Max Wolk only has four teeth so his mom, Melissa Hart, makes sure to take soft food for him on family trips.

But a much-anticipated trip to Canada’s Wonderland Saturday was a bitter disappointment when Hart was told by a security guard she couldn’t bring in his three-item lunch.

“It was a piece of bread with peanut butter, a baby yogurt and a package of baby food,” explains Hart in an interview Sunday, after blogging about the incident on her site napsandsprinkles.com.

“I kept saying, ‘but this is baby food’,” she says, adding that she looked for another person to whom she could plead her case.

“I expected it was one guard being overly strong. We assumed someone else would be more lenient,” says Hart, whose husband was also on the outing.

However, the response was also that she had too many items and that it was a lot of food for a baby to eat. Hart wonders how these total strangers know how much 15-month-old Max needs to eat.

“It’s kind of discrimination,” says the stay-at-home mother. “I was so taken aback.”

Dineen Beaven, spokesperson for the park, says that toddler and baby food is indeed allowed into the park as is sealed, plastic bottled water. The park is reviewing its policy with front gate staff so that there is no misunderstanding about the “no food or drink” rule.

Beaven also pointed out that people who wish to bring their own lunches are free to leave them in their vehicle and use the covered picnic area outside the park gates.

Now Hart is wondering how she will spend the summer after receiving a full refund for the family pass.

“I guess I’ll just go to the park.”