Anonymous wrote:I want to travel with my kid more than we can, but we do take trips: camping, long weekends in other cities, farm stays, train trips. We don't ski or go to Europe but we do cool things.
We also try to travel with grandparents or meet them somewhere fun. I know that's not possible for everyone but two birds / one stone.
Anonymous wrote:My kids much prefer to visit grandparents over break than to go on any fancy vacation thatcweve done in the past
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, that sounds utterly exhausting. I can afford all this but I get tired of so much travel.
Same here. Money not an issue but won't travel just to impress someone else.
We travel a lot. I don’t travel to impress others. I love to travel.
Me too!
Me three! It is not exhausting if you can afford to pay for convenience - direct flights from preferred airports at times that are not disruptive to family (no super early mornings or red eyes), Clear and precheck, closest parking lot at airport or uber, nice hotels/resorts with amenities in central location, etc.
If not in your budget, check out to points and miles game - plenty of tutorials online.
Many of the best places to visit require connecting flights and/or red eye flights.
Sure, but those can wait until summer. If you want a 1 week spring or winter break that is relaxing you choose a nonstop destination in the US or Caribbean to minimize time change. For Europe, I'd personally only do nonstop during those flights. There's a daytime flight to London that is priceless.
Anonymous wrote:Meh, traveling with kids is a lot of hassle:
Norovirus
Bed bugs
Germs everywhere
Flight delays
Taxi/shuttle problems (unsafe, price gouging, uncomfortable)
Rudeness/extortion from locals
Exploitive tourism where locals often appear to be treated unfairly
Trapped on planes on runways
Lost luggage/valuables
Pickpockets
Sleep schedules ruined
Food quality bad and or unhealthy
Foreign hospitals with lower standards
Foreign police/governments which are dysfunctional and/or corrupt
All of these things are of course 10x worse with kids. I think it’s also somewhat selfish to travel a lot with younger kids who thrive on the stability and safety of home and really benefit from more time bonding with their local friends. Teens are a different story but traveling with them is a whole other nightmare.
I travelled throughout my twenties and early thirties to central, South America, Europe and the Middle East. I love it but am realistic about the toll it takes. I think car travel trips are better for families and kids especially if you are staying with family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, that sounds utterly exhausting. I can afford all this but I get tired of so much travel.
Same here. Money not an issue but won't travel just to impress someone else.
We travel a lot. I don’t travel to impress others. I love to travel.
Me too!
Me three! It is not exhausting if you can afford to pay for convenience - direct flights from preferred airports at times that are not disruptive to family (no super early mornings or red eyes), Clear and precheck, closest parking lot at airport or uber, nice hotels/resorts with amenities in central location, etc.
If not in your budget, check out to points and miles game - plenty of tutorials online.
Many of the best places to visit require connecting flights and/or red eye flights.
Sure, but those can wait until summer. If you want a 1 week spring or winter break that is relaxing you choose a nonstop destination in the US or Caribbean to minimize time change. For Europe, I'd personally only do nonstop during those flights. There's a daytime flight to London that is priceless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, that sounds utterly exhausting. I can afford all this but I get tired of so much travel.
Same here. Money not an issue but won't travel just to impress someone else.
We travel a lot. I don’t travel to impress others. I love to travel.
Me too!
Me three! It is not exhausting if you can afford to pay for convenience - direct flights from preferred airports at times that are not disruptive to family (no super early mornings or red eyes), Clear and precheck, closest parking lot at airport or uber, nice hotels/resorts with amenities in central location, etc.
If not in your budget, check out to points and miles game - plenty of tutorials online.
Many of the best places to visit require connecting flights and/or red eye flights.