It was less than 1 hour into the 10 hour flight when my daughter showed me what she was made of and off to the loo we went. In the smallest cubicle known to man, equipped with an equally tiny change table I performed major nappy surgery. She had really won the jackpot with that poo. It was everywhere. All up her back, down her legs and remarkably under her armpits. It was only once I had fully changed her that I realised she had managed to get me too. Having carried her to the loo I was also covered in baby poo. It was nappy 1, me 0 and there were 9 more hours to go on the flight alone.
Luckily we were sitting next to a lovely woman who proudly told me of her 5 children and 9 grandchildren. With 25 years experience as a nursery teacher a little crying here and there was not going to phase her. Her daughter is still breastfeeding, I was told, so no need to worry about struggling to cover up.
She watched with bemusement as I reached into my Mary Poppins-esque bag and retrieved toy after toy; blankets; clean vests; Muslins and fresh nappies. She even had the decency not to laugh at me when I tried to rock the sky cot in order to help my bubba sleep.
My little lady really did very well. She fed during take off and landing and miraculously didn't scream. She smiled and cooed at the airline staff and made friends with another baby. She even giggled at the person next to us. What I didn't factor into my meticulous planning, was that she was so over stimulated by the new sounds, sights and oh yes smells of the airplane, she had no intention of sleeping.
So my little Madamoiselle stayed up. She stayed up so long that she was so far gone past tiredness she didn't know whether she was awake or asleep. We walked up and down the plane. And then down and up the plane. We walked and walked for so long my legs started to ache. Finally I saw her little eyes start to close and foolishly took refuge on a spare seat. Of course as soon as my bum hit the tiny seat, she started wailing! It felt like the never ending story.
After several hours walking and rocking, I managed to get her to sleep in the sky cot, a small box like contraption attached to a pull out table. Hurrah! Of course once she nodded off the seat belt sign appeared and I had to get her up again! I could feel the airplane gods laughing at me.
Arriving at Miami international airport with an overtired and yet surprisingly perky little girl, I was delighted, as well as bedraggled, to find that they have completely revamped the customs process. Despite it still being a 40 minute walk from the plane to customs, it is now much easier to get through passport control. The only real challenge was waiting for our buggy which took its very sweet time to arrive.
We were finally on the home stretch. Exhausted and feeling like I had run a marathon we stopped our rental car a few minutes outside Miami International in a small side road and I fed my little baby, changed her and encouraged her to finally nap during our last leg of the trip.
Having left the house at 7:45am we had travelled in total for 19 hours. My beautiful little 16 week old angel slept for a grand total of 5 hours during that time.
We arrived at our destination with spit up on my top, in my hair and on the inside of my trouser leg. A small splodge of baby poo had somehow made it's way surreptitiously onto the outside of my daughters babygro, I'm still not sure how. We were a mess. But we were here. Finally in Florida where the sun was waiting for us and the weather was going to be warm!
Flying with a baby wasn't too bad, despite my yearning for the days when all I had to think about was whether I had my noise cancelling headset, it wasn't the nightmare I had expected. It was full on but in a way just a new challenge in the wonderful world of parenting.
That being said I have a few tips I would love to pass on to any parents travelling with a very young baby. Who knows maybe my pearls of wisdom may come in handy one day...
1) Pack enough essentials to last the entire journey and then some. I bought old toys for familiarity, new toys for amusement. My daughter is breastfed but a bottle joined us. She's a thumb sucker and yet took a dummy for the first time mid flight.
2) Consider every possible situation - good and bad.
3) Take care when wiping bottoms, an extra layer of bum cream wouldn't go amiss. For some reason the air conditioning did nothing good for nappy rash.
4) Bring extra clothes for you as well. Trust me.
5) A baby carrier is a great idea. Walking up and down the plane can really take its toll on your back.
6) Take plenty of food for yourself. You will most likely not eat the tray provided. Cereal bars were my saviour and a sandwich for the other end of the journey.
7) Feeding during take off and landing can prevent little ears from hurting.
8) Keep your hand santizer easily accessible.
9) If using a sky cot pack plenty of blankets to make it comfortable.
And finally...
10) Throw all your organisation out the window and just go with it. Even the most well behaved, routine led baby will have you running circles around them. The long haul flight is their domain. The sooner we realise that the better.