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Travelling with Toddlers 1 - 4 Years
This article follows in the same format as the other articles for the younger age-group and provides checklists and tips for travelling with kids from age 1- 4.
Article By: ExplorOz Team - Michelle Jacka Updated: 25 Sep 2007
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Packing for Toddlers
Interesting User Experiences
Clothing for Toddlers
Article Feedback
Food for Toddlers
Related Pages
General Toddler Information
Related Shop Items
2½ yr old Toddlers
In this Article
Packing for Toddlers
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Packing for a child of this age should be much easier than for taking a baby (see my list for Travelling with Babies). Much fewer clothes, certainly much fewer sterile concerns but more emphasis on toys/activities.
Left Behind
Starting with the "to bring" list of items for the babies age group 0-12mths you might leave out the following:
Mesh dome tent
Jolly Jumper
Baby ring (blowup tube for swimming use)
Bottles and teats
Breastmilk!
Formula
2 x 5L plastic jerry cans for storing cooled boiled water to make up formula and drinks
"slender blender" to plug into invertor for pureeing foods when required
One car day-bag (days worth of nappies, clothes, bibs, cutlery etc) - too bulky, you'll find a better home for things in general
Much less linen and clothing
To Bring
These are the items that you might consider necessary to take with you. Most items are small and can be grouped into little carry bags. The only medium-sized items are the 0-4 year car seat, and portable cot.
0-4 year car seat
"Window sox" on car windows
Portable cot
2 drink bottles/cups, one plate, one open cup and one set of metal cutlery (spoons/forks)
Small plastic table with 4 removable legs and a small collapsible kids camp chair
One toy bag affectionately known as the "WANT" (containing books, crayons, pencils, 1 wooden puzzle with 6 pieces, playdough and cutters, 3 favourite soft toys)
CDs or tapes (nursery rhymes/classical music/stories)
1 x 5L plastic jerry cans for storing cooled boiled water for emergencies
One clothes bag - emphasis on fresh socks lots of nappies, wipes, and toweling wash cloths
A "shared" toiletry bag - like a ladies makeup case, easily accessible at all times
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Clothing for Toddlers
The most difficult trips to plan clothing for are during winter desert conditions which means very cold - freezing nights with mild - very warm days. Suggested clothing list for these types of conditions are:
Denim overalls
denim skirt
denim shorts
3 long sleeve skivvy tops
3 short sleeve tops
1 sleeveless top
2 coloured singlets
1 parka with hood
1 pull over jumper
1 pair fleecy tracksuit
2 stretch pants
2 pairs fleecy pjs
1 pair flannelette pjs
2 pairs boots (town boots and bush boots)
7 pairs socks (toddlers will usually dirty 2 pairs per day)
No cossie or swim nappies - just 1 pair quick-dry boardshorts
Food for Toddlers
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Car Snacks
This can include: cheese sticks, apples and pears (sliced and peeled with a knife as needed). If you child enjoys a cup of milk after lunch you may find that at this age, car sickness is more likely! Consider lots of apple juice diluted with water as an alternative.
Breakfasts
Includes cereal and milk, toast, boiled eggs, jaffles etc.
Lunch
A great suggestion for kids of this age, and an option that is easy to prepare from the vehicle tucker box, is a smorgasbord of cheese cubes, sliced fruit, sultanas, dry biscuits etc. Occasionally, offer 3 minute noodles prepared in the billy on a single burner on a gas bottle; or yoghurt with fruit; or sandwich for variation on longer trips.
Dinner
Lots of parents know the advantage of saving a portion from the evening meal to serve to your child the following night. To reheat, the stainless steel bowl with lid that comes with many billies is a good way to reheat food over just a few coals - use a little water to steam it and avoid burning/sticking.
General Toddler Information
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Children of this age are typically extremely easy to travel with. At home, you may normally find the constant running near cars etc quite tiring but in the great outdoors this will not even be a factor of concern (provided you have no other convoy vehicles to worry about). By giving your child a total free reign at camp you may find she'll never stray more than 30m away and never head off out of sight. Most kids have a natural caution and there is merit in letting your child find their natural limitations in such a unique situation. Your concerns are of cause warranted if your child sees their first dingo and runs towards it saying "dog!".
The wide open spaces and soft sands of the desert make it the most ideal playground for toddlers. We usually combine photo stops or sightseeing with snack stops to make each stop a worthwhile play stop too. Concerns about wildlife dangers are not terribly realistic in the desert where most wildlife is nocturnal.
Fun Jobs
We found that by giving kids a special job to do when arriving at camp gives them something to look forward to and alleviates any concerns about them wandering aimlessly whilst parents frantically erect the tent. If the kids have been couped up in the car for hours, it's only obvious that they will need some physical activity and a chance to explore their new surrounds.
Surprisingly, even a child as young as 19 months old will love to "help" collect the firewood and to construct the fire place. Your child might even like the responsibility for a special tent pole at every camp setup - kids love routine, and at this age they are very eager to be involved in adult jobs. Whatever you do, make the journey fun and create your own memories to share as bedtime stories for many years to come.
Personal Hygiene
I tend not to bathe my children in water tubs every night. For remote area trips, water must be conserved for drinking so you need to limit bathing. To clean up just before bed you can boil the billy for coffee and spare the surplus water for soaking a facecloth. You can make a nice bedtime routine by taking your toddler quietly into the tent/camper/van and laying her on a towel on a bed. You can then give your child a full warm sponge down, apply sorbolene, clean nappy, and a beanie before putting on fresh pjs and socks then snuggle down together for bedtime story - sounds just like home doesn't it, and why not? Also, consider a
first aid
kit for those unforeseen little mishaps. Please read our
First Aid
article for more information.
Having a small table of their own is ideal for a toddler as it gives a solid surface for drawing and playdough cutting. Playdough can be kept in an airtight container and although it will eventually get a bit dirty and dry it will probably remain useful for the duration of the trip.
Overall, this age group love exploring and learning, and it is easy to keep them occupied. You may be surprised to see how interested your child will be in fossicking around ruins, or collecting shells along a beach. Best of all, many young children will sleep when driving and may even slot back into 2 daytime naps like a baby, even they have only 1 at home. If this happens, simply adjust your daily driving routine.
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2½ yr old Toddlers
Children of this age, may possibly be already toilet trained so perhaps you'll not have to take nappies or pull ups. If so, that makes travelling a whole lot simpler. For ongoing daily driving with overnight stops, sleeping in swags is a great option but don't attempt this with young toddlers until they are confidently toilet trained. Booster seats can normally be used in place of the larger, 0-4 car seat however for long driving trips the added comfort, padding and support particularly for sleeping is a good reason to keep using it a little longer. Your child will also enjoy the higher sitting position in the vehicle, so stick with it at this age if you can.
In the lead up to a big trip, start collecting special things for your young child that will be a novelty (new books, a whistle, a torch), and allow one favourite teddy for the trip. Talking is this age groups favourite pastime so car time will probably be spent talking, answering endless questions and playing simple car games. Toys, games and activities can be kept in a box for use only at camp.
No parent has all the answers, but if you put in the ground work your child will naturally love the whole
camping
and travelling experience so fingers crossed for a enjoyable trip.
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Interesting User Experiences
Below is a list of related submissions from various site users.
Each child has a day bag filled with small, quiet past-times e.g. crayons, cards, squish-balls and books. They pack this themselves and keep it by them on the journey
You can't let the kids out of your sight when stopped, so give them a special job to perform immediately when the car stops to setup camp, rather than letting them running off wildly to explore just when you need to get the tent setup. As soon as the camp is setup, take them on a walk to explore the area and carefully explain the boundaries of where they can go
This age group prefers minimum travelling and maximum playing so try to plan a trip with a single destination
Hanging things in the car eg. soft toys and balloons by running an elasticised strap or cord across the car with suitable things hanging off it. Other ideas: barrels of monkeys, PEZ toy dispensers with a hook, magnadoodles with hooks. Carry spares and rotate every few days
Bags for hanging off backs of seats full of colouring stuff, magazines to cut up, glue and scissors, felt pens and each day one special treat: eg. chuppa cup
If you have metal door linings exposed use them for sticking up magnetic shapes and letters etc. Provides kids with hours of amusement
Article Feedback
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What Others have Posted
Mel & Michael : 29 Sep 07 22:52
Hi all, We are planning to drive and camp Australia beginning Fe...
Hi all,
We are planning to drive and camp Australia beginning Feb 2008, with a 5 year old and a 15 month old.
We are budget conscious, as we obviously wont be working (much), and we will just be camping in a tent, and driving in our 4wd ute.
I would lve some advice about how much we would need to average each day in driving time, to comfortably so all the coast plus Uluru.
Also, which times of year to be in different parts of Australia. I was thinking south (from Brisbane) because Feb is hot, down through NSW & Vic coast, across to SA, and then up to Uluru. Then Darwin/Top end for winter as it will be warm enought to camp still, and then the whole west coast of WA? But which way to go then? We still need to do Cap York and Cairns and QLD East Coast...
Thanks for reading my ramble, any feedback would be very helpful...
Read Full Thread...
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