Mom explains why Norway’s family trains are great for parents

       Clancy said the train has “a family compartment with room for baby strollers and an enclosed two-level padded play area at the front of the compartment.”
        Traveling by train can often be a chore for families, especially with children, when they get impatient and keep asking when the train will arrive at their destination, or when the kids want to run around when there isn’t enough space. However, this was not the same experience that the family experienced while traveling by train in Norway. Initially, the family planned to go to Bergen, the second largest city in Norway. “To get there from Oslo, you have to take the most beautiful train in Europe. It will take seven hours to cross some of the most impressive scenery in the world: glaciers, fjords, mountains and waterfalls. The only catch is we need our 8-, 4- and 2-year-olds to spend most of the day playing on the train,” mother, Kelly Clancy, wrote in an insider post.
        The best thing about the Vy train is that it has a playground. The kids were already excited about the trip to Norway, “but the train ride sealed the deal,” says Clancy. “Even before we left New York, my girls were telling everyone who would listen to the Fairground Train.” Clancy shared that the train has a “family compartment with space for a stroller and an enclosed two-story padded play area at the front of the compartment.” I don’t want to be with children. Climb inside and you can watch them from your seat. There are old books inside, our trains have programs in Norwegian, Russian and English, as well as a TV that constantly shows Peppa Pig,” Clancy added.
        Her children should do what they want. “The son quickly went up to the second floor and curled up in the reading nook, and the girls made friends with children from Germany and Taiwan. They climbed a ladder through small tunnels and descended a ladder at the back of the car,” Clancy said. .
        Meanwhile, Clancy and her husband were able to spend some quality time together. “Traveling this way is a pleasure in part because my husband and I can enjoy stunning scenery while sipping coffee without having to hear “Are we there yet?” every five minutes,” Clancy wrote. Clancy explained that the train is designed so that children can enjoy “developmentally appropriate areas where they can claim, play and make friends.”
        She shared that with a family car, they don’t have to worry about their kids getting in the way of other passengers. Clancy also shared an example of “a late sleeping Norwegian baby going through an emotional breakdown and her parents getting sympathetic nods and smiles from all the other families in the car.”
        Apparently, the train also has a coffee car that sells baby food and warms bottles and baby food. “The delightful waiter won the hearts of my kids with little courtesies, including offering them free Brunoster, a brown cheese that tastes a bit like caramel. They consider it an acquired taste, but they love to sit in the car and watch the mountains go to the playground,” Clancy said.
        Clancy called the remainder of the trip “unforgettable, from the fjord cruise to the hilltop hidden troll playground to every ice cream shop in Bergen.” At home they eagerly checked out our subway but were disappointed that the D train here in Brooklyn still doesn’t have a playground,” Clancy wrote.
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Post time: Mar-25-2023