Anonymous wrote:Wow-I am pretty shocked at how many here do little if anything! When my kids have been invited to a vacation we absolutely give them money to bring the host family out to dinner. If it is to their vacation home my kid would arrive with a gift (either a food gift or something fun for the week or candle/frame), the offer for bringing family out for a meal (or cook a meal at the house.) In addition to verbally thanking them and being a great guest, a hand written card would also be sent. And I have to say that this is pretty much what kids did for us when we hosted them - and most often we get letters from the kids and the parent. While we would decline letting them treat us for a full meal, we'd let them get ice cream or cook pancaked (though we'd buy ingredients.)
If we had guests who took our generosity so much for granted that they didn't thank us with a letter or email and just did a verbal thanks - they would probably not be invited back with any pleasure on our part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good god, no! I've never expected nor ever received a gift for taking a kid on an outing/trip with us. I expect a verbal 'thank you' from the kid but that's it - and have always gotten one.
+1 We've received verbal thanks and that seemed more than appropriate. I would be, I don't know what the right word/emotion is, upset? embarrassed?, if we received a hostess gift. These are kids. When our kids have gone with someone else's family then usually we have the kid make something, like cookies, that we send on a later date.
The last time we did it we spent thousands of dollars on the extra kids - literally. I would think something more than a verbal thanks is appreciate (written note, plant, flowers, gift card, meal, etc)
Anonymous wrote:Wow-I am pretty shocked at how many here do little if anything! When my kids have been invited to a vacation we absolutely give them money to bring the host family out to dinner. If it is to their vacation home my kid would arrive with a gift (either a food gift or something fun for the week or candle/frame), the offer for bringing family out for a meal (or cook a meal at the house.) In addition to verbally thanking them and being a great guest, a hand written card would also be sent. And I have to say that this is pretty much what kids did for us when we hosted them - and most often we get letters from the kids and the parent. While we would decline letting them treat us for a full meal, we'd let them get ice cream or cook pancaked (though we'd buy ingredients.)
If we had guests who took our generosity so much for granted that they didn't thank us with a letter or email and just did a verbal thanks - they would probably not be invited back with any pleasure on our part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good god, no! I've never expected nor ever received a gift for taking a kid on an outing/trip with us. I expect a verbal 'thank you' from the kid but that's it - and have always gotten one.
+1 We've received verbal thanks and that seemed more than appropriate. I would be, I don't know what the right word/emotion is, upset? embarrassed?, if we received a hostess gift. These are kids. When our kids have gone with someone else's family then usually we have the kid make something, like cookies, that we send on a later date.
The last time we did it we spent thousands of dollars on the extra kids - literally. I would think something more than a verbal thanks is appreciate (written note, plant, flowers, gift card, meal, etc)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good god, no! I've never expected nor ever received a gift for taking a kid on an outing/trip with us. I expect a verbal 'thank you' from the kid but that's it - and have always gotten one.
+1 We've received verbal thanks and that seemed more than appropriate. I would be, I don't know what the right word/emotion is, upset? embarrassed?, if we received a hostess gift. These are kids. When our kids have gone with someone else's family then usually we have the kid make something, like cookies, that we send on a later date.
Anonymous wrote:Good god, no! I've never expected nor ever received a gift for taking a kid on an outing/trip with us. I expect a verbal 'thank you' from the kid but that's it - and have always gotten one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine not giving a gift and a thank you card. That's how I was raised and how I am raising my own kids.
That's fine. Just know that because it's your family practice doesn't make it universal or a norm. Lots of people don't do this and wouldn't think of doing this though they very much appreciate you taking their child on a trip and think highly of you and your family for including their child.
Lots of kids don't write thank you notes for birthday gifts, lots of parents don't bother to respond to Evites. Manners are a lost art.
But thank you notes and rsvps are KNOWN things. They are maybe lost arts but only because everyone knew they were supposed to do them. This hostess gift thing is not clearly known by everyone. My mom was Ms. Manners and I'd never heard of this. We always brought wine when invited over to dinner and always sent thank you notes for gifts but nothing but verbal thank yous when a friend took me on a family trip. Seems like a nice thing to do and nothing wrong with doing it, but it's not a known thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine not giving a gift and a thank you card. That's how I was raised and how I am raising my own kids.
That's fine. Just know that because it's your family practice doesn't make it universal or a norm. Lots of people don't do this and wouldn't think of doing this though they very much appreciate you taking their child on a trip and think highly of you and your family for including their child.
Lots of kids don't write thank you notes for birthday gifts, lots of parents don't bother to respond to Evites. Manners are a lost art.
Anonymous wrote:Like the previous poster, I think...
Send kid with spending money
Many, many thanks, preferably written
Genuine offers to reciprocate in some way, even much smaller (dinner out, sleepover)