Categories
Tips

Travel to a Summer Music Festival.

Canada’s Globe & Mail travel section has an article highlighting some 2006 summer music festivals around the globe.  This might be fun if you travel with teenagers and both of you like music. 

My daughter, one of her friends and I just attended a Switchfoot concert and had a great time (even standing in line afterwards for autographs.) Obviously a big, sweaty, mosh-pitted outdoor festival is on a different scale, but if you and your kid are up to it, why not?

If rock’s not your thing, there are so many other options: in Newport, Rhode Island alone is the world-class Folk Festival (sponsored by Dunkin’ Donuts….what? I’m missing the folkie-donut connection) and Jazz Festival.  Lots of other cool music at Festival Productions.

For an interesting twist on this topic, here’s one blogger’s rundown on Chinese rock bands trying to play in certain places outside of China.  I found the link in the Global Voices Travel section, a jam-packed commentary compilation featuring non-US bloggers.

Categories
Florida USA

Family Fun in Florida (especially beaches.)

It’s always good to read a non-US perspective on US tourist spots.  Here’s a good overview of the offerings in Florida for kids from the UK’s Times Online.

If you just want beach….I would suggest someplace like Daytona Beach or Cocoa Beach on the Atlantic side of the state for party time with older kids/teenagers, and the Gulf Coast side (Clearwater, St. Pete Beach, south to Sand Key or Anna Maria Island) for the prettiest beaches and calmest water for young ones.

The Gulf Coast beaches in western Florida are simply dazzling.  For rowdier action there’s Panama City Beach, or more laid-back Destin/Fort Walton Beach.  Hurricane-walloped Pensacola is coming back as well.

For all the sandy scoop on the best beaches everywhere, not just Florida, the Doctor is In — Dr. Beach, that is.

Categories
Europe

Wonderfully Off the Tourist Beaten Path: Wadden Sea/Waddenzee Islands With Kids.

Building Castles in the Sky (OK, Maybe the Sand) Terschelling Island, the Netherlands (Scarborough photo)What’s there to do in the Netherlands outside of Amsterdam? Plenty, especially with families.

We had a chance to visit two of the laid-back Frisian islands in the North Sea/Wadden Sea (mostly in the Friesland province) Texel and Terschelling.

Friesland is one of the many provinces that make up the Netherlands; the oft-used term Holland really only applies to two of these provinces. If you are looking for a fun Dutch place to visit (complete with wide, sandy beaches, miles of flat bike paths and farmland full of fluffy sheep) this is your spot.

The better-known Scheveningen area near Den Haag (The Hague) is more boardwalk-y, and that’s fine if you’re pressed for time and just want to hit some beach quickly.

As always, the local VVV (“Vereniging voor Vreemdelingenverkeer,” the Dutch tourist bureau) on either island can help you with hotel and activity arrangements.

Texel Island (pronounced Tessel) is part of Noord-Holland and is the easiest island to reach from Amsterdam.

Fluffy Sheep & Wide-Open Spaces, Texel (Scarborough photo)We found lots of things to do (I was there with my preteen daughter plus two of her friends) including bike rides on the pretty “fietspads” or bike paths, kite-flying on the breezy beaches, seeing the EcoMare nature center and the Maritime & Beachcombers Museum, go-karting and a fun ride on a shrimp boat to see seals and watch the local fishermen in action.

In honor of the island’s wool industry we bought some nice warm lambswool slippers and gentle sheep’s milk soap.

Shrimp Boat Trip, Texel (Scarborough photo)Kite-Flying  Near the Lighthouse, Texel (Scarborough photo)Traditional Dutch windmill in the town of Oudeschild, Texel (Scarborough photo)

I visited Terschelling (pronounced Terskelling, and here’s another info site) with my three year-old son.

The island is reached by ferry from the coastal town of Harlingen. It’s smaller and quieter than Texel, but we had absolutely no agenda other than digging in the sand and riding bikes….well, I rode and he sat in the bike kiddie seat behind me, waving at people.

The Dutch, as you might imagine, provide you with rock-solid two-wheeled transport complete with full fenders, bell, light, basket, chain guard and sturdy child seats that bolt onto the back of the bike frame.

Ben and Jerry’s on Terschelling Island, the Netherlands (Scarborough photo)I wasn’t able to try the unique experience of wadlopen or mud-walking on my trips, but it’s on the agenda for the future.

As you can see from my links, there is plenty of information in English about the Netherlands. The Dutch seem to have a facility for speaking multiple languages; I attribute that to their seafaring and merchant heritage (think of the Dutch East India Company.)

A Dutch friend also laughingly commented that “we have to learn English and other languages because no one else speaks Dutch!”

This makes travel with kids in the Netherlands pretty idiot-proof and less of a stressor for parents than other places where communication is more difficult. Have a great time!

Some nautical friends in the Wadden Zee, the Netherlands (Scarborough photo)

Texel at sunset (Scarborough photo)

Categories
Europe

Take Your Family to Italy….and Europe.

There was a nice piece in the Star-Tribune recently about travel to Italy with a family. This group rented a modest place in Tuscany and plunked themselves into some immersion travel, which seems to have worked out quite well. The author, Jenny Deam, has great ideas for seeing the art museums — “I Spy” combined with gelato bribes.

If you haven’t been to Europe before, it’s hard not to overdo it and try to see too much. For your first trip, I would say that you should get a general guidebook on Europe and flip to the table of contents (or look at these “Best of” ideas) and have a family meeting to pick, say, the top 3 to 5 must-dos.

More than 4-5 in the standard two-week trip and you start to lose your mind. Have more of those “live in the moment” moments.

Then go, have a great time, and plan to return to one of the favorites someday and stay there awhile for a richer experience. The continent isn’t going anywhere; it’ll wait for you.

Categories
Tips

Travel with (Skateboarding) Kids.

What a marvelous discovery this is;  a wry piece by Susan Griffith in the new Perceptive Travel online magazine about skateboard travel, called “The Art of Finding ‘Spots.’ ”

A Mom finds herself going to places with her sons not to wander the museums or eat the food or see the tourist sights, but to find the best spots to skateboard.

It’s spot-on.

Categories
Europe

Travel in Europe: The Impact of Low-Cost Airlines

I’ve mentioned in a previous post that we flew Ryanair for a family trip to Italy; couldn’t beat the price of about US$140 for a family of four, the Netherlands to Italy, round-trip.

What I found interesting about this Business Week article is that these LCCs (low-cost carriers) are apparently driving some of the “union” part of the vaunted European Union.  People are hopping a plane and going all over the continent, exploring places that they might not have considered a few years ago. 

Said one Briton in the article, “I’ve been to places I’ve never even heard of just because it’s so cheap.”

I know that some of you are feverishly planning your travel with kids to Europe this summer; keep in mind that if your time is very limited, you can’t assume that the trains (much as I love them) are always the cheapest or best way to get to your destinations.

Hopping a plane may be just the ticket for your family.

Categories
Asia

Japan with Kids: Navigating Tokyo with a ‘Tween

Denwa (Cell Phone) Mania, Tokyo (Scarborough photo)It’s up, it’s good….

Here’s my 30 April San Antonio Express-News article about family travel to Tokyo with a ‘tween (preteen, roughly ages 9-12.)

I talk about visiting Harajuku, Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli and Odaiba plus climbing Mount Fuji.

More detailed postings about Tokyo to come, over the next few months.

There was also a sidebar about Yokohama that didn’t make it online, but here is my blog post about it.

Meiji Shrine, Harajuku, Tokyo (Scarborough photo)

Hope you enjoy it along with my other Tokyo blog posts.

Update 5 June 2006: I found a good overview for a week-long Japan trip with Budget Travel Online’s Trip Coach — take a look here.

Update 02 December 2006: Here’s a detailed story on BootsnAll about climbing Mount Fuji.

Update 08 January 2007: From Ampontan, a blog about Japan, is a detailed post about Japanese matsuri, or festivals. Great fun if you can see one while you’re visiting.

Sake Barrel Offering, Meiji Shrine, Harajuku, Tokyo (Scarborough photo) Taking a Break Climbing Mt. Fuji (Scarborough photo)