By: Revanche

Long weekends: a first road trip

April 22, 2015

We recently experienced a little improvement in quality of life, and so decided to take on another challenge.

Since none of my family had met the newbie yet, and his family was ready to take another crack at it, we loaded up a rental and drove down the coast.Ā  Here’s how it went….

Night 1: we left an hour and a half behind schedule. I blame Enterprise. They botched pickup, they didn’t have the car at the location even after I confirmed with them two days in advance AND they didn’t have a clean car ready to go when PiC finally arrived at the 2nd location where the cars were allegedly ready. They threw us exactly 1.5 hours behind.

We rented a minivan because STUFF and we wanted to be safer w/Seamus and LB. I hate not being able to crate him for the drive but there is no way to fit a Seamus-sized crate in the car. A truck, sure, but I’m not a fan of popping the dog in the truck bed, exposed to the elements. And LB, of course, requires a car seat and numerous other accoutrements. We tried to minimize as much as possible and consider this a learning experience for future packing.

I haaate running out of diapers and paying full price so I packed nearly 100. For 5.5 days away. It’s called pooperation, alright? I also packed twice as many doggy poo bags as Seamus could use. Very little worse than being stuck in a shitty situation with no clean up available.

Surprise: LB still hates being strapped into the car seat and hates sitting still in the car but loves freeway driving. We prepared our souls for multiple stops and screaming, instead ze slept the whole first 4 hour leg.

Day 2: we made an extra stop on Leg 2, making it 2 of 3 stretches before we made it the Home Base and that 45 minute delay put us in the middle of hellish traffic. 2:30 and like a bloody spider, GPS showed traffic stretched out every direction from the body of LA. Of course. It was a quick tutorial in why we can never move back. Every trip would take at least 45 minutes, if not 2 hours, because our friends and family are scattered everywhere.

LB ran out of “sitting in a car seat, putting up with freeway” steam at the tail end of Leg 3 so we rode the rest of the way serenaded by hir increasingly ragged roars. We slept pretty well that night, when we slept. It was a parody of our routine at home: sleep til ze wakes, one stumbles to get the bottle and the other weaves over to the sofa with hir, both collapse while ze is fed and patted back down. Stay on the sofa the rest of the night.

Day 3: Most of the morning and afternoon was spent recovering from the long drive and then ze finally met part of my family that night. Ze was full of chatter and what we call “crab bubbles” and then crashed hard.

We got to visit with some friends briefly that evening, and wind down almost like regular people, except we had to keep checking on LB since we didn’t bring a monitor.

Day 4 was the most intense day. We had a morning to early afternoon engagement, a small reunion, and ze decided that since we had to be up at 715 anyway, why not get up at 620 and stay up?

Thanks to, again, SoCal traffic, we didn’t get home til after 3, and then it was back out again for a dinner. This dragged on far longer than was civilized for a tiny infant and ze passed out in the car. Blessedly, this was the night of the long sleep. Ze actually stayed asleep for 8 hours. Hadn’t happened before, hasn’t happened since. But boy did we need it.

Day 5 was one last hurrah gathering of family and arguably the best one. LB was whisked away by Grandma, only to be seen again when hungry, then whooshed off to a cuddle and feeding with Grandpa. Aunts and Great Grandma finished up the rounds of baby passing and ze fell asleep in PiC’s arms. I don’t see this branch of the family often enough and boy do I miss them. Ze was also surprised with a handful of amazingly timed baby gifts: all things ze needed and I hadn’t even thought to mention them to anyone. Psychic family, I tell ya.

Logistics!

Packing. We were pretty sure that we overpacked but didn’t want to take the risk that going too minimalist would be to my detriment. I can only handle so much manual stuff, before you factor in the stress of travel, disrupted routines, and the energy drain of socializing.

Turns out we didn’t need: the spare cozy blanket (we brought two heavy/cozy and one light blankets, 2 were used regularly); the baby carriers (we were too tired to wear hir); a picnic blanket. I could also have packed about 10 fewer diapers but let’s never skimp on packing diapers because I don’t want to pay full price or live with regrets.

Feeding the Bean. I planned to do combination pumping and formula for hir feeding so we could be flexible. Turned out we didn’t need most of our handy formula packets. When I didn’t have enough prepumped milk packed, I nursed hir, and most days I was able to get nearly 20 oz in just two pumping sessions. Really quite convenient.

Costs. The car rental was nearly $400, and of course we had to fill up about three times. We stayed at places with breakfast provided and packed enough food and drinks along in our cooler so that we only paid for takeout twice. The convenience of not having to cram everything into our smaller cars and risking things falling over on Seamus or fighting with squeezing stuff into every inch was so worth that outlay.

10 Responses to “Long weekends: a first road trip”

  1. LOL! Ex-DH used to say, with a great deal of truth, “It’s hard to be suave when you’re traveling with a kid.”

    Slept eight hours, eh? You may have stumbled upon another Truth of parenthood: when you need some rest, run’em! You run them till they wear out and fall asleep, and then you have a few hours of peace and quiet. It’s good exercise for the little pistols, too. šŸ˜‰

    Putting a baby in a car and driving around and around will do it, too. Freeway driving never fails. Neither does rolling the kid around and around (and around and around and around and…) the neighborhood in a stroller. Problem with both these strategies is the instant you stop, the kid starts screaming again.

    Wow! Four hundred dollah? Did you know you can rent a vehicle from a car dealership? Here, to rent a Toyota is $30 a day. You claim you’re interested in buying the thing and want to drive it around without a salesman hanging over your shoulder. If the price is comparable there, 6 days would have come to $180…assuming the prices are comparable in Richistan…uhm, SF.

    When kidlet is older, it may be useful to know that some hotels will let you stash baby food and expressed breast milk in their refrigerator (unless, of course, the room has a little fridge). The Highlands Inn down in Carmel used to do that — they’ve changed hands since then so I dunno if they still will agree to it. But nothing ventured… wherever you go, ask.
    Funny about Money recently posted…Is Costco Shopping an Addiction?My Profile

    • Revanche says:

      Yeah I’ve noticed that to get the rest I need, I have to spend energy I don’t have to wear the kid out!

      I didn’t know that car dealerships would do that, I’d be rather surprised if they let us take a model out for 5-7 days and put a thousand miles on it, though. But hey, if they’re willing, I’d take the deal! (please be willing, please be willing)

      We do try to book rooms that come with a minifridge if not a full fridge. Costs about the same as any other hotel.

  2. I would imagine with a very young child traveling comes with a whole set of logistics one would normally never have to think about when traveling! Ah Socal traffic!
    Tonya@Budget and the Beach recently posted…Get Over It!My Profile

  3. Evil Bat Witch says:

    We still travel like this! This weekend, we’re renting a car and going up to see Missy and Rhys. We rented a minivan the first time we went to see the babeh last year, and i think it was 400 as well for 5 days. (at the time, Missy didn’t have a proper car, though they did have a car seat, so everyone fit while we were there) Overpacking whilst traveling in a car is so easy! glad you had a good trip!

    • Revanche says:

      After a lifetime of car rentals hovering around $10-20/day for the cheapest options, the minivan prices slay me! šŸ™‚ But I’m glad they were all comfortable and we didn’t have stuff falling all over Seamus.

  4. Karen says:

    Good post šŸ˜‰

    When my sister had her first, it took her a long time to get ready. Would kill me because…c’mon you know it will take you forever to get ready, start earlier! LOL (some big-little sister annoyances).

    Weekday rentals usually jack the prices up. Did Enterprise give you any concession for their mistakes?

    • Revanche says:

      Hah I think that’s fair! We can’t stand that either. Sometimes it’s unavoidable, the little one has to be fed, and then changed (and in LB’s case, changed 3x), but we generally have our packed bag ready to go so we can just load hir up, grab our bags and out the door!

      Enterprise – yes! We absolutely did complain and had some money knocked off.

  5. SP says:

    Pooperation! I love it.

    You’re a mini-van family – or at least you were for a bit! Glad to hear the trip was a success. So glad you an LB and PiC got some good family & friend time in!
    SP recently posted…You paid how much for that dog?My Profile

    • Revanche says:

      THANK YOU for catching that šŸ˜€ I was far too amused by it to have no one notice the clever. Hah.

      Thanks šŸ™‚ We don’t mind trading a bit of fashion for comfort šŸ˜‰

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