Baby Bricker’s Bucket List for Disney

We’re already starting to plan ahead for Megatron by building her bucket list for Walt Disney World, Disneyland, and beyond. Making some conservative assumptions about quality of life in the future, she should have roughly 347 years to accomplish all of this (part with her mind uploaded to a robot, naturally).
Given that, we’re going to narrow the scope just a little bit and treat this more like a combined bucket list + 2024 New Year’s Resolutions + Disney rite-of-passage checklist. In other words, these are our goals for Baby Bricker in 2024 and probably beyond, rather than a traditional bucket list. That wouldn’t really make sense for an infant, given the origin of the term.
In the spirit of our past bucket lists for Disney, we’re going to include goals ranging from easily accomplishable to relatively unattainable. Part of that’s because we’ve learned to aim high and try to make our dreams a reality. It’s pretty wild to look back at our first Disney Bucket List from 2012. At that time, we had only ever visited Walt Disney World and Disneyland.
Internationational travel felt out of reach; the kind of thing reserved for only fancy businesspeople and the McCallister family. So our “Very Ambitious” and “Relatively Unattainable” categories contained doing Tokyo Disney Resort, Hong Kong Disneyland, Disneyland Paris, and opening day at Shanghai Disneyland.
One year later, we had knocked out all of the operational international parks. A few years after that, we were on hand for Shanghai Disneyland’s opening day. Sarah is very assiduous and I’m super stubborn (two words that essentially mean the same thing, but with different connotations). Over the years, we’ve found that if we set goals for ourselves that are within our control, we typically do what’s necessary to accomplish them.
It’s with that same dogged determination that we’re making this list, which could end up getting us into “trouble” because Megatron may have other goals in mind…or something like that. (More accurately, we may not have realistic expectations for traveling with an infant.) We could find that the practical realities of a baby may butt up against our cabin fever and desire to get back out on the road after a very light travel year.

Before we get going, it should go without saying–but we’ll say it anyway–that we have been incredibly fortunate in our experiences at the Disney Parks. We are well aware of the fact that for most Americans, a vacation to Walt Disney World or Disneyland is a once-in-a-lifetime experience–itself a bucket list item. There’s truly no need to pile more on top of that, as the trip alone is truly magical–and something the vast majority of people will never experience, period.
We don’t want to diminish that, and do want to acknowledge that we’re incredibly grateful for the experiences we’ve had. We’ve been able to see and do so much in the last decade, and now get to visit and revisit places anew with our baby. Nobody’s life is perfect, but we truly feel like the luckiest and most blessed people–and would feel that way even if we were locked at home all year with Megatron!
Hopefully our dreams listed in this post don’t come across as entitled Disney fans unappreciative of what we already have. We are well aware that we’re very fortunate for all we’ve been able to do; it’s a privilege that we do not take lightly. We hope this post is taken in the ‘for fun‘ manner that’s intended.
Anyway, on with our Baby Bricker Disney Bucket List slash Infant Travel Goals slash New Year’s Resolutions for 2024 and Beyond…

Baby’s First Ride – We really wanted Megatron’s first ride to be “it’s a small world” holiday as she’s absolutely enamored with the lights on the exterior, and watching those has become our #1 thing to do at Disney these days. (I’m not complaining!) Part of that is because we’re trying to err on the side of caution by avoiding prolonged indoor activities for Megatron’s first ~6 months and during the peak of respiratory illnesses season, which means no rides or restaurants.
After seeing her react to those lights on the exterior of “it’s a small world” holiday, we’ve been trying to think of a way to do the attraction while mitigating risk. We could be the first people of the day and have a boat to ourselves by showing up at rope drop or go at the very end of the night. Thus far, neither of those things have happened–and realistically, probably won’t.
As such, we’re still unsure of what her first ride will be. The regular version of “it’s a small world” is the leading candidate, and feels like a good symbolic choice for a child. The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh is also up there. Regardless of what her first ride is, there’s only one pick for first show (and first UNESCO World Heritage Site): Country Bear Jamboree.

Baby’s First Hotel Stay – We’re hotel people, so this is a big one for us. In addition to that, sleeping outside the familiarity of our bedroom for the first time feels like both a major milestone and a terrifying prospect–like tightrope walking without a harness. (Okay, slight hyperbole!)
Because her first stay wouldn’t be exciting enough on its own, we’ve also opted to add to the intrigue by booking the smallest hotel room possible. Literally. We’re doing the Duo Studio at the Villas at Disneyland Hotel. (For those unfamiliar with it, this is comparable to the tiny Tower Studio at Disney’s Riviera Resort.)

Baby’s First Flight – This is another milestone that I’m very ready to cross off the list. Part of this is because I’ve only flown alone for the last 13 months, and I’m getting really sick of it. (I don’t know how business travelers do it.)
The other part is because I really want to see how she handles flying. As discussed below, I’m really nervous about this and have been obsessing over it. I’m not so worried about the first domestic flight–we’ll fly Southwest, so the stakes are low. I just want it to be done with so I can see how it goes and have more clarity.

Baby’s First Haircut – My grandpa was a barber, so when we first daydreamed about having kids, part of their firsts involved him cutting their hair–a family tradition. Sadly, he passed a few years ago so that can’t happen for Megatron.
While that exact tradition can’t live on, the first haircut itself still has immense importance. It’s a chance to recognize a milestone for her, pay tribute to him, and carry on the tradition in a different manner.

Baby’s First Character Meal – When I asked for Sarah’s input on this list, literally half of her suggestions were character dining experiences. Choosing the “right” one for Megatron’s first character meal is very important to Sarah, but she hasn’t yet settled on what that will be. Here are the contenders, all picked by Sarah:
- Topolino’s Terrace Breakfast
- Crystal Palace
- Cape May Cafe
- Goofy’s Kitchen
Topolino’s Terrace is Sarah’s favorite character meal and features Mickey & Minnie in iconic looks. Megatron is already part of Pooh’s Posse, so Crystal Palace is another logical choice. We have a lot of sentimentality towards Cape May Cafe and it’s another great costume spot, so that’s in the running. Goofy’s Kitchen is another iconic (and convenient) one.

Baby’s First Early Entry – “I need to do it to prove the haters wrong!” is a common expression in our household when a great goal comes to mind. It’s said by me to Sarah, who responds with some variation of, “I didn’t say you couldn’t do that, I said it wasn’t a smart idea.” (Perhaps it’s one of those you have to be there type of things.) She is almost always right, of course. I do the thing, and it turns out to have been a dumb idea.
One recent example of this was my excellent idea to have Megatron’s first Magic Kingdom Early Entry be at 7:30 am, with me and her setting out to accomplish both Seven Dwarfs Mine Train and Peter Pan’s Flight. There are a few reasons why this is probably is not-so-smart, but there’s one why it’s downright impossible unless she has a nice growth spurt in 2024. Fingers crossed.
Even though that particular plan has been (mostly) ruled out, doing Early Entry with Megatron at all 4 parks is oddly important to me. I want her to have street cred as a serious rope dropper. Yes, I really am an endless fount of bad ideas, with a specialty in unimpressive accomplishments!

First Visit to EPCOTÂ – I swear this isn’t just a list of “firsts,” although those are a lot of the experiences we’re really excited for! EPCOT specifically is really, really important. For as much as I complain about it, that’s coming from a place of love–I want the park to be the best version of itself. (See Why We Can’t Let EPCOT Go.)
More than anything else in my life, EPCOT shaped who I am today. That might sound corny and cliche, but it’s true. As a child, the park sparked my imagination. Figment and Dreamfinder inspired me, fostered my creativity, and so much more. Other pavilions piqued my curiosity about manatees, dinosaurs, and more. I didn’t care much for school, but EPCOT made me excited to learn (okay, it tricked me into learning.)
As adults, World Showcase expanded our horizons. My worldview was embarrassingly Amerocentric well into my 20s. International travel was not something I had done or had much interest in doing–I didn’t have a passport until 2012. World Showcase was a catalyst for this, and it fueled a tremendous amount of personal growth. Suffice to say, EPCOT has changed our lives for the better.
Every parent wants better for their kids, and for us, a big part of this is exposing Megatron to different cultures and customs early. Interacting with Cast Members in World Showcase, introducing her to different cuisines, and doing everything possible to show her how both big and small the world really is.
I highly doubt Future World will do for her what it did for me–or a better job than the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis and other real-world spots we plan on visiting–but I’m still very excited for her to meet Figment. And ride the ride, I guess. Living with the Land and the Living Seas pavilion are also high our our list.
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4 Parks in 1 Day – Honestly, I’m not 100% sure whether this is something we’ve ever done. If we did it as a challenge or concerted effort, it must’ve been a while ago and wasn’t particularly memorable, as I’ve somehow forgotten. More likely, we did it by accident. Back in the halcyon days of late 2019 when Extra, Extra Magic Hours were a thing, we were going hard and enjoying the low crowds. I think there’s a decent chance it happened then, but inadvertently. (The months leading up to March 2020 are now a bit of a blur!)
In any case, we really want to do it (again?) with Megatron. Not just to prove the haters wrong, but to see if it can be done with an infant and what we can actually accomplish as part of a challenge with baby. As a future fan herself (fingers crossed), I also think this will be cool bragging rights someday with her friends. “Have you ever done the 4-parks, 1-day challenge?” “Pffft, I’ve been doing that since before I turned one!”

Dine at More Character Meals – Probably not a surprise to see this make the list given Sarah’s suggestions revolved around character dining. But actually, that’s not the sole motivation for this entry.
It’s been at least 4 years since we’ve done most Walt Disney World and Disneyland character meals. Even shortly before the closure, we had been waiting to revisit some of them until we had a baby–it just made sense. Then March 2020 happened and…I don’t have to spell out why we didn’t/couldn’t do character meals the next two years.
In any case, one of our big Disney New Year’s Resolutions for the last 2 years has been to start revisiting the character meals. With almost all of these experiences finally back to normal, 2023 was going to be the year when we finally buckled down and did them again as a couple. Once again, we didn’t–but couldn’t be more pleased by the reason why this time! 2024 is finally, for real, going to be our year.

Maximize the Disney Dining Plan – This sort of goes hand-in-hand with the above. The last time Sarah and I did the Disney Dining Plan was March 2020, right when the then-new, now-defunct Disney Dining Plan Plus came out. It was a lot of fun at the time to do a bunch of character meals back-to-back, but now it’s morphed into a memory we associate with COVID. Not so fun.
Doing another round of DDP maximization gives us a chance to paint over that old memory, forces us to be serious about ADRs, and means a lot of character meals again. One stone, multiple birds.

Our Favorite Week as a Family – As intimated above and elsewhere, all of my trips this year have been solo. I used to actually enjoy trips by myself when they were infrequent and a change of pace, but the novelty wore off long ago and I’ve come to loathe it. (No disrespect to the single riders out there–to each their own!)
For two consecutive years, we haven’t been able to do our favorite week of the year at Walt Disney World together. It didn’t seem like a big deal last year–we had a scheduling conflict and it arguably made more sense as we could cover more ground and dates, while we took turns keeping Yossarian the Cat and Walter Dogsney company. Little did we know at the time that it would become a trend lasting until the following Christmas.
Suffice to say, we are beyond ready to attend Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party as a family. To see Candlelight Processional together (probably from outside the amphitheater, but it still counts). To interact with the Merry Menagerie. To attend Jollywood…eh, maybe we’ll give that one a pass! 😉

Very Merrytime Cruise – We previously did one of the Christmas sailings aboard Disney Cruise Line in late 2019, and I was a bit underwhelmed at the time. (See our Very Merrytime Christmas Cruise Review.) Time has been much kinder to those memories, and I now think I was way too harsh. Funny how that works.
In reviewing all of Sarah’s photos and hearing what she had to say about Halloween on the High Seas last year, it made me eager to give the Very Merrytime cruise a second chance. So, we were going to do precisely that for Christmas 2024.
We’re also just generally more excited for cruising with Megatron. By all accounts, it’s the easy vacation with a small child, and I’m going to have to “learn” how to slow down. If anything, that makes me feel vindicated by my past reluctance to cruising–there are still a ton of itineraries we haven’t done and will get to experience as a family!

Cinderella Castle Dream Lights – The ball is in your court, Disney. Do the right thing, bring back the Cinderella Castle Dream Lights, and win over the hearts and minds of disgruntled fans. And the eyes of our daughter, who is absolutely transfixed by Christmas lights. (I’m honestly not sure if we can ethically take down our Christmas tree at home next week!)
There’s a version of this list that’s entirely Christmas. It’s our favorite time of the year at Walt Disney World and is always on our minds. But nothing else compares with the Cinderella Castle Dream Lights, though. As cheesy as it sounds, there’s something truly optimism-inducing and awe-inspiring about Magic Kingdom’s icon being illuminated in thousands of brilliant lights. I really, really hope we get a chance to spend a chilly late night on Main Street as the crowd clears out, the glow of Cinderella Castle is reflected in the pavement, and the cheery background music sets a festive mood.

Disneyland & Walt Disney World in the Same Day – This is from our original Disney bucket list, and we still somehow haven’t done it. At the time, this was our goal while living in Indiana. We’ve since resided in both California and Florida, but still haven’t managed the feat.
Doing this feels like yet another opportunity to prove the haters wrong (“who is even saying you can’t do that?!” ~Sarah), embracing our inner dorkiness and getting photos of us holding up the day’s issues of the Orlando Sentinel and Los Angeles Times in front of Cinderella Castle and Sleeping Beauty Castle.

Traveling Outside Disney – World Showcase definitely opened my eyes to the world, but I don’t want to diminish what my parents did. My family traveled a lot when I was young, and I’m incredibly thankful to my mom and dad for taking me camping, traveling to National Parks, and visiting so many states–from West Virginia to Washington. That also shaped me.
We want to do the same for Megatron. America is an amazing and beautiful place, and there are wonderful people, cultures, and sites within our 50 states–every single one of which has something incredible to offer. It worries us that so many young people and the terminally online don’t recognize this, so we want to do everything in our power to show our daughter that America is one of the greatest places in the world. To have her see that we’re more alike than we are different, and to instill in her a sense of inveterate optimism early-on.

Disney in the Snow – This has made every single incarnation of our Disney Bucket Lists or New Year’s Resolutions–it’s our white whale. I grew up in the snow belt of Michigan, and was exposed to the “Lake Effect Snow Machine” throughout my childhood. That started a lifelong love of snow, and there are few things I find to be more beautiful than a fresh layer of powder blanketing the trees. Of course, California and Florida are out when it comes to significant snow accumulation.
Disneyland Paris and Tokyo Disneyland are different stories, and it seems to snow about once per year (give or take) in each. A couple of years ago, we spent much of the winter in Japan, but had no such luck with snow. We’ll either have to do that again (which seems unlikely) or get lucky with timing a trip. Cold weather without snow is no fun, so the latter is a pretty big gamble.

Baby’s First International Flight – I am terrified for this. I’ve lost count of how many articles I’ve read about flying internationally with a baby. The success stories. The horror stories. (If anyone would like to share their experiences–good or bad–in the comments, I’d love to read them!) I’m preoccupied about this to the point that I’m having dreams about it.
We’ve talked to friends about flying internationally with a baby, and almost all of them have allayed our fears and sometimes-enthusiastically recommended traveling as close to the 6-month mark as possible. They’ve described this as the “sweet spot” before the baby is really mobile and active, but after they start sleeping more and are less fussy.
Rationally, this makes complete sense and is very much our plan. But right now we’re in the eye of the storm, so to speak, and it’s hard to envision a time when the dreaded witching hour isn’t a thing. We’ve gotten pretty good at soothing, but that requires moving around (often outdoors!) with the baby carrier, which won’t always be possible on a plane.
We also are incredibly cognizant and apprehensive of being “those people” who are a burden, in the way, annoying, etc. (I think maybe this is a Midwestern thing?) Again, rationally we know that everyone was a baby and people need to get places regardless of age. It’s just a fact of life. And we ourselves have never been annoyed by crying babies on planes, so there’s no hypocrisy guilt…but there’s still a very big mental barrier.
But we’re going to do it, and I already know it’s going to be the most satisfying feeling ever once that plane lands (hopefully not for an unplanned stop to kick us off!). I’ll be kissing the ground and high-kicking the air once we cross this off Baby’s Bucket List!

Opening Day at Fantasy Springs – That first international flight is how we get to Japan for the opening of Fantasy Springs at Tokyo DisneySea, which we’ve been anxiously awaiting since watching its construction from our hotel room at Christmas 2019. Every day during that visit while walking in front of the site access point to the monorail station, Sarah would say ‘ohayou gozaimasu‘ to the construction worker on guard, who would enthusiastically (shockingly so!) say the same in response to her.
It’s no secret that we love Japan and Tokyo Disney Resort and would want to take Megatron regardless. But this in particular feels like a full circle opportunity, closing one chapter and starting another. It’s difficult to fully articulate, but the point is that this is meaningful for both the substance of the thing (we’re really excited for Fantasy Springs!) and the symbolism of it.
Even if we’re somehow not even able to get into the new land or do a single attraction, opening day is still something we very much want to be there to experience. That may not make sense, but it’s nevertheless the #1 entry on our Baby Bricker Bucket List in terms of importance.
It’s been fun crossing items off of our Disney bucket list over the course of the last decade-plus, and helped keep the parks fresh for us even after numerous visits. There’s always something we haven’t done, whether it’s a new seasonal event, restaurant, etc., to help keep things fresh. With Baby Bricker yet to experience so many firsts, it feels like we’re starting over from square one with a blank slate and fresh list. We absolutely cannot wait.
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Your Thoughts
What do you think of our Baby Bricker Disney Bucket List slash Infant Travel Goals slash New Year’s Resolutions for 2024 and Beyond? Any other meaningful milestones you can think of for an infant or toddler at Disney that we should add to the list? Do you agree or disagree with our picks? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback—even when you disagree with us—is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

We’ve been reading your blog since the original 2012 bucket list era so this was a very fun read for my wife and me. Can’t wait to read about your first international travel experience as a trio. We’re in our early 30s expecting our first child in February so I appreciate the research you’ll be doing and sharing as we also enter headfirst into that unknown 3-person travel experience.
Thanks for reading so long, and good luck yourselves on the home stretch of pregnancy and life thereafter!
A couple friends took their 1YO on Frozen Ever After. The look on the kid’s face in the on-ride photo is HILARIOUS.
In fairness to the kid, that camera is in a really funky spot. We have so many photos from FEA that will never see the light of day because they’re basically akin to Nick Nolte’s mugshot. (Okay, not THAT bad–but not flattering!)
We traveled internationally with my older son when he was about 8 months old and it is one of our favorite memories of his infancy. We requested the bassinet seat when we booked which was helpful so he could lay flat to sleep. He never adjusted to the time zone so we were pretty tired. Name of the game when traveling anywhere with kiddos is flexibility! This can be hard if you like to plan trips down to minute details but being flexible and willing to pivot when necessary makes a huge difference. Also we found having a baby along anywhere overseas invited wonderful interactions (and when we lived overseas for a couple of years it was amazing how much being on a train with my younger son brought on smiles, even when there was a language barrier!). You’re going to love it, even with the hectic nature of travel and going through TSA with a baby and all of their stuff.
“He never adjusted to the time zone so we were pretty tired.”
This is definitely a fear with a ~12-13 hour time change–day becomes night and vice-versa–but she sleeps a ton anyway, so hopefully that won’t matter too much!
I am Midwestern too so I totally feel you, but babies are humans who have the same right to travel as all other humans. When the time comes, don’t feel you have to make apology favors for the whole plane or anything. 🙂
Oh, we definitely would NOT do that. I will feel guilty and embarrassed, but I know better than to show signs of weakness outwardly, as that’s like an invitation for more criticism/complaints/judgment. I’ve learned that one the hard way!
There is a LOT of value to training your kids really early to cope with things like hotel stays and rope dropping. For real. As teens and young adults, I can now tell my kids it’s time to rope drop something and even the chronically late one is running out the door half dressed still stuffing stray items in his pockets to get there. They get it! And it’s because we made it a normal thing you do without question. It’s like washing your hands or brushing your teeth. You beat the people, and you do more of the things without the stress. These kids will even rope drop to hit the TTC or Carousel of Progress- because it’s just more fun if nobody else has been there yet. It applies outside of Disney as well – the zoo, museums, parks – you get a very different experience if you rope drop it. If you wait until they are old enough to establish norms about sleep and environment they won’t adjust the same, the earlier the learn to sleep where they are the more flexible they will be able bedtime/naptime/snack time/ etc.
That’s our plan! Rope drop is already in our everyday vernacular, so hopefully it’ll be in hers, too!
Meg’s first character dining, Crystal Palace, start familiarizing her with big life size pictures of Pooh and Friends. 1st ride definitely It’s a Small World, play the music over and over so she recognizes it on ride. Of course, just suggestions, as I am so excited for memories of all magical moments with our little guy, “now 28 and still loving all things Disney” through Meg. Keep posting progress and pictures.
Brought our son to WDW for his first birthday. Yes, he got the haircut and the staff were wonderful. I remember earlier being perplexed why anyone would put a barber shop in a theme park. We went back for subsequent birthdays and haircuts. Seems like the barber shop was closed way longer after Magic Kingdom finally opened.
Just did Plaza Inn Character Dining with my daughter for her first Disney Character meal. Recommended for while you’re still being Covid cautious as your kid can be outdoors the whole time and still get good interactions/photos in.
I am going to pass on advice that was given to me when we first started traveling by airplane when our kids were little from a coworker who did extensive travel with his young family:
Hope for the best and remember you will never see these people again 😉
I would like to suggest a few firsts before they become lasts or extinct – Bugs Life and the following character meet and greets – Donald Duck at Dino-bash , Daisy Duck at Dino-bash and Chip & Dale as chipmunk-o-saurus with all the changes slated for DinoLand, I would add these to Megatron’s list so she can experience them before they no longer exist in WDW. so glad to see that you are all planning many family Disney trips. I look forward to reading about all of your trip experiences.
cruising with kids of any age is nice because you’re never more than 5 minutes from your room. so easy. and we just did the merrytime panama canal cruise and absolutely loved it, highly recommend!
Our son’s first haircut was at the barber shop in Magic Kingdom. We went September 2013 when he was a little over 2 years old. We had to get that “free before 3” trip in. He “needed” a haircut since February 2013, but I was determined to have it done at WDW. So he rocked a pretty good little mullet until his haircut.
We usually flew Southwest with him as a baby so we could go sit in the very last row of seats and hopefully not disturb people. We also liked the last row because then we didn’t feel like we were holding people up when it came time to deplane. The only tip/trick I can recommend is have Megatron suck on something, a paci, bottle, bewb, when taking off and when landing.
I enjoy all of your bucket list items. I hope you get to complete them all.
I live in Maryland and have traveled to WDW numerous times via Southwest airlines. My advice – we always bought our daughters a seat on the plane and strapped them – in their car seat – into the airline seat. It was perfect – the girls knew what the car seat was, were comfortable in it and knew they had to stay still. My girls are now 20 and 23. I’m sure they must have had meltdowns, but none that I remember. Traveling with the car seat on the airplane is the way to go!
I would second this. especially after babies get more mobile. If I held my toddler he would squirm to get down and explore. He was so used to the car seat that he sat docile for entire flights.
Once my kids were old enough and out of the infant seat and in a convertible car seat we used the car seat as stroller (on a Britax car seat travel cart) to get around the airport and then for secure seating in flight.
As a mom of two well-traveled daughters, who are now 18 and 20 but who have always been pros at packing and managing their own luggage and have the map of Disneyland memorized, the BEST thing you can do to prepare your kiddo for travel in any capacity is to have that kiddo out and about as much as possible in her first year. Seriously. Take her everywhere and anywhere. She’ll get used to sleeping in new places with ambient noise, you’ll get used to figuring out new challenges as parents when you don’t have the comfortable routines of home to fall back on, and you’ll all have a lot of fun. Yes, there will be moments that are dreadful, but even those become fun memories. We now laugh about the time my 2yo had a meltdown as we were leaving Disneyland because she couldn’t ride in the stroller her 4yo sister was already asleep in (even though she got to ride on Uncle Ben’s shoulders, which was her favorite place at the time). We now ask her every time we leave the parks if she wants a stroller ride as her “last ride.” It never gets old and has now become a cherished memory. Enjoy every moment!
You can’t go wrong with Small World as Megatron’s first ride, but I definitely understand your concern for keeping her away from germs. I bet if you explained the situation to a CM they would let you have a boat to yourselves, especially if you rope drop.
For her first flight, I suggest taking a short one! As I’m sure you know, flying with a baby is a whole other thing than flying with adults. Some kids really take to it and are pretty relaxed, but for others it can be like the witching hour for 4 hours but without the comforts of home. (Perhaps practice changing a diaper in the smallest bathroom imaginable.)
Goofy’s would be a great first character meal, or maybe Plaza Inn.
Have fun!
Good luck with the international trip! We took our baby to New Zealand last year to visit family when he was 6 months old. >24 hours flying from the UK was a lot, and we didn’t get much sleep, but he slept better than he did at home! I think the plane acted as a giant white noise machine and he was very cosy in the bassinet that the airline provided. When he cried we just fed him in the seat, or went to the back of the plane to bounce him around. Everyone is wearing headphones so won’t be disturbed by you! Enjoy the trip
Here’s hoping I come back as your second child.
One piece of flight advice: With all your national and international park hopping I’m sure you have many available complimentary upgrades and elite status on at least one or two main-line carriers, so, for your sanity and overall comfort, when you fly as a family, don’t fly coach!
Thanks for the advice–that’s one thing we’ve definitely been going back and forth on.
We actually don’t have upgrades/status on the international carriers. We do a lot of deal hacking to fly with miles, and when I travel solo domestically, I typically fly basic economy (or the equivalent) that doesn’t earn miles. I’ve actually never flown ‘real’ first or business class–too frugal with miles!
We gave DCL a shot this year and did the Very Merrytime Cruise out of Fort Lauderdale. I think some of your critiques (i.e. it’s not MVMCP at sea) hold true. That being said, we had a blast on the trip. I was vehemently anti cruise, and said I’d never do one. Kids loved it as well. We also loved the place we stayed for two nights before the cruise (https://lagomar.com/). If you do end up traveling out of FLL I think you’d like it (based on your content), and no resort fee :-).
Thanks for the recommendation–I had never even heard of that before. If we cruise out of Fort Lauderdale, I’d imagine we’ll start at WDW, but I’ll still keep that in mind.
I’m certainly not anti-cruise…I just prefer theme parks, cities, and anything else with a faster pace. But I’m guessing I’ll be embracing a slower pace soon enough! 🙂
I think it’s great that your not letting your baby affect your WDW visits! our girls were born in April and we continued out fall and spring vists to wdw.