Anonymous
Post 02/21/2014 17:19     Subject: Hotels and sleeping with toddlers

Anonymous wrote:Honestly your daughter will probably fall asleep just fine in the room with you there as long as the light are mostly off. At the end of a typical vacation day kids are exhausted and just collapse into their beds/cribs/whatever.


Agree.
Anonymous
Post 02/20/2014 15:45     Subject: Hotels and sleeping with toddlers

After a disastrous hotel stay when DS was 12 months old (wouldn't sleep once he realized we were in the same room with him) we only book hotel rooms that have a room divider of some sort.
Anonymous
Post 02/20/2014 15:42     Subject: Hotels and sleeping with toddlers

We've done this a bunch of different ways. Push bedtime and everyone just goes to sleep at the same time (usually around 9ish). Have one adult hang out in a dark room watching something on an iPad or listening to music while the other goes and does something less boring. Read quietly in the room with a very dim light and the toddler's pack and play on the other side of the room.
Anonymous
Post 02/20/2014 14:32     Subject: Hotels and sleeping with toddlers

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Embassy Suites. That's our go-to. Plus the happy hour and breakfast are awesome.


+1. Get one with two queens. Put the child in one, and you can sleep later in the other.




+10000
Anonymous
Post 02/20/2014 12:54     Subject: Re:Hotels and sleeping with toddlers

Anonymous wrote:Marriott properties. Townplace Suites, Residence Inns and some Springhill Suites have one bedroom suites available at reasonable prices. Get the pack and play in the bedroom, put the child to bed and close the door. When it's time for you to go to bed, you go in quietly and go to bed without waking your child.



I don't know where you're going, but Hyatt House is also set up like the Marriott's mentioned above.
Anonymous
Post 02/19/2014 14:07     Subject: Hotels and sleeping with toddlers

Honestly your daughter will probably fall asleep just fine in the room with you there as long as the light are mostly off. At the end of a typical vacation day kids are exhausted and just collapse into their beds/cribs/whatever.