Anonymous wrote:I've done this before. Some things to consider:
1) Does the child regularly spend time away from their parents? I took a girl once with my daughters and she cried about being homesick/missing her mom. She was 10.
2) Is the child high-maintenance? My kids have some friends that exhaust me when they come to my house. I can't imagine taking them anywhere overnight.
3) Is the child responsible? We took a kid who wore glasses and lost them on the trip. It was a nightmare. Apparently she loses them all the time (thanks to the mom for not sending a backup pair if this was the case!). The kid should be able to be responsible for their own stuff and make smart food and beverage choices, otherwise say no.
4) Does the child eat and sleep like yours? We've had kids for sleepovers who regularly stay up past midnight and then sleep in until 10. My kids have always been somewhat earlier to sleep (like by 10:30) and earlier to rise (by 8:30). It's not a lot of fun for your kids to not get sleep and to have to wake up another kid. Same with food - if the child is a picky eater or their eating schedule is really different from yours it can be stressful.
5) Are the parents covering the cost? I used to travel with friends when I was a kid and we'd bring my friends on trips with us and it was never an issue. I was shocked when one of my kids' friend's parents didn't offer to cover any of the cost of the hotel (we needed a second room because of this kid) or food. Obviously it's my fault for not having asked before, I just don't know anyone like this and I was caught off guard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It truly depends on the kid and my kids relationship with the kid. My daughter has a best friend who is well behaved and would make this easy. I would happily take her.
This - I know the bestie's parents very well, if I spent over what we estimated beforehand, I wouldn't think twice about being like "ok you owe me $50 more than we thought" - her kid and mine are bonded at the hip, and it'd be fine.
A kid/family I don't know as well? Hard pass.
Someone has to take the kid. Should the same family always have to take them?
Yes. Their own parents. Don’t sign your kids up for travel sports if you aren’t willing to make the entire commitment.
So when the coach asks the other parents do you just say no? The kid is an integral part of the team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've done this and have no problem with it. Our team does a lot of Venmo reimbursements, so I have no problem tracking expenses and saying "Please send $125 for the weekend" or whatever it was. When I've done it, the other family booked their child's flights so that expense was covered. Other family also had a hotel room booked, so the kids stayed in there together and I kept the room I'd booked. (They're old enough that it wasn't an issue.) Other parents have done it on our team for other kids as well.
I find this odd because did the child then not have to be booked to fly as an unaccompanied minor? When we've flown with other kids we've always booked their flights with ours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have done this a few times. We just get a suite. Usually it is only DH or myself attending (never both). Usually a chain place like Embassy Suites or Springhill Suites etc is not much more expensive (and one person can take the sofa bed in the “living room”). Might be different if we stayed at a team mandated hotel that was more expensive. Also usually it is for just one night.
We refuse any reimbursement for the room, but kid is always sent with $ for meals and we let them pay for theirs.
I usually don’t find it terribly awkward because there isn’t usually a whole lot of down time between games and team meals. The room is mostly just for sleep.
We have not asked anyone to take our own kid to a tournament, but the parents return the favor in other ways (rides etc).
Do you all share one bathroom? This would be a no go for me as a mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It truly depends on the kid and my kids relationship with the kid. My daughter has a best friend who is well behaved and would make this easy. I would happily take her.
This - I know the bestie's parents very well, if I spent over what we estimated beforehand, I wouldn't think twice about being like "ok you owe me $50 more than we thought" - her kid and mine are bonded at the hip, and it'd be fine.
A kid/family I don't know as well? Hard pass.
Someone has to take the kid. Should the same family always have to take them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the family usually offer to reimburse? I think it's awkward with team meals and such.
I would never ask this.
If you can not afford this then don't take the other kid.
I can afford it but why would I front a $750 bill for another kid?
Anonymous wrote:I've done this and have no problem with it. Our team does a lot of Venmo reimbursements, so I have no problem tracking expenses and saying "Please send $125 for the weekend" or whatever it was. When I've done it, the other family booked their child's flights so that expense was covered. Other family also had a hotel room booked, so the kids stayed in there together and I kept the room I'd booked. (They're old enough that it wasn't an issue.) Other parents have done it on our team for other kids as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the family usually offer to reimburse? I think it's awkward with team meals and such.
I’m the first 9:29 and it’s all of this. It’s not just the travel to the tournament but it’s all of the team meals and making sure they have what they need for the long tournament days. Volleyball tournaments are very long and it’s a lot. I’m not going to do this next year.
How do you say no if it's a friend of your kid? The kid is important to the team. I think the parents think if they just pay for the room it's NBD, but being in charge of another teenager for an entire weekend is a big deal IMO, and a huge inconvenience.