Wednesday, August 28, 2013

“Petty” Tips for a great family vacation

Over the years of traveling with family, I have learned a few things that make the trip run smoothly.


1.        Pack plenty of activities to keep kids busy in the car.  Our family vacations were pre-video players in cars.  So we had to carry LOTS of things to do.  Tip:  Crayons melt in hot cars in the summertime.  Once I bought a lot of small, inexpensive toys and placed them in brown paper lunch bags, stapled shut.  When the conversation in the car became “She’s looking at me” and “Mama, he is touching my car seat”, it was time to open another bag.

2.       Pack plenty of snacks and liquids to drink in the car.  Tip:  Chocolate melts in hot cars in the summertime.  Jimmy always wanted apples and chewing gum.  Small packages of crackers with cheese or peanut butter were great.  Bottled water was not a staple back then, so a thermos of ice water or lemonade and cups with lids were the rule to quench thirst.  Jimmy also liked for his mom to make him a bunch of her “smush burgers” for him to eat.  When he was a kid, the family packed a stalk of bananas and a 3 lb. pack of hot dogs to eat on the way to Chattanooga.  Yes, you could buy bananas still on the stalk back then.
Rock City, Lookout Mt., TN

Wading at Cades Cove, Great Smokey Mountains
 
 
 
3.       Take plenty of rest stops. I wonder if John, Anne & Kathryn realized that those jump ropes and Frisbees that we took on the long ride to carry Kathryn home from Mississippi to Ohio were to wear them out at the rest stops on the interstate so that they might want another nap on the way.
4.       Be prepared for disagreements between the driver and the navigator.  Now days it is the GPS that gets the blame for a wrong turn.  Back then the person in the front passenger seat kept a paper map that could never be refolded properly to navigate the path to the vacation destination.  Inevitably, turns would be missed and the kids in the back seats were able to add new words to their vocabulary.
 
5.       Pack for every possible emergency.  We must have believed that vacation destinations did not have pharmacies, grocery stores or general merchandise stores.  We packed our suitcases on the “what if” principle.  That made packing the car a challenge that even Einstein would have wanted to avoid. Two items that Jimmy always insisted on packing were a roll of paper towels and a spray bottle of window cleaner.  He couldn’t stand having bugs on the windshield.  Paper towels also came in handy with kids’ messes.

 
6.       Families with more than 2 children or with an older teenager need a van with at least 3 rows of seats.  The back seat is the only place for a teenager on a vacation.  Space from the rest of the family is necessary for the coexistence of family members related to a teenager.  The back seat needs to be outfitted with a pillow and blanket and some form of sound emanating from a device that uses earphones.
7.       Take lots of photos.  The photos will be necessary to embarrass your children years later when you blog online.  Be aware that the willingness of children to be photographed on family vacations decreases with age.  That is the reason that the older sibling appears less frequently in vacation photos.
 
 

 
 
 

Disney World

Kennedy Space Center
 

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