"My 4-year-old is a ride fanatic (truly, she came home from Disney saying she wants to be a "roller coaster engineer" when she grows up). I knew she'd want to ride every ride she was tall enough to ride and she'd want both of her parents to experience the joy with her. (I still remember her devastation when she found out I couldn't ride a roller coaster at a different park while I"
"The only hitch in our plan is that we were also traveling with our nine-month-old son. I was excited to take the trip, but also really nervous about balancing both of their needs - I feel like I'm still learning how to do this on a normal, low-key weekend at home, let alone in the midst of her dream come true. The stakes felt high."
"Disney World is an easy place to have two kids - in some ways it was even simpler than at home because every single environmental detail is planned with kids of all ages in mind. My husband and I pushed the two of them in our rented double stroller more than 50 miles over the course of the six-day trip (I do recommend a "rest day" with no park plans in the middle if you can swing it)."
A family planned a Disney World trip for a four-year-old’s birthday while also traveling with a nine-month-old. The four-year-old anticipated the visit with nonstop excitement and the parents worried about balancing both children’s needs. Disney World proved accommodating, with many details designed for kids of all ages. The parents used a rented double stroller and pushed the children more than 50 miles across six days, and they recommend scheduling a rest day mid-trip. They identified three strategies to make the trip more doable, including using Rider Switch for ride-sharing when one parent stays with the baby.
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