Great for
airplane travel too.
Not exact matches
Coconut flour egg, bacon & cheese muffins Popcorn (popped in coconut oil and topped with melted butter)-- we make popcorn for the movie theater,
too Coconut flour blueberry muffins Grass - fed cheese Homemade corn tortilla chips Soaked and dried nuts Homemade sprouted flour crackers Whole, raw milk (in a sippy cup; sometimes I even bring two)-- it's impossible to get ANY kind of milk on most
airplanes these days; many airlines only have non-dairy creamer available Scrambled eggs — I put them in a Thermos container Bananas, oranges, apples, grapes — organic if possible Homemade shortbread cookies — it's a great idea to pack a few cookies for those extra-tough times while
traveling Raisins — organic if possible Grass - fed whole milk yogurt mixed with a little fruit - sweetened jam or honey — I put it in a Thermos Homemade soaked granola -LSB-...]
We
travel a lot by plane and use táxi as well, my main concern about the BJ GT is that when folded all the SEAT is totally exposed to the ground and this will make the seat seat
too dirty Aldo the stroller handle to the
airplane luggage compartment Will be a dirty magnet to the dar SEAT.
This
travel system is easy to store
too, meaning, you can easily
travel with it wherever you go, even on an
airplane.
If your baby is
too big for the bassinet or boppy, it's VERY worth the extra money to purchase a seat and
travel with your
airplane - compatible car seat.
Even if your baby is
too long, check the weight requirements... it might just qualify you for the prime family
travel location on any
airplane.
Airplane travel cost need to reflect CO2 emissions,
too.
Business Class
travel means more than just
traveling for work — it is that happy medium between paying
too high a price for a First Class seat on an
airplane and being cramped in a microscopically small Economy Class seat.
Because I ride a bicycle and limit my car trips, and I've curtailed my
airplane travel, and wear sweaters (I know when I've set the thermostat
too low when I can see the dog's breath in the living room), and because I've opted into our electric utility's «Pure Power» wind power program (they pledge to buy 75 % of your power from wind farms in exchange for raising your rate a few cents per kilowatt hour), my personal «Carbon Footprint» comes out at less than 4 tons per year.