Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mostly we visited family. Otherwise, we liked to rent the rustic cabins that the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club rents. They are really cheap and in beautiful spots and a step up from camping.
Omg, we just vacationed at one of the cabins there! đ
We stayed in the Catoctin Hollow Lodge and it was beautiful... we loved it.
There's a cabin for everyone's taste preference -- from primitive & rustic, to modern and luxury.
There are cabins to suit every different taste & need.
For those interested, you can see all of the cabins at the below link (the Catoctin Hollow Lodge that we rented is listed under Maryland).
https://www.patc.net/PATC/Cabins/Geo_Cabin_List.aspx
Anonymous wrote:Mostly we visited family. Otherwise, we liked to rent the rustic cabins that the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club rents. They are really cheap and in beautiful spots and a step up from camping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Camping, closest beaches, theme parks (smaller ones like Six Flags, Hershey and Lake Compounce, not Disney)
There are TONS of LMC families at Disney. Not sure how. Iâm guessing they save for years as a dream vacation.
Lots of people who live in Florida or Georgia buy yearly passes and only go to Disney for vacation and stay in cheap hotels. Source: used to live in Georgia.
When we were stationed in Germany with the military our military neighbors took all their vacations at euro Disney. Saw nothing else in Europe. Strange.
Enlisted?
Nope. Fairly senior level officers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think how much and where you go is a combination of your values and your income; many LMC and MC families I know may have unusually nice cars or tvs but don't travel. Not everyone cares to and I certainly don't begrudge them their choices. My DH grew up more middle class than me and barely ever traveled beyond his own state until he was in high school and started traveling b/c of his extracurriculars.
This is kind of us. We're in the middle income wise. While we don't do extravagant travel, it's still pretty nice. The tradeoff is our cars. They're functional, but we drive them into the ground and don't make having a nice car a priority.
A lot of people didnât grow up traveling and as adults they have the means but literally donât know how. Or they know how to get themselves to a beach and sit on it one week a year. But they donât know how to plan for a trip to a city or country theyâve never been to. The notion of going somewhere theyâve never been, walking around, becoming part of the local culture temporarily, seeing the interesting unique things every area has to offer never crosses their mind because they never have done it. I am so grateful my dad prioritized that for us growing up. My family takes the coolest trips because I know how to travel. Friends of mine with more money just take cruises or go to OBX despite having the means for way better travel. But itâs a skill they donât have.
I think itâs more of a generational thing as well. I didnât grow up going be to lots of places but can plan a trip pretty well. Because youâŚthe internet. Itâs not a complicated skill like you make it sound.
Of course it doesnât seem complicated if you know how to do it and donât find it intimidating. I am not making this up. There are people I know who DO NOT feel comfortable going a place they have never been and just winging it themselves. So they donât. They know how to vacation. They do not know how to travel.
Please, just because they have no desire to go to London doesnât mean they donât know how or that there is much skill involved. Effort yes, skill no. Some people prefer familiar things and there is nothing wrong with that, nor is there anything inherently virtuous about âcoolâ or international travel vs OBX.
I think you missed ppâs point. Obviously there are lots of people who are well traveled internationally but would prefer to sit at their beach house in MD. Nothing wrong with that at all. Doesnât change the fact that planning an international trip is intimidating for those who never traveled farther than the smoky mountains.
Exactly. We are talking about two different groups of people. Yes some people can and know how to travel and donât by choice. Some people LITERALLY DONT KNOW because theyâve never done it. I have no idea why people are pretending the first group existing means the second doesnât.
Yup. This is my DH's family to some extent. They talk about wanting to travel but simply don't know how. I have planned and gone on some trips with them and it's hard. Even stuff like "how will I get to and from the airport", they need help with. They worry a lot about money when they travel, even though they have plenty of money for the kinds of trips we take, simply because they are very nervous about the unknown. I think they are also very ripe for getting taken advantage of because of how inexperienced they are -- I think about the grifters who prey on travelers in a lot of popular tourist destinations and how some of my ILs might not understand the grift at all.
My DH is not this naive, but before we met, most of his travel was arranged by other people. He'd been on great trips organized by friends and classmates where his job was to show up on time and book his own air travel, which he can handle. Even now, I definitely do most of the planning because I'm just better at it, though I definitely encourage him to do a lot more of it simply so he understands how it works a bit more. We are absolutely showing our kid how to travel, and that it doesn't have to be expensive or fancy, so that she has more options as an adult.
I just don't know anyone like this, despite growing up poor/LMC. When and if they do decide to do new travel that they have never done before, they book trips and figure out transportation to and from the airports in Disney and Pigeon Forge. I personally have never met an individual who desires a different type of travel but are unable to execute it due to "they LITERALLY DON'T KNOW how to plan for a trip to a city or country theyâve never been to".
Oh well Iâd you never met them they must not exist. My husband when we met was able to plan about two types of trips: Disney and a cruise. Why? Thatâs all heâd ever done. His parents had money when he was growing up but they grew up poor and didnât know how to travel or plan trips. All they ever did was a cruise and big family trips to Disney. Thatâs what he knew. The first time he went to New York City he ate in Times Square the whole time because chains were familiar (which is another quirk of people who donât travel much - even when they do, they stick to restaurants they know and can eat at anywhere). Heâs more adventurous now but when it comes to scoping a place out, planning the best itinerary, finding all the various modes of travel (do we fly in here, then overnight train to here or there to fly out?) he still leaves that up to me. The first time I just suggested a city to go to and explore for a trip he was like âwhy?â I have no clue why some of you insist that EVERYONE just intuitively knows how to travel and can do it and are so irate when others mention no, a lot of people out there never did it growing up and donât know how as adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Millions of possibilities. Sounds like youâre fixated on what you donât have.
I feel like people who say this usually have plenty or at least enough. Itâs like saying money doesnât buy happiness while living in a McMansion and being well offâŚ
I disagree. We are firmly middle class (HHI last year was 121k) and I definitely don't feel restricted to Ocean City and staying in Econolodges. We don't eat at 5 star restaurants or stay in $300/night hotels, either, but we do lots of things. In the last few years, we've done:
NYC (stayed in AirBnB, hung out with friends, did some Central Park, the Highline, the Met, and the ferry)
Nashville (AirBnB, saw live music at the honkeytonks during the day, visited the big gardens outside of town, hit up western and consignment stores, ate amazing food)
Outer Banks, twice (group house rentals with friends)
Montreal (crazy affordable, including cheap short flights)
New Mexico (ABQ, Santa Fe, hiking in the mountains, great food)
Charleston (weirdly the least kid-friendly of the places we've been recently, but we did like the beach and Fort Sumter)
Florida multiple times, typical Florida stuff but not Disney because kids are still a bit young to enjoy it
New Orleans (more live music, lots of walking around, eating crawfish and jambalaya, etc.)
Just wanted to say that I love this!
Plus weekends in Richmond, Baltimore, Philadelphia, as well as visits to family. None of this stuff is that expensive if you know how to scout cheap flights, go outside of peak times of year, and don't get sucked in for pricy tours or do lots of shopping. We like sightseeing, walking/hiking, seeing gardens and museums, and so our kids have grown up doing and enjoying those things to. None of them are pricy. Some of our favorite family memories are things like having a picnic on Mont Real or eating beignets in the park in NoLa. My DD still talks about sitting on the beach with me early in the morning and letting the tide roll up and slowly bury us in the wet sand as we sang songs in the Outer Banks.
Planning vacations on a budget is not even a particularly unique skill and I am super grateful to live in a place so convenient to so many neat, affordable places. I grew up in a remote town out west with no local airport and all our vacations involved like 12 hours of driving each way. Meanwhile, we can save money and do a trip to London with our family for under 5k, and be there in less time than it used to take my family to drive to the nearest major city. Everything is relative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Camping, closest beaches, theme parks (smaller ones like Six Flags, Hershey and Lake Compounce, not Disney)
There are TONS of LMC families at Disney. Not sure how. Iâm guessing they save for years as a dream vacation.
The LMC at Disney are almost all from Florida or driving distance. They don't pay for air or hotel and they pay instate rates and/or get a pass.
I would guess, on average, out of state visitors have at least twice hte income of the typical instate visitor.
This, the "locals' at Disney are totally different from the non locals.
Yeah, I agree with this. My brother is a gay doctor from NYC and he does fancy gay Disney and it's a world away from the way locals do disney lol.
I want to hear more about fancy gay Disney!
There are gay days. He likes to do princess brunches. The princesses LOVE dealing with the gays after dealing with families all the time lol.
Anonymous wrote:When I was a kid, Deep Creek Lake, Myrtle Beach, Ocean City.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think how much and where you go is a combination of your values and your income; many LMC and MC families I know may have unusually nice cars or tvs but don't travel. Not everyone cares to and I certainly don't begrudge them their choices. My DH grew up more middle class than me and barely ever traveled beyond his own state until he was in high school and started traveling b/c of his extracurriculars.
This is kind of us. We're in the middle income wise. While we don't do extravagant travel, it's still pretty nice. The tradeoff is our cars. They're functional, but we drive them into the ground and don't make having a nice car a priority.
A lot of people didnât grow up traveling and as adults they have the means but literally donât know how. Or they know how to get themselves to a beach and sit on it one week a year. But they donât know how to plan for a trip to a city or country theyâve never been to. The notion of going somewhere theyâve never been, walking around, becoming part of the local culture temporarily, seeing the interesting unique things every area has to offer never crosses their mind because they never have done it. I am so grateful my dad prioritized that for us growing up. My family takes the coolest trips because I know how to travel. Friends of mine with more money just take cruises or go to OBX despite having the means for way better travel. But itâs a skill they donât have.
I think itâs more of a generational thing as well. I didnât grow up going be to lots of places but can plan a trip pretty well. Because youâŚthe internet. Itâs not a complicated skill like you make it sound.
Of course it doesnât seem complicated if you know how to do it and donât find it intimidating. I am not making this up. There are people I know who DO NOT feel comfortable going a place they have never been and just winging it themselves. So they donât. They know how to vacation. They do not know how to travel.
Please, just because they have no desire to go to London doesnât mean they donât know how or that there is much skill involved. Effort yes, skill no. Some people prefer familiar things and there is nothing wrong with that, nor is there anything inherently virtuous about âcoolâ or international travel vs OBX.
I think you missed ppâs point. Obviously there are lots of people who are well traveled internationally but would prefer to sit at their beach house in MD. Nothing wrong with that at all. Doesnât change the fact that planning an international trip is intimidating for those who never traveled farther than the smoky mountains.
Exactly. We are talking about two different groups of people. Yes some people can and know how to travel and donât by choice. Some people LITERALLY DONT KNOW because theyâve never done it. I have no idea why people are pretending the first group existing means the second doesnât.
Yup. This is my DH's family to some extent. They talk about wanting to travel but simply don't know how. I have planned and gone on some trips with them and it's hard. Even stuff like "how will I get to and from the airport", they need help with. They worry a lot about money when they travel, even though they have plenty of money for the kinds of trips we take, simply because they are very nervous about the unknown. I think they are also very ripe for getting taken advantage of because of how inexperienced they are -- I think about the grifters who prey on travelers in a lot of popular tourist destinations and how some of my ILs might not understand the grift at all.
My DH is not this naive, but before we met, most of his travel was arranged by other people. He'd been on great trips organized by friends and classmates where his job was to show up on time and book his own air travel, which he can handle. Even now, I definitely do most of the planning because I'm just better at it, though I definitely encourage him to do a lot more of it simply so he understands how it works a bit more. We are absolutely showing our kid how to travel, and that it doesn't have to be expensive or fancy, so that she has more options as an adult.
I just don't know anyone like this, despite growing up poor/LMC. When and if they do decide to do new travel that they have never done before, they book trips and figure out transportation to and from the airports in Disney and Pigeon Forge. I personally have never met an individual who desires a different type of travel but are unable to execute it due to "they LITERALLY DON'T KNOW how to plan for a trip to a city or country theyâve never been to".