My family loves to take a good vacation. Whose doesn’t? But as the family travel planner, I always
take the vacation planning process as a personal challenge. How do I make each trip memorable? What kind of new things to see/do/taste/learn
can I plan?
The first threshold question is always, where should we
go? Typically it depends on time of year
and how much time we have to travel.
Obviously, the longer the trip, the more adventurous we can be.
I also try to factor in time-zone changes. If we only have 4-5 days to be away, is it
worth battling our internal clock adjustment?
That’s not to say we haven’t done a 4 day trip to London, or a 7 day
trip to Maine. Given the amount of
traveling we do as a family, my kids have become adept at adjusting quickly and
stealing naps in trains, planes, buses and cabs as needed.
With rare exception, we don’t go to the same place
twice. It’s a big world out there and we
only have so much time to travel. Plus,
my wife has visited all 50 states and many countries so when provided an
opportunity to take our kids to a new state or place, we usually take it (even
if it means driving 2 hours from Jackson Hole to have dinner in Idaho). The few exceptions to our no repeats rule are
Disney World (we’ve gone every 3 years since my son turned 3), Okemo (for New
Years Eve/Day skiing in Vermont at least 4 times) and Telluride (for the
Telluride Film Festival for 17 out of the last 18 years).
The next question I grapple with is what kind of trip should
this be? Are we flying solo, planning
each activity on our own? Are we
enlisting the help of a travel agent to custom plan a tour just for our
family? Are we joining a tour with
multiple families? We’ve done all of the
above and many variations in between. We
generally prefer to do our own thing, not being tied to anyone else’s schedule. We can do what we want, when we want. But when we are strangers in a strange land,
don’t speak the language, etc., those situations sometimes warrant taking a
tour or hiring a guide.
Where we stay is often dictated by location, but we also
look for unusual experiences. For every resort we’ve visited, we have also
stayed in less common accommodations like a treehouse hotel in California,
tented camps in the Serengeti and octagonal bungalows on a cliff in Costa Rica.
As for activities, I always try to mix active and passive
things to keep vacation interesting, get some exercise, and maybe interact with
our new location in ways that might give us a better sense of the place. Some of my favorites include a taking a cooking
class in Florence, whale watching in Alaska, hot air ballooning and big game
watching in Tanzania, snorkeling in the Galapagos, canoeing among the
alligators in Florida, sunset yoga on Waikiki beach, hiking in the Grand Canyon
and among the sequoias in Yosemite, going to gladiator school in Rome and experiencing
a fjord rib-boat safari in Norway.
Where will our next adventure be? Good question. I can’t wait to decide.
- Frosty
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