When you're traveling to Spain with kids, the packing list looks different from any trip you've taken before. You have the obvious things — snacks, entertainment for the flight, a change of clothes in the carry-on because something always spills. What I didn't think to add, until the trip that made me realize I needed it, was a phrasebook built specifically for family travel.
Not a general travel phrasebook. I had one of those
and it was fine for checking into a hotel or ordering at a restaurant when it
was just me. But traveling with children introduces an entirely different
category of situations, and most of them require very specific language that a
general phrasebook simply doesn't cover.













