You have easy kids. Be grateful. |
+1 |
Did you read the first three words of the post? |
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You have one kid who is not even 1.5 yet and you are so uniquely impressed with yourself that you only take the adults' interests into account when you plan trips?
Okay then, here is your award! |
Same, we have picked trips based on their interests, which are genuinely cool things that are neat for us too. And the kinds of activities they would enjoy - being outside, short hikes, beach, etc. |
| You’re going it right (and, lots of others do the same as you, just maybe not your surprised friend). Get it in before the kids are old enough to form opinions, as others have said. 3 and 6 year old here, and they happily go where we choose, though I’m expecting that’ll eventually change. |
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We did mostly of beach/ Island trips till our son was in 5th grade, and which we all enjoyed. We also did a Disney Cruise to Alaska and also Disneyland while he was in elementary.
Then we started doing city vacations, sometimes adding a beach nearby our destination for couple of days. |
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I promise you no one you know is judging or even thinking about what trips you took with your kid as a toddler.
::yawn:: |
+1. Just learned that winter team Was missing traveling w a toddler lol |
| Winter break I meant |
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Are you asking, OP, if parents take toddlers to Disney for the toddler? No, not really. Parents that take kids who still need a stroller to Disney either have older kids, got talked into it by grandparents who want to go while They can still walk, really love Disney, or go because Disney is set up to make life easier for kids. The logistics can be helpful when they are preschool age. But most people do not go to Disney for a full week with a toddler.
When your kid is 3-4, you can go to Sesame Place or Dutch Wonderland for 1-2 days and hit up some of the tourist activities in Lancaster or Hershey. Try it for a 3 day weekend to get an idea of what your kid likes. My kids have never been to Disney because they hate lines, standing around when it’s hot, and most rides. I am glad we learned that on a 1 day trip to Legoland before spending $$$$ at Disney. |
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I agree no one is judging you op. Your friends may be surprised because some people prefer to stay close to home with toddlers, or not do long flights. It’s personal preference. But yeah, unfortunately you are the one sounding a little judgy so maybe that’s why you assume others are judging you? Things definitely are wayyy different when you have more than one kid and hit older years. We do not plan vacations to specific kid things, but we of course as do probably all parents of older kids who want to enjoy their vacation try to make sure it will be enjoyable for our kids. Some parts of the day we may do more adult focused things, some things may be focused on a specific kids interest.
It gets fun - my kid is really into medieval history right now so we are planning a trip to Europe that will hit on some cool things, some of it will be real medieval castles and then one is also an amusement park that does cool re-enactments. Sure it is for my kid in some ways, and also for me! I’ll get to go to France, see my kid learn and enjoy new things, make memories and have fun as a family. It’s a give and take - he’ll also go to some activities that aren’t his #1 that we want to do. |
Even still, I'm guessing you choose things that facilitate having a 3 and 6yr old. Are your vacations long days in museums or leisurely wine tastings followed by fancy restaurants? Maybe you've got kids who are in for that, or you find babysitters or nannies. Maybe I'm wrong, but my guess is the vacations you choose are things like skiing with a ski school for kids, or a cruise or resort with a kids club, or maybe a house on the beach where you can easily return for naptime. These aren't trips specifically for the kids, but they absolutely take into account the fact that you have kids and don't want them to be exhausted, whiny walking disasters. OP, your toddler doesn't have a preference as to Joshua Tree versus Disney versus a cruise, but you absolutely in some way, shape and form are accounting for your toddler's existence and schedule in a way that you didn't have to 17 months ago. |
We don't generally take trips specifically FOR the kids and kids alone (as in we haven't gone some place we actively disliked only for the kids). We do all enjoy Disney
I do try to make sure we have a mix of kid and adult activities. We went to Spain last year and spent some long days in museums. But made sure to make time for the kids to play at a playground and get ice cream. I also tend to pick museums that I know will have an exhibit my kids will enjoy (usually some huge art installation). We will go to a nice restaurant, but I make sure there is something my kids will eat. My kids are 8 and 12 and have always generally gone along with whatever we pick, but I try to make it fun! I think the kid is to just set expectations. I always tell someone that our vacations will have something for everyone and we need to respect that everyone likes different activities. Luckily my kids still like the same things lol. Fingers crossed that my 12 year old continues to be agreeable for a while. |
| We never took our toddlers anywhere, because kid-friendly or not, it would have been terrible. |