A ROOKIE MOM’S guide TO LIVING WITH THOMAS & HIS TRAIN friends

When my child was a toddler, an outing to Barnes & Noble to visit the train table in the children’s section there could take up half our day. Thomas trains were an lovable obsession. There was no limit to the length of time he could spend connecting Thomas, Henry, and James, plus nine others whose names I never could quite remember. For numerous toddlers, trains are an obsessive phase, so we thought we’d round up some guidance for those who are living with ALL THE TRAINS.

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How to visit trains out in the wild

Go to a train museum. Seek out a place where your child can examine trains of all shapes and sizes.

Ride a real train. Whether you have easy access to Amtrak or to a commuter train line, holding a ticket and choosing a seat is a real thrill for train-loving tots. In the Bay Area, we have at least five parks with miniature steam train rides.

Know where your local train tables are. Is there a map or app with all the train tables? Heather claims she could plan a day’s worth of outings by hitting the public play tables at the haircut place, Barnes & Noble, and a few much more strategically placed about town.

Buy a ticket for Thomas. keep your eye on the Day Out With Thomas tour. An home entertainment company outfits real, running locomotives with a Thomas face and suit, so your family can literally ride on a train pulled by your favorite engine. Unless, of course, your favorite engine is Percy.

photo credit: Day Out With Thomas, produced by hit Entertainment

Managing all the moving parts of #thatthomaslife

Here’s what been-there-done-that mothers say about managing your train collection.

Pick one kind of train system and stick with it, says Jill from BabyRabies. Wooden tracks vs. Trackmaster with motorized trains is the decision you’re making. Do not second-guess.

Say “Yes” to hand-me-downs, says Heather from 510families who built her family’s collection the easy way — when her friend was moving out of the train phase. See much more money-saving suggestions below.

You don’t need a train table, says Melissa from little Lake County. While those bulky tables might be useful for storage, track-building ought to be able to take any shape and not be limited by the edge of the rectangular table.

Keep a list useful of all the trains and their names, says @ameliasprout. Here’s a Thomas character guide to bookmark.

The Thomas the tank Engine birthday party

For $30, a Thomas the Train play tent in my backyard or at the park would have thrilled my son’s pants off and you can keep it for all impromptu train cosplay in the future. Related: how to throw a cheap birthday party.

Thomas play tent from Amazon.com

One reader suggested that grandparents and giftgivers are a good way to build up the train world inside your home. because so numerous price points are available, from a single train to a incredible set of tracks with a wheelhouse, there’s something for everyone.

A easy cake can be achieved by drawing tracks with frosting and placing a wooden train on top. (I can see a meltdown brewing, though, can’t you?) Karen leveled up the Thomas birthday cake with landscaping and a tunnel!

Amazing train cake by Karen

Saving money on Thomas trains

Fisher price summer Day beach Set

Craig’s List: purchasing used trains and tracks is the cheapest way to grow your collection. Some people on Craig’s list are crazy and think their used toys are worth practically the retail price, but numerous are pleased to have their now-11-year old’s trains get out of the house. I see huge collections of trains and tracks for $300 and a tub of ten or fifteen trains for $3. It’s likely your train-lover will be thrilled by 10 new trains at once.
Pro tip: use the “save search” function on craig’s list to recieve emails when new postings come up with the search criteria you want.
Pro suggestion #2: purchase someone’s collection and use each train as a potty training reward.

Next Door: Join your local NextDoor.com board and search the classifieds there.

Close5: The Close5 app enables users to purchase and sell stuff from people in close proximity to them. I see a few Thomas branded items, including a train table, an ABC game, and a new-in-box figure 8 track set when I search near me.

Facebook: just ask your friends. “Hey, Owen is really into Thomas best now. If you’ve got trains that have fallen out of favor, we’d love to borrow them for a few months.” I gave everything train we owned to Karen.

Other money-saving suggestions we got from readers are:

Check the $1 bins at Target for knock-off trains

Use 40% off discount coupons at Michaels (just put the app on your phone, you’ll get the coupons)

Buy trains at IKEA (the tracks fit with other tracks, but not easily) for a child who is much more passionate about the engineering and not so attached to the Thomas personality

IKEA train set

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