Anonymous wrote:Op I am one of the pp's that recently had a long international flight. While 14 hours is a super long flight, your child will likely spend a decent amount of time sleeping. And because you are sitting the whole time, you don't work up much of an appetite. Bring some snacks he likes and do what you can with the food they serve. Once you land and get through customs you can go get a decent meal together. I know it sucks, but long flights are never really much fun.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - how is that a security policy? Why would it matter? My child has medical allergies, not food fickyness. TSA makes no sense!
Anonymous wrote:I'd be curious to know whether many of the PPs have kids with food allergies. I would NEVER trust airline food. Holy crap. First, the quality control sucks and you can't talk to the person who prepared your food. Second, talk about a horrible place to have an allergic reaction!!!
Will he eat avocado? You can cut it on the plane and spread it on bread. Maybe some pasta, with or without meatballs? Beans, perhaps in a tortilla. A bagel with apple butter.
Hopefully he will eventually outgrow the egg and dairy. Your options will increase substantially if that happens. GL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - how is that a security policy? Why would it matter? My child has medical allergies, not food fickyness. TSA makes no sense!
Yep. TSA sucks. Some of them are just really bad and others tend to be a little more understanding, but in general, TSA just sucks. Good luck op.
Is your child able to eat stuff like bread, chicken, fish, rice, potatoes, vegetables, fruit, pretzels etc? Because that's what they served a lot of on my recent flight. Breakfast was a tray with bagel, yogurt, fruit, juice, and water. Dinner was chicken, fish or beef with rice or potatoes and vegetables and bread with a cookie or something similar for dessert. They had a snack which I can't remember what it was. I think a sandwich where one half had ham & cheese and the other half was egg salad. The point is, they brought so much food. i remember several years ago, when ds was 2 or 3, we went on a trip to Asia & dh called the airline and made sure they had "kids meals" available for ds. You might be able to call and see if they can have special meals available for your child.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - how is that a security policy? Why would it matter? My child has medical allergies, not food fickyness. TSA makes no sense!
Anonymous wrote:Ice packs are NOT allowed unless they are to cool medicine. You won't generally be allowed to take applesauce or yogurt (even in tubes) as those are counted as a liquid and must be under 3 oz. I have gotten away with greek yogurt -- but only when the TSA agent wasn't really paying much attention. You also can't take milk with you through security. You can, however, purchase milk once inside the security gates.