Anonymous wrote:My son’s favorites have been London and now Copenhagen
London (visited at age 7 and 9)
- loved riding trains and Tube
- Tower of London, HP studio, Princess Diana playground, etc
We are planning to go back to London and also planning to visit Japan
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really dumb responses. My kid has traveled extensively overseas since he was two months old. Has citizenship in three countries. What matters to kids is the activities they do and whether they're interests are being catered to. At age 6 my kid had no preference for seeing a giraffe at the zoo in downtown DC over the one in Melbourne. A leafy park with lots of vendors selling cute monkey hats in Mexico City is not much different to a 7-yr-old than one in the Market Square in downtown San Antonio.
Speak for yourself. My chilled was thrilled to try a different language and people watch. If he was lucky he could make friends on a playground and eat foods or sweets and actively knew he was in a different place. The experience is rich for them in ways we tend to forget. Also good for you that your child is a multi citizen. Mine now knows he doesn’t have to settle for America or anywhere for that matter. The world is his oyster as well.
we have taken them out of school which flows into the Christmas break. I didn’t spell that out but it’s beyond a week. Australia will be the same. Not a waste at all.Anonymous wrote:mAnonymous wrote:6 year old loved Jamaica and cruising in general
7 year old liked Bali ( not the food so much) and London
We are headed to Thailand for thanksgiving and Australia for spring break so we shall see.
Thailand for thanksgiving is not enough time, what a waste!
We went for three weeks pre-COVID and the kids have been asking to go back (they were 8 and 11 at the time).
The highlight for that trip was definitely the elephant sanctuary we visited in Chiang Mai.
mAnonymous wrote:6 year old loved Jamaica and cruising in general
7 year old liked Bali ( not the food so much) and London
We are headed to Thailand for thanksgiving and Australia for spring break so we shall see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 14yo DC has been traveling with us since 8. These are some of the favorites:
London- Harry Potter WarnerBros Studio, Shakespeare play at the Globe theater (outdoor), boat ride to Greenwich/Prime Meridian Line, saw the Magna Charta at the British Library
Spain- Alhambra & Toledo tours, Seville- old quarters & flamenco dancing, Barcelona- cathedrals, waterfront & ferris wheel ride
Paris- (So many great museums, but can be overwhelming, so only in small bites)
Louve- Mona Lisa, Dutch Masters and Code of Himmurabi; Cluny- unicorn tapestries; Impressionists at d'Orsay & de l'Orangerie; Versailles- Hall of Mirrors, the fountain show at the Fountain of Apollo; eating at many outdoor cafes and DC trying first escargo
Japan- Tokyo temples, Kitchen Street, Shinjuku 3D cat on building, thrift clothes shopping at Harajuku, Sumida Hokusai Museum, Shibuya scramble Crossing & Mega Donkey store. Rode the bullet train. Kyoto- Monkey Park and some temples including Torii gates
Italy- Rome colosseum and Roman Forum, day trip to Pompeii, Florence Uffizi Museum & Ponte Vecchio
Your kid actually liked Uffizi Gallery? Our kids liked it for about twenty minutes then tired of the crowds really quick.
International travel is great, my kids have been on a couple trips, but if we’re being honest, kids don’t care about travel that much. My kids favorite trips are to the Outer Banks/Hatteras Island where they boogie board, play beach volleyball, fish and hang out with their cousins.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 14yo DC has been traveling with us since 8. These are some of the favorites:
London- Harry Potter WarnerBros Studio, Shakespeare play at the Globe theater (outdoor), boat ride to Greenwich/Prime Meridian Line, saw the Magna Charta at the British Library
Spain- Alhambra & Toledo tours, Seville- old quarters & flamenco dancing, Barcelona- cathedrals, waterfront & ferris wheel ride
Paris- (So many great museums, but can be overwhelming, so only in small bites)
Louve- Mona Lisa, Dutch Masters and Code of Himmurabi; Cluny- unicorn tapestries; Impressionists at d'Orsay & de l'Orangerie; Versailles- Hall of Mirrors, the fountain show at the Fountain of Apollo; eating at many outdoor cafes and DC trying first escargo
Japan- Tokyo temples, Kitchen Street, Shinjuku 3D cat on building, thrift clothes shopping at Harajuku, Sumida Hokusai Museum, Shibuya scramble Crossing & Mega Donkey store. Rode the bullet train. Kyoto- Monkey Park and some temples including Torii gates
Italy- Rome colosseum and Roman Forum, day trip to Pompeii, Florence Uffizi Museum & Ponte Vecchio
Your kid actually liked Uffizi Gallery? Our kids liked it for about twenty minutes then tired of the crowds really quick.
International travel is great, my kids have been on a couple trips, but if we’re being honest, kids don’t care about travel that much. My kids favorite trips are to the Outer Banks/Hatteras Island where they boogie board, play beach volleyball, fish and hang out with their cousins.
Yeah, I know, but my kid was a teen when we went to Uffizi. I cannot imagine taking an 8yo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 14yo DC has been traveling with us since 8. These are some of the favorites:
London- Harry Potter WarnerBros Studio, Shakespeare play at the Globe theater (outdoor), boat ride to Greenwich/Prime Meridian Line, saw the Magna Charta at the British Library
Spain- Alhambra & Toledo tours, Seville- old quarters & flamenco dancing, Barcelona- cathedrals, waterfront & ferris wheel ride
Paris- (So many great museums, but can be overwhelming, so only in small bites)
Louve- Mona Lisa, Dutch Masters and Code of Himmurabi; Cluny- unicorn tapestries; Impressionists at d'Orsay & de l'Orangerie; Versailles- Hall of Mirrors, the fountain show at the Fountain of Apollo; eating at many outdoor cafes and DC trying first escargo
Japan- Tokyo temples, Kitchen Street, Shinjuku 3D cat on building, thrift clothes shopping at Harajuku, Sumida Hokusai Museum, Shibuya scramble Crossing & Mega Donkey store. Rode the bullet train. Kyoto- Monkey Park and some temples including Torii gates
Italy- Rome colosseum and Roman Forum, day trip to Pompeii, Florence Uffizi Museum & Ponte Vecchio
Your kid actually liked Uffizi Gallery? Our kids liked it for about twenty minutes then tired of the crowds really quick.
International travel is great, my kids have been on a couple trips, but if we’re being honest, kids don’t care about travel that much. My kids favorite trips are to the Outer Banks/Hatteras Island where they boogie board, play beach volleyball, fish and hang out with their cousins.
Anonymous wrote:My 14yo DC has been traveling with us since 8. These are some of the favorites:
London- Harry Potter WarnerBros Studio, Shakespeare play at the Globe theater (outdoor), boat ride to Greenwich/Prime Meridian Line, saw the Magna Charta at the British Library
Spain- Alhambra & Toledo tours, Seville- old quarters & flamenco dancing, Barcelona- cathedrals, waterfront & ferris wheel ride
Paris- (So many great museums, but can be overwhelming, so only in small bites)
Louve- Mona Lisa, Dutch Masters and Code of Himmurabi; Cluny- unicorn tapestries; Impressionists at d'Orsay & de l'Orangerie; Versailles- Hall of Mirrors, the fountain show at the Fountain of Apollo; eating at many outdoor cafes and DC trying first escargo
Japan- Tokyo temples, Kitchen Street, Shinjuku 3D cat on building, thrift clothes shopping at Harajuku, Sumida Hokusai Museum, Shibuya scramble Crossing & Mega Donkey store. Rode the bullet train. Kyoto- Monkey Park and some temples including Torii gates
Italy- Rome colosseum and Roman Forum, day trip to Pompeii, Florence Uffizi Museum & Ponte Vecchio
Anonymous wrote:Really dumb responses. My kid has traveled extensively overseas since he was two months old. Has citizenship in three countries. What matters to kids is the activities they do and whether they're interests are being catered to. At age 6 my kid had no preference for seeing a giraffe at the zoo in downtown DC over the one in Melbourne. A leafy park with lots of vendors selling cute monkey hats in Mexico City is not much different to a 7-yr-old than one in the Market Square in downtown San Antonio.