factor. We were commuting home at snack time, it occupied him when he otherwise wanted to get up and play, and I always cleaned up after us. I learned my lesson about not having a snack when we got stuck for 45 extra minutes (in addition to our hour commute) one day on the red line. From that point on I always has food on metro.
If you're commuting home at snack time, you should be better prepared. You should stop and feed your child a snack before you get on the train, especially since you KNOW that it's at snack time for your child. Why can't you give your DC a snack at the daycare before you leave? That would tide the child over until you get home. While I am sympathetic to the water on the hot day without A/C, this is just elitism. Some rules just don't apply to us, so I'll break them because the rules are inconvenient. You are just as disrespectful and bad as the teens who willfully ignore the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you giving your toddler Goldfish crackers in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:I commuted for two years with DC on metro. As he got older I had to allow snacks even though I was worried about the germ factor. We were commuting home at snack time, it occupied him when he otherwise wanted to get up and play, and I always cleaned up after us. I learned my lesson about not having a snack when we got stuck for 45 extra minutes (in addition to our hour commute) one day on the red line. From that point on I always has food on metro.
Anonymous wrote:21:18 - It is when it says "no eating or drinking" and not "no eating or drinking except water."
Anonymous wrote:I believe there is also a handicap rule for certain seats - no one seems to follow that either. So, my kid will get her snacks (she's 15 months).
Anonymous wrote:We metro'd with our three children this weekend down to DC - from Shady Grove - long day of museums and walking. I did let them have a snack on the way home - they were tired and starving. They are little - 4.5, 2.5 and 1 and would've totally melted down if no food was provided during the time in which we finally sat down for the day! I did feed them sort of discreetly and didn't hand them each a bowl of their own snack. I agree with their rules and the reasons behind them but feel that some circumstances are beyond the snack rule...