Have fun on your trip. Let me know if you'd like more advice. I've been collecting ideas from other parents online & I can send you an attachment if you email me.
-A. (I have a 2 & 4 yr old. These ideas are from our last flight 6 months ago & one I took when our first child was 2 yrs.)
It depends on the temperment of your child, but my suggestions are what you'll probably hear from other moms:
Before the trip:
• Research ideas from other moms and online, which you're doing already.
• Watch what your child chooses to play with before you leave to get ideas.
• Repack toys and snacks into small ziplock bags.
• Frozen juice boxes can keep other food cold for awhile and still be useful when thawed.
• Check online with the airline to see what you can take onboard. I found that we got to take an extra bag since we had a child. Besides the 1 carry-on per ticketed passenger, we could take a diaper bag, a purse, a jacket, a book and a small bag of food, and a stroller.
• Think what will make it easier to go through the safety check area where you'll probably have to empty your pockets and take off your shoes. Consider what metal items you wear or carry.
on the trip:
• Be calm.
• I wore my toddler in a front pack and brought a big backpack with different sections for a carry on. One section was food, one was toys, one was diapers, one was a change of clothes, one was Mommy's/Daddy's for reading material (wishful thinking) and glasses, lip balm, saline nose sprays, Airborne, cel phone, etc.
• Walk the aisle.
• Stop to talk to anyone who waves at your child or any other kids, then you can take a walk to "visit" them for a few minutes and have a destination/purpose to talk about with your child (when we did this we were able to share toys with another family which kept the interest longer for both kids).
• Use lots of snacks before hunger strikes to prevent a grumpy kid: cereals, small pretzles, fruit/nut bars, frozen peas and diced carrots should last a day and are good frozen or thawed, fruit rolls, rice cake (even bring a tiny container of nut butter or jelly to spread on it with a plastic knife, dried fruit, cut fresh fruit should last a day or bring whole and cut on the plane will last longer and if you let your toddler "help" cut it with a plastic knife while on your lap can even be entertaining, applesauce cups, fruit cups (I've found the ones in the tiny cans with the pull off tops are 1oo% juice).
• Bring a straw cup where the cover folds over the straw or a silly, shaped straw to use while you hold the small, plastic cups given on board, or the tiny, kid or lunch sized water bottles are fun.)
• I loved traveling with an Ergo carrier (an ABC or Mei Tai would work too), a Maya wrap sling, and a car seat that converted to a stroller (I can’t remember the brand. They had it at Goore’s. It’s not great as a car seat or a stroller, but it sure beat having to bring both and it was great to use the stroller for child or bags in the airports.)
• Get a little blanket and pillow as soon as you get on board or bring one. Ear plugs helped the adults sleep. The kids slept on us or in the car seat we brought. The car seat was a pain and wasn’t required on board, but it did help our toddler sleep longer which was a blessing.
bring toys like:
• the little thing you fill with water and push a button to move little things through the water, kind of like a pinball machine (hope that makes sense)...lightweight and pretty small
• clings
• stickers
• paint with water book (get a little cup of water on the plane, if it's different it's exciting, it's not too messy)
• wipe off crayon books with the laminated plastic pages
• black coloring book with the day-glo color crayons
• small plastic animals worked with us
• tiny tub of playdough or silly putty
• favorite stories you can read over and over, touchy feely books or activity books that have moveable pieces (We had a board book with photos in catagories like food, zoo, toys, clothes so we could say find the _____, point to the _____, where's the _____ for the younger one. You could make it a clue giving game for your older one: Find a black & white animal with wings...that doesn't fly...that swims & waddles.)
• finger puppets
• party favor/new year's party blower (the kind that the paper unrolls when you blow, but doesn't have a whistle)
• play phone that lights up and plays soft music (Our Chicco brand one I got on
Babycenter.com is very quiet so kids can put it up by their ear and not disturb anyone.)
• small things that fit in containers like putting your snacks in plastic eggs, or a few small colored pom poms or cotton balls that you can blow around on the tray table or off your hand
• plastic snow globe
• a tiny flashlight
• little (flash)cards with pictures on them you can sort into groups like animals, food, clothes, etc.
• a small magnet writing board and/ or a small chalk board
• stacking cups, small measuring spoons
• small retractable measuring tape like the round ones with the soft tape at fabric stores
• magnets with a magnet book (I was given one with numbers and one with letters.) or a small, flat metal pan or tray
• I was amazed at how long my kids played with a pack of colored popscicle sticks! It was their first time using them. They sorted the colors, lined them up, made shapes (you can even make a house) by laying them down. You can stack them to build a 3D house by overlapping the ends.