Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok everyone take a chill pill
Go to London
Thames cruise
Shopping on Bond St or Mayfair or Kensington or Covent Garden
Train to Windsor don’t have to go inside the castle to appreciate it
Afternoon tea in Windsor
Or train out to Bicester Outlets near Oxford
Dinner in Oxford
London Eye
Shopping at Harrods
Eat at Harrods food halls
Train to Paris
Do two nights in Paris
Do a cooking class
Seine dinner
Shopping in Paris
Fly home open jaw
Anonymous wrote:Ok everyone take a chill pill
Go to London
Thames cruise
Shopping on Bond St or Mayfair or Kensington or Covent Garden
Train to Windsor don’t have to go inside the castle to appreciate it
Afternoon tea in Windsor
Or train out to Bicester Outlets near Oxford
Dinner in Oxford
London Eye
Shopping at Harrods
Eat at Harrods food halls
Train to Paris
Do two nights in Paris
Do a cooking class
Seine dinner
Shopping in Paris
Fly home open jaw
Anonymous wrote:We would like to leave the day after Christmas for a weeklong trip to Europe. Hoping someone could help me with an itinerary. She loves fashion, shopping, not into the museums or the historic stuff. She has a condition on her legs where she has to keep her lower half completely covered so don’t want to go anywhere too warm.
Anonymous wrote:Can people please recommend hotels they like in both London and Paris?
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok everyone take a chill pill
Go to London
Thames cruise
Shopping on Bond St or Mayfair or Kensington or Covent Garden
Train to Windsor don’t have to go inside the castle to appreciate it
Afternoon tea in Windsor
Or train out to Bicester Outlets near Oxford
Dinner in Oxford
London Eye
Shopping at Harrods
Eat at Harrods food halls
Train to Paris
Do two nights in Paris
Do a cooking class
Seine dinner
Shopping in Paris
Fly home open jaw
Thank you!! This is exactly what I was looking for. I have never been to Europe, so I am clueless. Clearly she will appreciate the culture and taking in the sites, I just don’t want to spend most of our time in museums, that’s all that I meant by the comment.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:I love Germany and Austria at that time of year for Christmas Markets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an almost 15 year old DD and she is also not really into the museums/history. We just got back from the UK and Paris. The trip wasn't for her - she just had to come along because there wasn't anyone to leave her with. The only parts she really enjoyed were (as expected) the Harry Potter Museum, Madama Tussauds and Disneyland Paris. She also loved shopping in London. It was honestly kind of a drag taking her to Westminster Abbey, Tower of London, St. Chappelle, etc.
DH and I have decided that we are shelving Europe/further until our kids are in college. They aren't ungrateful, they just don't really enjoy the trips and it doesn't make sense to keep taking them. They can take themselves later when they mature more (if they even want to go.)
But try to take your kids to some well done, interactive museums in the U.S. then. Make sure they have read a book or have some background. Otherwise they will grow up to be the same type of adult.
Anonymous wrote:I have an almost 15 year old DD and she is also not really into the museums/history. We just got back from the UK and Paris. The trip wasn't for her - she just had to come along because there wasn't anyone to leave her with. The only parts she really enjoyed were (as expected) the Harry Potter Museum, Madama Tussauds and Disneyland Paris. She also loved shopping in London. It was honestly kind of a drag taking her to Westminster Abbey, Tower of London, St. Chappelle, etc.
DH and I have decided that we are shelving Europe/further until our kids are in college. They aren't ungrateful, they just don't really enjoy the trips and it doesn't make sense to keep taking them. They can take themselves later when they mature more (if they even want to go.)