Travelling LH with a newly potty trained girl
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: BOS-TLV
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Travelling LH with a newly potty trained girl
So in the winter, we'll be taking a LH trip to Israel with the kids. My son is potty trained, but still wets at night, so since the the flight is overnight I will put him in one of his sleep pants to prevent accidents but take him to the potty like usual when he's not sleeping.
My daughter, though, will be either recently potty trained or on the tail end of training. We will, of course, have her in pull ups to prevent accidents, but what I really need to know is if you guys have seen any good potty products for girls. Since she will be newly trained, she will need to actually sit on the potty in the airplane. Expected her to do the "hover" maneuver (while I am holding her, no less, since she's 2 years old and obviously too short to do it herself) is way too much to ask.
So I am looking for some disposable seat covers that anyone might have used successfully on the plane. My alternative would be maybe to bring a roll of saran wrap or something.
I found these online. Any luck with them? Apparently they stick to the seat with a subtle adhesive so they won't slide around and fall off like the paper ones.
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sesame-Str...-Count/4532473
My daughter, though, will be either recently potty trained or on the tail end of training. We will, of course, have her in pull ups to prevent accidents, but what I really need to know is if you guys have seen any good potty products for girls. Since she will be newly trained, she will need to actually sit on the potty in the airplane. Expected her to do the "hover" maneuver (while I am holding her, no less, since she's 2 years old and obviously too short to do it herself) is way too much to ask.
So I am looking for some disposable seat covers that anyone might have used successfully on the plane. My alternative would be maybe to bring a roll of saran wrap or something.
I found these online. Any luck with them? Apparently they stick to the seat with a subtle adhesive so they won't slide around and fall off like the paper ones.
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sesame-Str...-Count/4532473
#2
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: IAD
Programs: No Loyalty to any airline
Posts: 2,378
I have no experience with those, but they look as if they would be far better than carrying a roll of plastic wrap up to the lav. You know she'd had to go "real bad" and you'd be struggling to rip off the wrap and it would be clinging to itself.
Try them at home first and then tell her they are "special" and for travel use only. Amazing what will work for a two year old.
Try them at home first and then tell her they are "special" and for travel use only. Amazing what will work for a two year old.
#3
Original Poster
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: BOS-TLV
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Posts: 1,318
Yeah, the saran wrap is just the plan B if I can't find a product that works well with little hassle.
I think I will order a package of these to test them out. I guess one of my thoughts is what fits an airline toilet instead of a home toilet, but something like I posted seems like it would be adaptable enough..
I think I will order a package of these to test them out. I guess one of my thoughts is what fits an airline toilet instead of a home toilet, but something like I posted seems like it would be adaptable enough..
#4
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: SE Asia
Posts: 1,274
We use a fold up one which is solid and the kid won't fall in the tolite. I think my wife found it at target or toys r us. It fits in her back pack of all the baby stuff and kids stuff. If I could attached pics to this post you could see what it looks like. The one we have is a cars themed seat.
I think it is a must have for traveling our just running to the mall with young kids.
I think it is a must have for traveling our just running to the mall with young kids.
#5
Original Poster
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: BOS-TLV
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Posts: 1,318
We use a fold up one which is solid and the kid won't fall in the tolite. I think my wife found it at target or toys r us. It fits in her back pack of all the baby stuff and kids stuff. If I could attached pics to this post you could see what it looks like. The one we have is a cars themed seat.
I think it is a must have for traveling our just running to the mall with young kids.
I think it is a must have for traveling our just running to the mall with young kids.
#6
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 100
So in the winter, we'll be taking a LH trip to Israel with the kids. My son is potty trained, but still wets at night, so since the the flight is overnight I will put him in one of his sleep pants to prevent accidents but take him to the potty like usual when he's not sleeping.
My daughter, though, will be either recently potty trained or on the tail end of training. We will, of course, have her in pull ups to prevent accidents, but what I really need to know is if you guys have seen any good potty products for girls. Since she will be newly trained, she will need to actually sit on the potty in the airplane. Expected her to do the "hover" maneuver (while I am holding her, no less, since she's 2 years old and obviously too short to do it herself) is way too much to ask.
So I am looking for some disposable seat covers that anyone might have used successfully on the plane. My alternative would be maybe to bring a roll of saran wrap or something.
I found these online. Any luck with them? Apparently they stick to the seat with a subtle adhesive so they won't slide around and fall off like the paper ones.
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sesame-Str...-Count/4532473
My daughter, though, will be either recently potty trained or on the tail end of training. We will, of course, have her in pull ups to prevent accidents, but what I really need to know is if you guys have seen any good potty products for girls. Since she will be newly trained, she will need to actually sit on the potty in the airplane. Expected her to do the "hover" maneuver (while I am holding her, no less, since she's 2 years old and obviously too short to do it herself) is way too much to ask.
So I am looking for some disposable seat covers that anyone might have used successfully on the plane. My alternative would be maybe to bring a roll of saran wrap or something.
I found these online. Any luck with them? Apparently they stick to the seat with a subtle adhesive so they won't slide around and fall off like the paper ones.
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Sesame-Str...-Count/4532473
#9
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: BOS-TLV
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Posts: 1,318
1. The mere fact that her tush is far smaller in diameter than the potty hole, so she needs something to sit on.
2. Many men aren't exactly great at aiming on a good day, and far worse in bumpy air, and by the end of an 11-hour flight there can be quite the puddle on the floor, let what is on the seat itself and the surrounding platform. (Sorry for the TMI!) I don't want my little girl sitting in the urine of 100+ men. Call me crazy.
#10
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Seattle
Programs: Alaska MVP
Posts: 1,169
2. Many men aren't exactly great at aiming on a good day, and far worse in bumpy air, and by the end of an 11-hour flight there can be quite the puddle on the floor, let what is on the seat itself and the surrounding platform. (Sorry for the TMI!) I don't want my little girl sitting in the urine of 100+ men. Call me crazy.
#11
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Is there a reason you can't support her by the armpits while she sits on the seat and goes? This is always what I did with my toddler and it worked fine.
Isn't that why men typically lift the seat to pee? So that they don't spray all over the part that folks actually sit on? I'd just bring some disinfecting wipes with me and do a once over if things look suspicious. Basically, I'm with VickiSoCal on this one. I'm far, far more worried about contracting disease from the door handle or bathroom faucet handle than from the toilet seat.
Isn't that why men typically lift the seat to pee? So that they don't spray all over the part that folks actually sit on? I'd just bring some disinfecting wipes with me and do a once over if things look suspicious. Basically, I'm with VickiSoCal on this one. I'm far, far more worried about contracting disease from the door handle or bathroom faucet handle than from the toilet seat.
As for men lifting the seat. You'd THINK they would, but you'd be surprised.
#12
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: SNA
Posts: 18,240
I always did the hold while they sat move and wiped the seat off first if it looked suspicious, but I don't bother with covers usually even if available, back of the thigh not being a normal disease entry point.
#13
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: BOS-TLV
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I don't bother with them, either, but in particularly skeezy environments like the restroom on a longhaul aircraft, I don't sit on the seats by policy, and I don't plan of having my daughter do so, either.
#14
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Prepare your daughter for the idea that airplane toilets are going to look different and make weird flushing noises. Some kids PANIC and some don't care at all.