Anonymous wrote:Unless you have a very slim carseat, I hated using the carseat on the plane. Rearfacing, the person in front of him couldn't recline, and forward facing, he kicked the seat in front of him. Not to mention the seat buckle while FF was right in the middle of his back. I tried so hard to keep his feet down, but the carseat was too far up to use the tray table, and his feet were just at the exact right height relative to the seat in front to put his feet on it and PUSH. It was a very long couple of flights. If I had it to do over again, I would buy a cheap carseat, gate check it, and use a harness on the plane. Also, he only slept on one of 4 flights, even though at least two of them were during times he would normally be asleep. He was about a month shy of two (but I didn't want to hold a wiggly toddler on my lap for a cross country flight). I can't remember what we did about ID, but it was a domestic flight and we don't have a passport for him yet. I think I may have taken a copy of his birth certificate? Can't remember.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For any trip where we needed a car seat at our destination, we brought it on to the plane. We have a lightweight seat just for travel, so it was not much of hassle, and better than wondering how your seat will fare in the hold. Given how many times our gate-checked stroller has been banged up, carrying on the seat was one less worry.
We've never had an issue with seat kicking, and when we were on short haul flights the person in front never cared when we asked if we could install RF (which makes it easier to entertain/feed the kid).
Age 3.3 was our first flight where we wouldn't need a car seat on arrival, and for that one we just used the regular belt.
NP. Children need car seat or booster seat till age 8 in most places. Where did you not need a car seat at age 3.3?
Anonymous wrote:For any trip where we needed a car seat at our destination, we brought it on to the plane. We have a lightweight seat just for travel, so it was not much of hassle, and better than wondering how your seat will fare in the hold. Given how many times our gate-checked stroller has been banged up, carrying on the seat was one less worry.
We've never had an issue with seat kicking, and when we were on short haul flights the person in front never cared when we asked if we could install RF (which makes it easier to entertain/feed the kid).
Age 3.3 was our first flight where we wouldn't need a car seat on arrival, and for that one we just used the regular belt.