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Blog

Farewell to Kid Trippin’

Nobody said that the writer’s life is a secure one, but then neither is life in Corporate Land these days.

As of this month, my family travel blog Kid Trippin’ (for Disney’s Family.com Web site) is on indefinite hiatus.  I enjoyed working with my editors, who were professional enough to call me personally and explain that there was not a problem with me or my writing, just that the company is taking a pause to sort out where they want to take the site and the online presence that they want to build.

It’s frustrating to create a blog from the ground up and then have it shut down, and frankly it was the first really decent blogging money that I’ve made, but I’m OK with it as long as the issue is not my work.  Blogs and sites are not a “build it and they’ll come” proposition — you have to market and work RSS feeds and a host of other things in addition to the obvious requirement to write good content.  I took care of content and made suggestions in the other areas, but that’s the downside to corporate blogging; a lot of things are out of the writer’s control. 

By the way, interested in blog promotion?  Check out Successful Blog’s 20 Blog Promotion Guides to Inform Your Strategy.  Thanks for the helpful info, Liz Strauss!  Good online marketing ideas are also easy to find on Wendy Piersall’s Inspired Business Growth blog for Entrepreneur.com.

We’re at an interesting point in the business blogging continuum and the development and growth of online media.  Some things will work and some won’t.  I don’t like being associated roadkill 🙂 but I certainly understand it.

R.I.P., Kid Trippin’ and all the other bloggers out there who are with me on the Web 2.0 wave, rough as it may be.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, blogging, blogs 

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Blog

How do you like your links?

There is a lively post over on ProBlogger right now, asking blog readers whether links should open in a new window.

The question is this:  if you click on a link here on Family Travel, would you prefer to have a new window pop up that takes you to the link’s URL, or would you prefer to stay in the same window and then back-click to return to the original Family Travel post with the link in it?  As an example, the ProBlogger link above opens in the same window, and the link to the “whether links should open….” permalink opens in a new window. 

Apparently a lot of people really, really HATE it when a new window opens, to the extent that they actually leave the offending site that doesn’t open windows the way that they prefer.

Here’s what I wrote in comment #63 to the ProBlogger post: 

“Wow, I’m with Barbara up in Comment 7, in that I get off on Internet exploration tangents and prefer to have a new window open and come back to the original site later, since otherwise I’d be “back-buttoning” for eternity. So, I open into a new window on my blog because I thought that was easiest for everyone. No nefarious intentions at all.

I had no idea that this annoys people so much, and am somewhat puzzled by what you accomplish when you get miffed about new windows and never return to that naughty site. Why not leave a comment for the blog author; maybe they’re like me and had no idea that it gets people in such a twist.

I know life’s short and we’re all busy, but don’t be passive-aggressive. Give straightforward feedback.

This has inspired me to ask my readers what they’d like — thanks so much for the food for thought, Darren.”

So here’s my question, faithful readers — which do you prefer, and why?

I can go either direction when I draft a post and put in a link — open in a new window or open in the same window — but I want to make this site user-friendly and welcoming to the readers, not write it only to satisfy my own preferences regarding the “right” way to set up a post.

Thanks very much for your feedback in the comments.

Technorati tags:  travel, family travel, blogging

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Europe

Update on travel with kids to London

View from the London Eye of the Thames and Westminster (courtesy wallyg at Flickr Creative Commons)

Maybe you’re being beaten bloody by your kids to go check out Harry Potter film locations since there’s a new Potter movie coming out this summer. Maybe you’d like to enjoy the Thames, exploring maritime heritage in a side trip to pretty Greenwich, or East London surprises like Canary Wharf.

Maybe you want to see England, Scotland or Wales now, simply because you never have before! Americans tend to think quite highly of the British, even with their quirks.

For whatever reason, if you’re planning a London or UK visit this summer or fall, just make sure that you’re ready for sticker shock.

The current exchange rate is making the already outrageously expensive spots even worse than usual. The budget travel guru himself, new blogger Arthur Frommer, just wrote about it in terms of the high costs at some of the more popular European destinations. (If you are going to Europe at all, check out the latest updated info on various countries from Rick Steves and his top sights in London.)

Travel writer and editor Tim Leffel, who blogs at Tim Leffel’s Cheapest Destinations (here’s his Cheap Europe category) has long recommended Eastern Europe for more bargains, and I guarantee that the UK and London are not in his book of World’s Cheapest Destinations.

Still, if you insist….

There are some freebies left in London (here’s ten of them that don’t include the usual fallback of museums) and Budget Travel tries to help with some kid-friendly hotel ideas and hotel rooms around $200/night, which is unfortunately often the norm for price. If you’re curious about Japanese capsule hotels, you can give one a try near London at the Gatwick airport, but I don’t know about squeezing in the kids. If money is less of an issue, how about this unusual hotel and its themed rooms?

The International Herald Tribune chimes in with budget places to eat.

Perhaps the shortest possible visit will help you save those pence — London in a weekend?

Other general London info I’ve found recently: the wonderful thoroughfare of Oxford Street is full of fun, and navigating the city is easier when you “mind the gap” and understand the Tube or Underground (subway) system — the UK newspaper The Guardian has an Underground Guide to help you.

They also give us the lowdown on good UK vegetarian places to eat, plus fun things to do in swank London hotels without actually staying in one (I’ll skip this recommendation at the Dorchester hotel: “The most unforgettable experience is to arrive for breakfast in the Grill Room, which is a cross between a Spanish palace and baroque chapel. This is a temple to traditional British cuisine, serving grilled kippers, bubble and squeak, lamb kidneys and kedgeree – the creamy dish of curried smoked haddock and rice that is the ultimate early-morning test of an enthusiastic foodie.”)

If you’re considering leaving the UK and crossing the English Channel during your trip, remember that you can still go the old-fashioned way — by sea. The UK’s Times newspaper has a complete guide to cross-Channel travel. You can also explore the UK by train; take a look at train enthusiast site The Man in Seat Sixty-One’s UK train travel page (hat tip to Vagablogging for telling me about this site.)

Finally, Frommer’s has a new podcast on London for the whole family that you can download and sneak onto your kid’s mp3 player.

Just thought you’d like to know….

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Europe, UK, London

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Blog

Latest blog carnival action

Family Travel’s post on fall travel planning is featured in this week’s Carnival of Family Life. Other posts include a tribute to Dads, plus yummy blueberry pancake recipe, from a blog about the Fish Creek House in Whitehall, Montana and tips on flying with kids. Check it out.

My post over on the Perceptive Travel blog about the Austin City Limits Music Festival was featured in the latest Carnival of Cities, hosted across the Pacific (New Zealand) by fellow blogger Liz Lewis at her Christchurch Tour Guide blog on Home Turf Media.

Finally, not particularly family travel-related but still fun is my Fast Machines post about NASCAR’s roots in moonshine-running, which is featured in the current Carnival of Wheels (for car enthusiasts.)

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, blogging, blog carnival

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New York City USA

New York City Update

Times Square NYC (courtesy Kaysha at Flickr Creative Commons)I’m sure that a lot of families are planning to travel with the kids to New York City this summer, although you might have a better time in the fall or around Christmas/New Years, when I think the city is at its most lively.

NYC and the boroughs are pretty hot and muggy in summer, and lots of the “natives” take extended vacations or have weekend houses, so you may meet more tourists than New Yorkers during parts of June/July/August.

Still, I have some good links for whenever you go.

My first suggestion is that you see what the locals have to say about things to do with kids, and start with Mommy Poppins. She is full of great suggestions for New York’s most interesting and educational places for families (and you know what a museum geek I am) with an eagle eye kept on the budget as well. How about freebies at the Metropolitan Museum of Art? Or free summer sports; many of her ideas are camps, which are good for locals but maybe not travelers, but there are other single-day ideas listed including a fishing tournament sponsored by Macy’s department store. Who knew?

I rarely find many family-oriented items in the hip urban blog Gridskipper, but they have a great list of free summer festivals in NYC. You may need to stand in line for tickets (tricky with young kids, I know) but if everything goes to bleep in a handbasket and you have to leave early, you’re not out any money.

Checking out Central Park is free, and a nice place to cool off.

Fodor’s Travel Wire found some NYC surprises that even the locals may have missed — I didn’t know that the city has water taxis, for example.

Where to stay is always a quandary; the UK’s Telegraph newspaper has some good (but somewhat pricey) tips for staying right in the heart of the action in Times Square.

I also got to thinking that visitors might be interested in staying across the Hudson River from Manhattan, so that you can park your car and leave it, take the train into downtown, and also have views of the skyline. I haven’t tried this personally, but a quick surf of TripAdvisor gave me this list of Jersey City hotels, and several reviewers mentioned Manhattan skyline views and easy walking distance to public transport.

Anyone tried this on the Brooklyn side? I bet it’s more expensive.

Finally, want to tack on a road trip? I was impressed with the Perrin Post’s detailed itinerary for a New York State Thruway trip north of the city.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, New York, NYC

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Tips

Getting Ahead of the Game: Fall Family Travel

Yes, I know it sounds painful, but right now is really the time to make plans, buy airline tickets and set up lodging for one or two fall getaways with your family.

Most of us don’t have the luxury of long stretches of time off, even in summer, and certainly not in the busy fall months.   Many parents are “doubling up” their work-related travel and taking kids on business trips; sometimes it’s great to have family around, and sometimes the work or conference schedule just doesn’t allow it.  Someone has to watch kids during the day while you’re in meetings or whatever, and if there is a heavy evening socializing component to the trip, it may not be worth it to try to shoehorn in the family. 

Still, there are a few long weekends coming up in the autumn when you could sneak in one of those great restorative mini-vacations.  USA Today recently wrote about long weekends subbing for long vacations.

First, Labor Day this year is Monday, September 3rd.  Since school will have just started, you probably won’t be able to go too far away with the kids, but there’s always an end-of-summer trip to the beach or lakes or water park (or floating down a cool, spring-fed river in a giant inner tube, like we do here in Central Texas.) 

Second is one of my favorites; the usually-forgotten Columbus Day holiday.  This year it is Monday, October 8th.  If that isn’t a holiday in your school district, never mind, but for those that do get the holiday, I’ve found over the years that no one ever seems to remember that it’s coming until it’s too late to score a decent price on anything.  Do a little homework now, and you’ll look like an insightful genius in October.

Third is Monday, November 12th, Veteran’s Day (actually on Sunday the 11th but observed on the 12th.)  Again, not everyone is out of school for that, but consider a long weekend if you are, perhaps tied to honoring our veterans in some way or taking the kids to a nearby Revolutionary War or Civil War battlefield, or maybe a frontier fort.

Let me remind you to investigate teacher work days, when the school staff and teachers go into the schools to do training but your kids stay home for the day.   Most districts have posted calendars online by now for the 2007-2008 school year;  note those teacher work days on your calendar, and maybe take that day off yourself (usually a Friday) and plan a little family escape.

Finally, there’s the Thanksgiving week.  I’m as sentimental as the next person, but if you aren’t totally wedded to the idea of a traditional family sit-down Turkey Day meal, this may be the ideal time to take a week-long trip to Europe (or how about Paris from $389?)  The weather is not too bad, the crowds are much, much smaller than in summer, and you can always spring for a big fancy meal in a fabulous restaurant on the appropriate day (and it won’t be insanely crowded like Thanksgiving is in U.S. restaurants. So what if they don’t have turkey — eat more at Christmas or something.)  A short week-long cruise is another great option, or a trip to somewhere in South America (no jet lag — hurray!)

What is not a good option may be the major theme parks, including Disney.  Do some research first, but Thanksgiving week is usually one of the most crowded times at the parks.  Now, if you’re in Paris that week, I’ll bet Disneyland Paris is actually a great idea, but check for November opening hours.

There you go — a day or so spent planning in the early days of summer will reap a much-anticipated fun vacation this fall, and you’ll be considered an organizational wizard.  Just smile and tell ’em you read it at Family Travel.

Technorati tags:  travel, family travel, fall vacation

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Blog

It’s Carnival time again

Carnival of Cities logo

It’s been awhile since I’ve helped to host a fun gig — the Carnival of Cities over at Home Turf Media.

Stop by and visit when you have a chance; a blog carnival is just a roundup of different writer’s posts about a particular topic, hosted on one blog. The Carnival of Cities includes posts about specific cities. 

If you want to know more about carnivals, check out the Blog Carnival Web site.  There are over 1,800 different carnivals, so you can probably find one that interests you. 

This week, you’ll find posts from around the world, including:

**  A TV show in paradise (Extreme Makeover pays a visit to Honolulu

**  Delights of Argentina (Puerto Piramides offers more than just…whales)

**  Nature near Washington, DC (Wings of Fancy – Live Butterfly Exhibit)

**  A unique shopping trip in Paris (buying nail clippers on the Champs-Elysées)

**  A handy tip for New Zealand (hop on the tram for a quick tour of Christchurch)

….plus other goodies.  Step right up! 

Technorati tags: Carnival of Cities, blog carnival, blogging, travel.

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Europe

Travel with kids to Amsterdam

Shoes at Keukenhof Gardens, near Amsterdam (Scarborough photo)I’m a huge fan of the Netherlands, probably because I was lucky enough to live there for a few years.

Like most people in the U.S., however, I really didn’t know very much about the country beyond Hans Brinker’s silver skates and the whole wooden-shoe-and-tulip shtick, plus people apparently smoked weed whenever they wanted and lived in teensy houses. Doesn’t sound like much of a place for families, does it?

Actually, it’s a wonderful family travel destination.

Let’s take a look at the biggest city, Amsterdam….

It’s so much fun to visit a city that’s human-scaled and walkable; you can see a lot without spending a ton of money and time on transportation, and you don’t feel so overwhelmed while trying to juggle kids and sight-seeing. Amsterdam is a city built on basically concentric/circular canals, so it’s possible to walk, ride rented bikes or hop the tram/bus/canal transport to get to places, and you can cut across canals to shorten the journey.

If you rent a bike, pay attention, because these guys are pros. I saw one couple riding their bikes holding hands and each talking on cell phones with the other hand, yet still somehow managing to steer without a single finger occupying the handlebars.

So much of the city is, well, unbearably cute and charming. Houses really are tall and skinny, with incredibly narrow staircases, because people were taxed on the width of their buildings, so they made them as narrow as possible. The stereotype of national tight-fistedness is somewhat true (remember “Dutch treat” dates?) because the Dutch do take pride in thrift and lack of ostentatiousness. They are also big on openness; that’s why their houses have large windows in front, to show passers-by that they’ve nothing to hide. (By the way, we also learned while living there that you must keep that window sparkling, and regularly scrub your front door and front stoop, or be considered the neighborhood slobs.)

An urban area near water like Amsterdam is always appealing to me; it’s such a stimulating mix of city life and nature. If you and the family need more open area for running around, there are several parks, including Vondelpark, het groene hart (the green heart) of Amsterdam. The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra sometimes gives open-air concerts in Vondelpark, usually free in the summer, and there are playgrounds to burn off all of that energy. You can grab a snack — try the frites (French fries) which will come with mayonnaise, not ketchup (if you ask for ketchup, you’ll get an Indonesian version with curry.)

The art museums are a big draw, and will work with kids if you are willing to go through them pretty quickly. Even smaller children can enjoy Van Gogh‘s colorful sunflowers, created with his characteristically thick daubs of paint. Although it’s under significant renovation until mid-2008, the stunning works at the Rijksmuseum are worth a visit. Don’t miss the massive “Night Watch” by Rembrandt — it’s beautifully displayed/lighted and quite breathtaking. You can even cycle with Rembrandt, riding bikes through the places that he lived and painted, or go visit his house.

As I found when taking kids to the Louvre, just keep moving, and enjoy what appeals to you and the kids without worrying too much about the “arty stuff” unless you’re/they’re interested.

The Anne Frankhuis (Anne Frank House, the “Secret Annexe” of the World War II Jewish teenage diarist) is a must-see, although the crowds can be huge. Try for an evening visit, since on some days they’re open until 9 p.m. My older daughter, a pre-teen at the time, was glad that we had taken her there when it came the inevitable time to read the book in middle school. It’s very sobering to try to explain the Holocaust to a child, that’s for sure, but I think it’s important if yours is ready. If you visit the nearby town of Haarlem, you can also see Corrie ten Boom’s house, the Hiding Place, where she and her Christian family sheltered Jews during the war, at great personal sacrifice.

Don’t worry too much about the famed Amsterdam red-light district; we accidentally wandered through a few blocks of it and had to figure out how to explain to my son why the ladies in the windows were waving at him (my daughter figured it out pretty quickly) but no apparent harm was done. My daughter was quite embarrassed at a couple of randy postcards she found at tourist kiosks; they portrayed, um, erect male members with colorful wooden clogs hanging off of them. I just kept picturing the photo shoot for that postcard, and cracking up. The sale of marijuana in the “coffee shops” is actually quite regulated, and you won’t really see many stoned people wandering around, contrary to legend.

The New York Times has tips for making Amsterdam more affordable, and for hotels I always look at the Frommer’s listings. Try for a place near Museumplein/Vondelpark, since that area tends to be quieter and better for families. There are nice markets where you can pick up broodje (sandwich) fixings for picnics (we always gorged on kaas, or cheese, in the Netherlands.) The Concierge.com site, which is basically Conde Nast Traveler, has some good links and stories about Amsterdam, and the Amsterdam official tourist Web site is always helpful. The Dutch tourist offices are called the VVV, with a distinctive blue and white logo, and they also have material and suggestions.

Side trips are worth considering, because the country is so compact. The LA Times has a good article on cycling tours, “Taking Holland for a Spin,” and you really shouldn’t miss the nearby Keukenhof gardens. A barge cruise (taking a slow boat to Delft) is a little grown-uppy and staid, but older kids might enjoy a slower pace and plenty of time to experience canal life.

Finally, it’s a bit PG-13 for a family site, but you really must read Agent Orange, one person’s hilarious encounters with the Dutch in all their glory.

Related posts:

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Holland

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Blog

Who is in my feed list?

I met the irrepressible Lorelle van Fossen at the SOBCon 07 blogging conference and have started reading her advice and commentary posted at Lorelle on WordPress.  She does a weekly Blog Challenge, just to fire up the creative juices, and this week’s Challenge is to write about who is on my feed list.   

Lost you just now?  See my post called What’s the Heck’s an RSS feed and Why Do You Want One?”  

I’m not going to overwhelm you with my 95-100 feeds (it’s not that bad, I just skim the headlines and click through only when something interests me) so I’ve crunched it down to a sampling of my most recently added feeds:

**  Anders Meanders, by Helen Anders from the Austin American-Statesman

**  Brave New Traveler

**  Brazen Careerist, by Penelope Trunk

**  Digital Ethnography, by students at Kansas State and their professor, the ones who explained Web 2.0

**  Glossed Over, great snark about the fashion/beauty magazine industry. You’ll be a total cynic by the time the next Vogue gets to your mailbox.

**  Travel Log, the Washington Post travel blog

**  eMoms at Home, with bundle of energy Wendy Piersall

**  Travel god Arthur Frommer’s blog

**  The new travel blog Taking Off at the Chicago Tribune (yes, they were one of the first to turn down my Tokyo with a ‘tween article, but I hold no grudges! 🙂  

**  Mr. Magazine, by the Chair of the Journalism Dept. at the University of Mississippi, a guy who’s seriously into magazines.

**  Inkthinker, by Kristen King for freelance writers.

There, I’m pooped.  Thanks for the challenge, Lorelle!

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, blogging

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Tips

I’m cookin’ with gas

Actually, I have an electric stove, and the truth is that I don’t even like to cook. 

I’m such a perfectionist, I think that every meal has to be this gourmet, nutritionally-balanced extravaganza, so I just wig out.  Thank goodness that Sainted Husband not only can cook, but generally likes it.

I do like to make cookies and pies.  Dessert first, you know.

The good news is that just because I don’t like to do it doesn’t mean I can’t write about it.  The online food magazine CHOW is currently featuring my article “Pack Your Knives and Go,” the scoop on ten unique cooking vacations around the world including Finland, Louisiana, the Netherlands, Rhode Island, Thailand, New Zealand and Mississippi.  France and Italy are deliberately excluded because they’re the expected places to go for culinary travel, and I wanted to feature something new.

Hey, I’m pretty savvy about food (eating it, just not cooking it) and I’ve been all over the world, so I found some great places that combine place and placemat….OK, that was pretty bad. 🙂

Anyway, take a gander and then hang around the site for awhile.  These folks are seriously into food and drink, but in a really fun way.  The very active Chowhound forum is jammed with commentary on places to eat.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, cooking vacations, culinary travel