Anonymous wrote:I would go to South Dakota.
A few nights by Badlands National Park because the kids would love the rock scrambling, animals, hiking.
Then more nights in a cabin near Custer State Park. Great hiking, wildlife. S’mores nightly for the kids. Could do a city day in Rapid City.
Anonymous wrote:OP. So with the following criteria
- spring/summer travel (at this point late August being the most likely time).
No international or cruises. No beaches. No big cities as already been (NYC, Philly, San Fran, LA, Chicago, Boston, San Diego).
Been to Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Toronto, Montreal, Quebec City.
Alaska seems enticing but would need more planning.
I do want to stay put for a week. We changed accommodations 3 times in 7 days on our spring break trip which was fun and needed but exhausting.
I think my shortlist is South Dakota, Montana and Wisconsin. Just need to figure out appropriate base city. This was a great thread (everyone was kind).
Anonymous wrote:I’m the pp and just saw the recommendations for South Dakota. I spent two weeks in South Dakota once and loved it! Mammoth hot springs is cool and there used to be a really fun indoor pool there. I don’t know if there still is. Custer state park is so beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What time of year? Hawaii, Miami, Hudson valley, Vancouver, Western Massachusetts, new York City, a dude ranch....all could be fun but the weather matters.
Since when the hell is Vancouver in the US?
Idk but I do know Toronto is part of Detroit
This is accurate.
-- grew up in Michigan
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grand Canyon area but maybe too hot for summer.
If you aren't trying to take the kids on a hike all the way down to the river, it's fine. I have been in August and found the "but it's DRY heat" cliche to be true. Cool in the shade and at night.
We used to live in Flagstaff. The rim is at 7000 feet. You’re up in the mountains. It’s not hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grand Canyon area but maybe too hot for summer.
If you aren't trying to take the kids on a hike all the way down to the river, it's fine. I have been in August and found the "but it's DRY heat" cliche to be true. Cool in the shade and at night.
Anonymous wrote:Acadia - do not stay in Bar Harbor, but you can visit. We have rented houses along Somes Sound with a view of Cadillac Mountain. They were associated with a campground. You can hike, bike, take a windjammer, just enjoy the view. Get popovers at Jordan Pond for lunch - make reservations well ahead of time. Lobsters at Beales Lobster in Southwest Harbor.
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