Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve done Disney and just skipped the parks. We stay at a Deluxe resort, where the pools are nicer and have slides, and poolside activities for the kids. DH and I park it on a chaise, order drinks and snacks, I read and watch the kids, DH sleeps, we trade. We spend the evenings in Disney Springs. We visit the water parks, play mini golf. Last time I even ran a pop-up fun run at the resort. The resort had child care so we did that and spent an evening at Epcot alone.
You know what, this is good advice. DH liked the park hotel just not the park. Limiting park time to one partial day, maybe just me and DD alone, could be the ticket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places we have been that went poorly: Portland/PacNW, Colorado, NYC.
What are you trying to do on your vacations, aka what do you consider fun? If the best vacation so far was Disney, sounds like your family might benefit more from a beach or other laidback vacation rather than a city-based one built on sightseeing and restaurants? Totally not knocking that, just trying to identify what worked at Disney and what didn't work in those locales. Maybe it was the resort element of Disney that appealed, even without the theme park, so pick a resort setting in a locale that you like.
Yeah before kids our vacations were either cities/museums or hiking. So we were, I guess, trying to keep that going. And now I guess it’s time to pivot to more of a resort type vacation, which isn’t something DH or I would pick otherwise. So I’m sort of at a loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places we have been that went poorly: Portland/PacNW, Colorado, NYC.
What are you trying to do on your vacations, aka what do you consider fun? If the best vacation so far was Disney, sounds like your family might benefit more from a beach or other laidback vacation rather than a city-based one built on sightseeing and restaurants? Totally not knocking that, just trying to identify what worked at Disney and what didn't work in those locales. Maybe it was the resort element of Disney that appealed, even without the theme park, so pick a resort setting in a locale that you like.
Yeah before kids our vacations were either cities/museums or hiking. So we were, I guess, trying to keep that going. And now I guess it’s time to pivot to more of a resort type vacation, which isn’t something DH or I would pick otherwise. So I’m sort of at a loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places we have been that went poorly: Portland/PacNW, Colorado, NYC.
What are you trying to do on your vacations, aka what do you consider fun? If the best vacation so far was Disney, sounds like your family might benefit more from a beach or other laidback vacation rather than a city-based one built on sightseeing and restaurants? Totally not knocking that, just trying to identify what worked at Disney and what didn't work in those locales. Maybe it was the resort element of Disney that appealed, even without the theme park, so pick a resort setting in a locale that you like.
Anonymous wrote:Places we have been that went poorly: Portland/PacNW, Colorado, NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last couple trips with my 7 yr old and rambunctious now 18 month old DS have been miserable with lots of whining about food choices, sleeping arrangements, etc. The best trip we have had TBH was Disney but DH doesn’t really want to go back. At this point I want to bag the entire concept of family vacations. Any advice?
You have two very different ages to accommodate and traveling with a child in the 9mo-2 year old time frame is going to be dicey no matter what. I agree a resort type vacation, preferably where you also have an in-suite kitchen to serve up kid food, is probably your best bet. However, keep expectations low for now.
Agree with the bold above. We are pretty regular travelers with both of our kids, but we basically chained ourselves to our house for ages 12-24 months. We just white knuckled through it and both kids ended up able to travel again when it was over. It's a really, really hard age for travel.
We had one okay trip when my oldest was 14 months to an all-inclusive in Cancun. It was definitely not relaxing, but we spent almost the entire time in the pool and had a bit of fun. My parents paid, but I don't think it would have been worth the costs if we had to pay for it ourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last couple trips with my 7 yr old and rambunctious now 18 month old DS have been miserable with lots of whining about food choices, sleeping arrangements, etc. The best trip we have had TBH was Disney but DH doesn’t really want to go back. At this point I want to bag the entire concept of family vacations. Any advice?
You have two very different ages to accommodate and traveling with a child in the 9mo-2 year old time frame is going to be dicey no matter what. I agree a resort type vacation, preferably where you also have an in-suite kitchen to serve up kid food, is probably your best bet. However, keep expectations low for now.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places we have been that went poorly: Portland/PacNW, Colorado, NYC.
Ha! We had a semi-disastrous trip to Portland as well! Beautiful city/area, but timing was bad when kids were 1 and 4, and they were just not in a good place that time.
Anonymous wrote:The last couple trips with my 7 yr old and rambunctious now 18 month old DS have been miserable with lots of whining about food choices, sleeping arrangements, etc. The best trip we have had TBH was Disney but DH doesn’t really want to go back. At this point I want to bag the entire concept of family vacations. Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:Places we have been that went poorly: Portland/PacNW, Colorado, NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a bigger splurge / trip, what about the Disney resort in Hawaii? I think it's all the amenities / support / kid friendliness of Disney but with beaches and pools instead of a Disney park. And you can easily do road trips around the island while you're there. My sister (single mom) took her 6 yo son there last year and had an incredible time.
There is no way I’m getting on a plane for that many hours with my 18 month old.
LOL fair. Maybe next year? I think by around 2 or so my kids could watch TV for an hour at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a bigger splurge / trip, what about the Disney resort in Hawaii? I think it's all the amenities / support / kid friendliness of Disney but with beaches and pools instead of a Disney park. And you can easily do road trips around the island while you're there. My sister (single mom) took her 6 yo son there last year and had an incredible time.
There is no way I’m getting on a plane for that many hours with my 18 month old.
LOL fair. Maybe next year? I think by around 2 or so my kids could watch TV for an hour at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a bigger splurge / trip, what about the Disney resort in Hawaii? I think it's all the amenities / support / kid friendliness of Disney but with beaches and pools instead of a Disney park. And you can easily do road trips around the island while you're there. My sister (single mom) took her 6 yo son there last year and had an incredible time.
There is no way I’m getting on a plane for that many hours with my 18 month old.