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You are overthinking this.
America is neither better or worse than other countries. It is not a contest. Your kids cannot learn about other cultures by only visiting the country of their birth. It is a gift to introduce them to international travel as children. It will change their perspectives (for the better), and give them more confidence/desire to travel as adults. Not to mention, parents deserve vacations too. If this appeals to you more, by all means go for it. You deserve a break you are excited about. |
What? Talk about gross generalizations. |
Maybe the problem was your parenting. Traveled all over the U.S. and parts of Europe during the toddler stage. Not everyone went out of their way to joyfully welcome us, but we weren’t surrounded by haters either. |
| No |
We also found Europe surprisingly kid friendly. |
How could you manage that? Is traveling to parks your full time job? If so, I'm jealous. |
| Go where you want to go. Bring kid. Our travel philosophy in a nutshell. We're not bring our 4 year old to Michelin prix fix meals, but we also don't shy away from going to real restaurants, either. |
I am confused how you agree that kids should see the US before going abroad, and also think that kids should go to South American as toddlers, and to see our National Parks in Middle School. I'm also an American who doesn't hate children though, so perhaps we are living in different realities. |
| We try to do one big trip and one long weekend trip every year. The long weekends are to US cities. We have done San Diego, New Orleans, New York, San Antonio, etc. We try to mix it up. This year we will head to Chicago for Memorial Day. Our big trips have been Europe for a couple of years, but before that it was Disney/Universal, Pacific Northwest/Canada, etc. This year we are planning a National Park trip around Arizona, Utah, and Nevada. The big trips are sort of planned- we have an idea of different places we want to go, either because we have never been or because we want to show the kids. The reality is that we will not get to all the places we want to go, and certainly not while the kids are young. We hope we are exposing them to a variety of places and instilling in them a love of travel/appreciation for new places/cultures/experiences. |
| We did a lot of the US National Parks (including Denali in Alaska) when the kids were in elementary and middle school. We've been doing Europe, South East Asia, Mexico, Canada, Costa Rica now that the kids are older. We haven't done the Pacific NW, and will try to do that this summer. |
| For me, it's an easy/cheaper way to show the kids how to travel. If you can't spend 2 hours at the National Gallery of Art is there any point is going to the Louve? |
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Have young adults now, but we have only done Europe (family there so had to visit often and took side trips all over) and US/Canada. I personally much preferred US nature trips especially out west. I don't think anything really beats camping in the desert and the landscapes in AZ, NM and Utah. Also loved Colorado, Wyoming and Montana.
At the time kids preferred Europe/CA/NYC and city trips because they seemed faster-paced and "cooler", but they now look back on the camping and nature trips and really appreciate them and the memories. |
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Both. I love the culture shock aspect on travelling to other countries, that you just can't get here. And sometimes it is cheaper to go overseas, so that helps.
My 11 year old has probably been on more "big" trips (like 1 week or more) to other countries, but has also been to TX, HI, NY, CA, and of course VA, MD. But if we have the choice of a vacation in CA or Portugal, Portugal wins because lodging is cheaper, its easier to skip the rental car, food is cheaper, etc. |
| We focused on US before Europe because we felt like kids would better appreciate the big museums (like Hermitage) when they were in high school, same with historic homes. US National Parks were very exciting to them when they were elementary and middle school and liked being outdoors more. |
Do you live in DC? DC is really bad with kids. Most of the restaurants don't even have high chairs. Adults will openly stare at crying children anywhere. My kids are really well behaved too and like to eat in restaurants. |