Anonymous wrote:For those of us willing to fly- where do you all suggest to find a magical Christmas experience
Anonymous wrote:For those of us willing to fly- where do you all suggest to find a magical Christmas experience
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have no family to celebrate with this Christmas so I want to take the kids somewhere very over the top, like Hallmark channel Christmas worthy. Can you recommend anywhere within 4 to 5 hour drive?
Does this mean you want a small town that is decorated to the hilt and do Christmasy/winter things like:
Go sledding
Decorate cookies
Cut down a tree
Make Christmas ornaments and decorate the tree
Go caroling
Drink hot spice cider
Find a future spouse, preferably an old beau
Wrap homemade presents
Go to a tree lighting ceremony in the town square
Make a gingerbread house
Play board games
Go Ice skating
Have some hot chocolate
Shop at a Christmas market
What am I missing?
LOL
Depending on age of kids, you can add:
Find a new dad for your adorable son, who will promptly fall in love with "New Dad" who calls him "Sport"
Have some tension with your tween daughter who does not want "New Dad" but then will come around when New Dad proposes to mom on Christmas Eve and she sees the magic of their relationship (doesn't hurt that New Dad is taking all of them AND her 3 best girlfriends to Hawaii for a "FamilyMoon"
You forgot to mention Old Dad died young and mom is a widow who had no interest in meeting someone new. When she moved to a rural old farmhouse to start her goat cheese farm, she has NO idea it would be so tough. And then the goats got sick! Luckily the new young vet in town does house calls. He didn’t even mind when she accidentally stuck her foot in the milk bucket and fell into his arms accidentally
Anonymous wrote:New York. See the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, Nutcracker, stay in a great hotel ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A close suggestion would be the Canaan Valley in WV though you might have a hard time finding a rental at this point. We went last year with kids 2 & 5 and it was wonderful!
Tons to do:
Timberline Ski resort
Canaan Valley Ski Resort: downhill skiing/tubing/snowboarding/some cross country skiing/snowshoeing/hiking
White Grass (cross country skiing, very fun, snow pile area for kids to hang when needing a break, local beer outside, fire pits, lots of friendly local people.
Blackwater Falls State park: amazing sled run (our favorite part!!!), can rent xc skis or snowshoes, snow hiking.
That's about 2.5-3 hours from DC.
Beyond that....Williamsburg is delightful, NYC is super busy but lovely, Lake placid may be a little too far with your range but is supposed to be one of the best spots for a snowy, christmas, hallmark-like trip. Personally, we are traveling to Quebec City by car and it's like Christmas heaven lol so we are pumped but you would want to go for prolly a week if driving as it is quite far.
I was in West VA last month and NO ONE (including employees in our hotel) had masks on. Not one guest at the breakfast buffet had a mask on. Same with those in elevators. And the hotel staff informed us that they were not vaccinated. I am not sure if this matters to you but it made us on edge.
Anonymous wrote:New York. See the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, Nutcracker, stay in a great hotel ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have no family to celebrate with this Christmas so I want to take the kids somewhere very over the top, like Hallmark channel Christmas worthy. Can you recommend anywhere within 4 to 5 hour drive?
Does this mean you want a small town that is decorated to the hilt and do Christmasy/winter things like:
Go sledding
Decorate cookies
Cut down a tree
Make Christmas ornaments and decorate the tree
Go caroling
Drink hot spice cider
Find a future spouse, preferably an old beau
Wrap homemade presents
Go to a tree lighting ceremony in the town square
Make a gingerbread house
Play board games
Go Ice skating
Have some hot chocolate
Shop at a Christmas market
What am I missing?
LOL
Depending on age of kids, you can add:
Find a new dad for your adorable son, who will promptly fall in love with "New Dad" who calls him "Sport"
Have some tension with your tween daughter who does not want "New Dad" but then will come around when New Dad proposes to mom on Christmas Eve and she sees the magic of their relationship (doesn't hurt that New Dad is taking all of them AND her 3 best girlfriends to Hawaii for a "FamilyMoon"
Anonymous wrote:For those of us willing to fly- where do you all suggest to find a magical Christmas experience
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New York. See the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, Nutcracker, stay in a great hotel ...
This is fun for kids (depending upon their age). Will you need to prove vaccination though. Are tickets still available?
Plus, they can walk alot, which makes them tired/sleepy at night.
If I were you, I would do this, and take the train.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have no family to celebrate with this Christmas so I want to take the kids somewhere very over the top, like Hallmark channel Christmas worthy. Can you recommend anywhere within 4 to 5 hour drive?
Does this mean you want a small town that is decorated to the hilt and do Christmasy/winter things like:
Go sledding
Decorate cookies
Cut down a tree
Make Christmas ornaments and decorate the tree
Go caroling
Drink hot spice cider
Find a future spouse, preferably an old beau
Wrap homemade presents
Go to a tree lighting ceremony in the town square
Make a gingerbread house
Play board games
Go Ice skating
Have some hot chocolate
Shop at a Christmas market
What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:A close suggestion would be the Canaan Valley in WV though you might have a hard time finding a rental at this point. We went last year with kids 2 & 5 and it was wonderful!
Tons to do:
Timberline Ski resort
Canaan Valley Ski Resort: downhill skiing/tubing/snowboarding/some cross country skiing/snowshoeing/hiking
White Grass (cross country skiing, very fun, snow pile area for kids to hang when needing a break, local beer outside, fire pits, lots of friendly local people.
Blackwater Falls State park: amazing sled run (our favorite part!!!), can rent xc skis or snowshoes, snow hiking.
That's about 2.5-3 hours from DC.
Beyond that....Williamsburg is delightful, NYC is super busy but lovely, Lake placid may be a little too far with your range but is supposed to be one of the best spots for a snowy, christmas, hallmark-like trip. Personally, we are traveling to Quebec City by car and it's like Christmas heaven lol so we are pumped but you would want to go for prolly a week if driving as it is quite far.