Anonymous wrote:I hate, hate, hate the DCUM snobbery and travel focus of UMC people.
That said, I jump sides and agree with the AI snobbery. Spouse and I simply can’t bring ourselves to do it. Same goes for cruises, although we’ve come close to booking a Ritz Carlton cruise.
Yes, off the beaten path or a more bespoke trip with younger kids can be harder and/or more expensive, but we’ve always signed up for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a picky eater and something of a foodie. But over the years I’ve also just come to the conclusion that a vacation is not all about my food preferences. I’ve had crappy meals in lots of beautiful unique places because the truth is that, in many places, eating like the locals do (or worse yet, eating near the popular tourist places that you might actually want to see) is not going to result in a great meal. I’m now at a place where I try to pick the best restaurant I can without dragging my family to someplace they don’t want to go just because someplace is supposed to have the most authentic whatever. Sometimes we get really lucky and happen into someplace great but other times it’s just whatever and that’s fine. I find the same thing with AIs and Disney and cruises (all of which I’ve done)—much of the food is whatever, some of it is bad and sometimes you get a surprisingly amazing dish (I’m thinking of you. Sandals jerk chicken fresh off the grill). If my family is having fun with the location, then I think it’s a good vacation. I’ve definitely had worse food in some gorgeous national parks, random pubs in England or Ireland, small towns in South America, or eating in some people’s homes in Eastern Europe.
Anyway, I hate the snobbery, but I do find it amusing! At least this thread has not yet reached chicken bus status—that was the worst!
You can't be a picky eater and a foodie. It is one or the other.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a picky eater and something of a foodie. But over the years I’ve also just come to the conclusion that a vacation is not all about my food preferences. I’ve had crappy meals in lots of beautiful unique places because the truth is that, in many places, eating like the locals do (or worse yet, eating near the popular tourist places that you might actually want to see) is not going to result in a great meal. I’m now at a place where I try to pick the best restaurant I can without dragging my family to someplace they don’t want to go just because someplace is supposed to have the most authentic whatever. Sometimes we get really lucky and happen into someplace great but other times it’s just whatever and that’s fine. I find the same thing with AIs and Disney and cruises (all of which I’ve done)—much of the food is whatever, some of it is bad and sometimes you get a surprisingly amazing dish (I’m thinking of you. Sandals jerk chicken fresh off the grill). If my family is having fun with the location, then I think it’s a good vacation. I’ve definitely had worse food in some gorgeous national parks, random pubs in England or Ireland, small towns in South America, or eating in some people’s homes in Eastern Europe.
Anyway, I hate the snobbery, but I do find it amusing! At least this thread has not yet reached chicken bus status—that was the worst!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: Just checking in and amazed at the number of responses. The resort is the JOIA Grand Paraiso, part of the Iberostar complex. All of the resorts looked lovely and we saw many, many families with happy kids.
This explains a lot. I'm glad there were lots of happy families, but happy families don't tend to be all that discriminating about food and do tend to label crap buffets as "good."
Of course the insults begin as soon as the resort is named. Can't win here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: Just checking in and amazed at the number of responses. The resort is the JOIA Grand Paraiso, part of the Iberostar complex. All of the resorts looked lovely and we saw many, many families with happy kids.
This explains a lot. I'm glad there were lots of happy families, but happy families don't tend to be all that discriminating about food and do tend to label crap buffets as "good."
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Just checking in and amazed at the number of responses. The resort is the JOIA Grand Paraiso, part of the Iberostar complex. All of the resorts looked lovely and we saw many, many families with happy kids.
Anonymous wrote:6 pages in and we still don't know what resort? Please name it, OP. We are looking at doing a multigenerational family vacation next year and for a variety of reasons it pretty much has to be an AI or a cruise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people like a very corporate, catered experience when they “travel”, and that is fine.
+1
If people like that, good for them! I enjoy chance encounters with locals in grocery stores and on the train, especially if I’m trying to speak their language. Other people would hate that, and that’s fine.
Oh FFS. I guarantee they don't enjoy it.
How do you know that, oh, great expert?
Anonymous wrote:6 pages in and we still don't know what resort? Please name it, OP. We are looking at doing a multigenerational family vacation next year and for a variety of reasons it pretty much has to be an AI or a cruise.