Posts Tagged ‘travel snacks’

Traveling with Children who have Food Allergies

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Many parents who have a child with severe food allergies opt not to travel because they fear a negative allergic reaction away from home. Our lives changed forever when we discovered our daughter, Chloe, has severe allergies to milk, egg, wheat, and peanut. My husband and I have always loved to travel and we can’t imagine giving up visiting faraway friends and family and seeing the world with our two children. Travel with a food-allergic child is possible. It just takes preparation, communication, and vigilance!

At home, we prepare safe food for Chloe and we control her environment to avoid accidental reactions. Travelers, however, are at the mercy of uncontrolled surroundings, especially when it comes to food. In restaurants, on airplanes, and at stops along the highway it can be a tricky game to find safe food. Here’s what we do to make sure our daughter stays safe on the go.


Kate and Chloe posing beside a statue of Sacagawea and Jean Baptiste at Fort Clatsop, Oregon in 2009

Road Trips
Before long road trips, I pack a bag full of “Chloe-safe” snacks such as fruit, safe store-bought pretzels, juice boxes, raisins, and homemade muffins. I also pack a “Non-safe” bag of travel snacks because, let’s face it, it’s not always possible to please everyone with Chloe-safe choices.

On the road, we have learned which convenience foods and fast-food items are safe. Cross-contamination is also an issue – we can’t just pull ham out of a sandwich. Usually, safe snacks are of the “potatoes fried in oil” variety, such as plain potato chips or french fries. These aren’t the healthiest options, but if it comes down to unsafe but healthy, or unhealthy but safe, I’ll take the second choice!

Dining Out
In restaurants, I communicate with the server extensively and politely. Often the chef will make something special, especially in fancier places.

If traveling to a foreign country, you can purchase Select Wisely food and travel translation cards. These handy cards are available in a numerous languages to make it easy to tell wait staff about food allergies or other dietary restrictions.

Air Travel
The food allergy community is very concerned about airlines serving peanuts on flights, and rightly-so! Some people are so allergic to peanuts they will go into anaphylaxis just by breathing in or making skin contact with peanut dust. Thankfully Chloe is not that allergic but she still cannot eat the pretzels or other airline snacks. Therefore we are sure to bring our own snacks onboard.

Airline travel presents families with food allergies another challenge: getting through security with medicines. In a sturdy zippered pouch that lives in my purse are Chloe’s Benadryl and Epi-Pens in original packaging, along with a copy of the food allergy treatment plan signed by her physician. I remove all of these and show them to the agents as we move through the security line. Only once have we been stopped so the officials could test a partially-used bottle of Benadryl.

On our recent trip to Europe, what concerned me most was the long flight. What if something happened in the air over the Atlantic? That was the only time I felt the need to inform the flight attendant of Chloe’s allergies. On domestic flights we don’t bother. The flight attendant appreciated our preparation and communication. She said, “You would not believe how many parents expect us to come to the rescue when their kid has a reaction!” 

Explore the World!
Our travel experiences with Chloe have been very positive because we are proactive. We understand the nature of her allergies and make careful choices based on this information. Traveling with a child who has food allergies requires some extra planning, but the rewards of seeing loved ones and exploring the world together as a family is well worth it!

Kate Newmyer is the author of Chloe’s Food Allergies, a blog about dealing with the emotional and logistical aspects of parenting a food allergic child. Kate and her husband, Daniel, love to travel with their two children, Andrew (age four), Chloe (age two) and their nephew, Morgan Hart (age 16). Chloe had her first anaphylactic reaction and was diagnosed with severe food allergies at eight-months-old.

 

Do you have any tips for traveling with food allergies? Leave a comment below!

You might also like:

A Road Trip Experiment: Eat While You Drive. Stop to Play

Children’s Motion Sickness No More

How to Stay Healthy & Fit While Traveling

10 Commandments of Traveling with a Child Who Has Special Needs

How to Stay Healthy & Fit While Traveling

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

I interviewed Carolyn Scott, a.k.a. the Healthy Voyager, to get some tips for staying healthy and fit while traveling. Read on to learn how to win three Healthy Voyager e-cookbooks plus a prize pack of healthful Bellybar snacks. (Total retail value is $57.50.)

Carolyn’s website, HealthyVoyager.com, highlights healthy activities, products, recipes, and restaurant options for travelers of all kinds including those with special dietary needs. Carolyn is working with an agent for her series of 12 books on healthy living and she hosts a Healthy Voyager Radio show on 1680 AM in Los Angeles. A vegan, Carolyn, travels frequently with her non-vegan fiancé, Dan Hamilton. While the couple doesn’t have any children yet, they have embarked on road trips and day excursions with Dan’s school-aged nieces and their neighbor’s tween-aged children.

Here are Carolyn’s tips for keeping the whole family healthy and fit while away from home…

Cheat, in Moderation
While on vacation, Carolyn suggests ordering the sinful dish you crave, but asking for a to-go box or second plate so that you can immediately split the dish in half to avoid over-eating. Or, save calories and money by splitting a meal with your spouse or travel mate. You can also swap out mashed potatoes for a salad or order your meat or fish grilled rather than fried. Then you won’t feel so guilty when you order dessert!

Trick the Kids
Carolyn understands that getting kids to eat healthy can be a challenge, especially when dining out. She suggests you order the food your child loves, but modify the dish slightly to sneak in the fiber and nutrients they need. For example, order a grilled cheese sandwich, but ask the server to add sliced tomatoes. Or, order a bean and cheese burrito and add grilled veggies. Instead of fries as a side dish, request fresh fruit. It’s also a good idea to pack some children’s vitamins because, despite your best efforts, chances are you will be less successful in enforcing a healthful diet on the go than you are at home.

Make Fitness Fun
I admitted to Carolyn that I’ve stopped packing my workout clothes and shoes when traveling because I never, ever make use of them. She advised me to incorporate exercise into my family’s vacation activities instead. For example, skip the bus tour in favor of a walking tour, plan a hike, or sign up for surf lessons.

Select Wisely
Carolyn suggests travelers with diet restrictions purchase Select Wisely food and travel translation cards. These handy cards are available in a multitude of languages to make telling servers in foreign countries about any dietary restrictions you may have, such as diabetic, gluten-free, or kosher.

Stay Hydrated
It’s easy to become dehydrated while traveling, especially when visiting a warm climate or a destination where the tap water is not drinkable. Be sure to stock up on bottled water and juices while away from home!

Think Green
Carolyn admits, “I totally let myself cheat (on vacation) as far as not eating all of my whole grains.” Drinking Go-Greens provides the fiber needed in a balanced diet, which allows her to splurge on a plate of vegan chili cheese fries. Go-Greens, made by To Go! Brands, Inc. is a powder you can add to water that tastes like green apple and comes in convenient on-the-go packets. It is made with 15 organic fruits and vegetables and has the antioxidant power of six servings of produce in one packet.

Pack Healthy Snacks
Rather than filling up on cotton candy and potato chips between meals, Carolyn suggests bringing along some healthy travel snacks. Some of her favorites are: 

• Healthy bars, such as Bellybars - All natural bars that come in four flavors: Mellow Oat, Baby Needs Chocolate, Berry Nutty Cravings, and Burstin’ Chocolate. Read on to learn how to win a prize pack of Bellybars and other Bellybar healthful goodies designed for women on the go. (Note that Bellybars are not vegan.)

Yogachips - Crispy dried apples with no added preservatives, in flavors like peach, strawberry, caramel and Carolyn’s favorite, apple cinnamon.

Galaxy Granola - A protein-packed, crunchy treat that is baked in applesauce instead of oil and comes in four flavors.

• Healthy Voyager Creamy Pinwheels, a tasty snack that is easy and fun to make with the kids to take along on a road trip or to eat instead of airplane food during a flight.

Healthy Voyager Creamy Pinwheels Recipe
4- 12 inch spinach tortillas
2- 8 ounce packages of (opt. vegan) cream cheese, at room temperature
2 green onions (scallions), minced
1/2 cup diced red, yellow or green pepper
1/2 cup diced celery
1 can pitted black olives, drained and sliced
1/2 teaspoon fresh herbs (dill, tarragon, basil or cilantro depending on taste)
fresh black pepper

In a large bowl mix filling ingredients. Spread mixture evenly onto tortilla leaving about an inch of room around the edge of the edge you are rolling toward. After rolling is complete, tightly wrap tortillas in plastic wrap and store in refrigerator for 2 hours or overnight. Remove right before serving and slice into one inch pieces.

Enjoy
While on vacation, Carolyn admits, “I totally let myself take a break.” For her, that means skipping her strict daily workout regimen and indulging in vegan cheesecake or, her favorite, tiramisu. She said, “One week is not gonna kill you.”

So, go ahead and splurge while on vacation. Just be sure to get back to healthy habits when you return home!

Win
One lucky Travel Mama (or Travel Daddy!) will win three Healthy Voyager e-cookbooks and a prize pack of healthy snacks from Bellybar. Total retail value of the prizes is $57.50. The contest ends on Saturday, January 23, 2010. The winner will be randomly selected using RANDOM.org and will be announced on TravelMamas.com the following Monday. Healthy Voyager will provide the three e-books and Bellybar will provide the snack prize pack to the winner. Travel Mamas did NOT receive any money or products as payment for this post.

The winner will receive all of the following:

• The Healthy Voyager’s Global Kitchen E-Cookbook Teaser – Mini Greek Chapter

• The Healthy Voyager’s Restaurant E-Cookbook Teaser – Mini Appetizer Chapter

• The Healthy Voyager’s Healthy for the Holidays Preview E-Book - Mini Winter Wonderland Chapter

• 8 Bellybars (2 of Each Flavor: Baby Needs Chocolate, Berry Nutty Cravings, Mellow Oat, and Burstin’ Chocolate)

• 2 Pouches Bellybar Chews (1 of Both Flavors: Chocolate Cuddles and Citrus on Board)

• 2 Due for Chocolate Bellybar Shakes

There are three ways to enter:

1) Make a post-related comment below about which of these Healthy Voyager tips you find most useful, or share your tips for staying healthy and fit while traveling. All generic comments like, “Thanks for the contest” or “I want to win” will not count as entries.

2) Post a second comment below about which Bellybar product sounds tastiest to you and why. Be specific to make sure your entry counts!

3) Tweet this contest! Copy and paste the phrase below into Twitter. Be sure to post another comment with a link to your tweet!
I want to win a healthy travel prize pack worth $57.50 from @Bellybar & @HealthyVoyager on @TravelMamas http://bit.ly/8xV9MF

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For more information on this topic see:

Eating Tips

Health & Safety Blogs

Health & Safety Resources

Health & Safety Tips

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Mother Knows Best: An Old School Road Trip

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

Travel never used to phase me. And I thought it never would. Before having a baby, I wouldn’t hesitate to jump in the car and make a last-minute trip to Vegas bringing only a change of underwear and a toothbrush. My thought process was, whatever I didn’t have I could always get later. Not so anymore. Now that I have real responsibilities, namely in the form of a healthy, bouncing six-month-old baby boy, my tendency is to over prepare.


Giulia and her son, Milo, are pictured above

And so began the preparation for our first big road trip. My husband and I were off to see the in-laws in Northern California to show off our little guy.

Cooler full of formula bottles, sodas and travel snacks? Check.

Stack of gossip magazines in the hopes that I would be able to steal away a few minutes for myself, but with the knowledge that would never really happen? Check.

Armed with 25 pounds of toys and activities for a baby whose happiest moments are those spent with just a plastic spoon from Ikea to chew on? Check.

I was ready for our six hour drive (though not quite mentally prepared to two days with the in-laws)!

This was not going to be my mother’s road trip. Unlike my mom, I packed toys and distractions galore! When we were growing up and made our yearly pilgrimage to Grandma’s house, we were lucky to each have our own seatbelts. My mother’s plan for keeping us occupied during the drive was to play travel games with us, like have us tally up how many different states’ license plates we saw. Or she would have us search for things on the road, like a Tibetan monk riding a yak. Then she’d lean back in her seat and relax for the next three hours while each of us kids gazed intently out of the car window hoping to be the first to spot our target.

Smart, responsible parent that I am, I mapped out the trip making sure we left at a time when we would hit the least traffic. One half-hour and only four miles into our mini-vacation, I knew we were in for a long ride. But I was ready. Out came the colorful interlocking rings – fun to gnaw on for a few minutes (by the baby, of course, not me), then they were tossed aside. Next up from the arsenal? A carefully chosen, developmentally-stimulating and age-appropriate board book. Apparently, this book had not been tested on real children because he showed no real interest whatsoever in looking at it or even chewing on it.

So what, then, did we end up doing between his frequent naps and feedings? Just what my mother would have done. We played word games. We blew raspberries at each other and giggled. We practiced our “ma ma ma’s” (“ma” being the single most glorious syllable in the English language!) and other such sounds that are so new and challenging to him.

What should have been a six-hour trip ended up being 11 hours. And you know what? It wasn’t all that bad, at least not for the baby. My husband and I, on the other hand, were about to lose our minds, especially upon discovering after our arrival at 1:00 am that we had, in fact, forgotten the all-important footed pajamas. But it was nothing a quick trip to the store couldn’t cure.

My advice for traveling with kids? Relax and enjoy the ride. Remember, you can buy that extra pair of underwear at pretty much any destination.

But the most important advice I can impart… make sure to pack a nice bottle of wine in the cooler next to those bottles of milk for when you finally arrive.

 

Giulia Rivera is an attorney and a mom to her six-month-old son, Milo.

Do you have advice for other road-tripping moms you’d like to share? Leave a comment below!

You might also like:

A Road Trip with Children Experiment: Eat While You Drive. Stop to Play.

Road Trip Resources

Road Trip Tips

The Most Important Item to Pack…A Bucket!

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A Road Trip with Children Experiment: Eat While You Drive. Stop to Play.

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

“Eat while you drive. Stop to play.” I recently tested this tidbit of road trip advice from a friend.

My friend and fellow Travel Mama, Danielle Beaty Adler, has braved several road trips from San Diego to Phoenix with her two sons, Jessie (22 months) and Jacob (5.5 years), BY HERSELF! What’s more, she does this without the aid of television, even though her SUV came stocked with a DVD player.

If Danielle can manage a six-hour trek alone, surely I could survive a four-and-a-half-hour trip without the aid of Barney or the Wiggles on screen. Especially since I would have with the luxury of an adult helper (my husband, Phil).

Danielle places a cooler on the front seat beside her and passes a steady stream of healthy travel snacks back to her older son, who distributes the goodies between himself and his younger brother. She said, “The night before, I cut up gobs of fresh fruit and I steam lots of veggies.” Then she divides them into separate plastic containers for easy handling on the go. She even packs the steamer for multi-day road trips! Danielle told me, “After that they get some kind of carb like Cheerios, granola bars or a muffin. I’m a sucker for muffins.” After stopping to let the kids run around and burn off some energy, she serves lunch back in the car. I would love to tell you that with the help of Danielle’s advice we made it all the way to Las Vegas without succumbing to the lure of the DVD player, but I can’t.

I plied my four-year-old, Karissa, with peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, apple slices, organic cheese puffs and ranch-flavored soy crips. I did not go so far as to steam vegetables for the trip, I’m afraid. I climbed into the backseat and spoon-fed jars of baby food to my one-year-old son, Leo. We stopped at a rest stop, sadly lacking in trees and grass, and kicked an inflatable beach ball about and blew bubbles. For travel entertainment back in the car I read books to the baby and zoomed little cars up and down his limbs. I provided lace boards, washable Crayola markers with no-drop, flip-top lids and coloring books to my daughter. Nonetheless, both kids hit the proverbial wall a half-hour before we arrived at Excalibur on The Strip.

Maybe in a couple months when Leo has perfected chewing and swallowing finger foods without gagging I will be able to proudly announce I survived a multi-hour road trip without a single minute of television. For now, I’m thankful for Baby Einstein videos and the aura of calm they brought to the last segment of our journey. The important thing is, we arrived safe and sound…with sanity in tact!

 

Do you think it’s okay to let children watch television on a road trip? What are your favorite road trip snacks? Leave a comment below!

For more information on this topic see:

Road Trip Resources

Road Trip Tips

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