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Hawaii USA

Juicy drinks from Hawaiian Sun

Hawaiian Sun canned juices (photo by Sheila ScarboroughOne special treat in Hawaii that’s great for kids (and adults) is the Hawaiian Sun line of canned drinks.

They are based in Honolulu and have been around since 1952.

Products include fruit drinks, teas and diet/lite items, and they are super-yummy and refreshing after a hot day in the tropical sun.

I like Pass-O-Guava Nectar with passion fruit, orange juice and guava.

My son votes for Passion Orange Drink, with passion fruit and orange.

Grab them in any store in the islands.

For more on our blogger’s tour, see the So Much More Hawaii blog/microsite.

Just So You Know Disclaimer:  The Hawaii Tourism Authority through Cilantro Media is paying my way to Hawaii, and also paying most of my expenses while I am there including lodging.  I am contributing towards my son’s expenses.

Categories
Hawaii USA

Hawaii Calls and We Answer

A happy kid (mine) in the Waikiki surf, Hawaii (photo by Sheila Scarborough)This is my son.

This is my son in Waikiki Beach surf (because we’re visiting with the So Much More Hawaii bloggers tour.)

Any questions?

****

Seriously, our blogger group has now assembled in the islands and we’re already talking about Hawaii on Twitter with the #HawaiiHTA hashtag, we’re uploading photos to Flickr, writing blog posts, uploading items to our Facebook pages….and wondering how we got so lucky.

Looking forward to more time to post as we move across the islands.

All I know is that a very good (but garlicky) plate of pasta disappeared at dinner from Mr. Picky Eater’s plate, so get ’em running around in the surf enough and they’ll eat anything!

Categories
Blog Hawaii USA

A bunch of bloggers will show you So Much More Hawaii

Sunset Ke'e Beach Kauai (courtesy jaybergesen at Flickr CC)I’m happy to announce that my 9-year-old son and I are getting on a plane next week to visit the Hawaiian islands.

Vacation? Uh, no. Work.

Really.

A lot of tourism organizations are starting to see the value of the social Web and social media-based content, and the Hawaii Tourism Authority is no exception.

They are sponsoring a group of bloggers to come to Hawaii, look behind the scenes and the standard tourism glitter, and show our readers a more local-flavored “So Much More Hawaii” (a dedicated site for our tour content is launching in a day or so.)

Visionary tour organizer Christine Lu is big on cross-border cultural understanding (I was on her China 2.0 tour in November 2008) and social media is a common theme in her life for creating those connections. She writes:

“The upcoming So Much More Hawaii tour is meant as a proof of concept that through social media, first-hand insight of Hawaii can create content and outreach that influences those to understand Hawaii better and want to visit the islands…key bloggers in different vertical niche markets [will] experience the islands as a group, with separate sector focuses. Each one has a sector they are known for covering and their visit to Hawaii is meant to share this with their audience.”

My focus will be primarily family travel, of course.  Other bloggers on the tour include:

As we all know, the economy is down around the world. The Hawaii tourism industry is in crisis right now and the outlook is grim.  I applaud Christine and others for seeking new, more effective ways to use social media to showcase the islands for potential visitors.

Categories
50 State Series

Family travel in Vermont

ben-and-jerrys-button-courtesy-dvs-on-flickr-ccEvery Tuesday until we run out of states, I plan to post about family-friendly travel ideas, attractions and events in each one of the US states, taking input mostly from Twitter and Facebook.

Yes, I know how to search for family travel ideas on a destination or attraction Web site, but a tweet or a Facebook Wall recommendation is a much more engaging and public way to spread the word.

Please don’t email suggestions to me;  that’s nice but it is one-to-one communication. Tweet me and/or Facebook me, so that all of our networks can see what’s cool about your state.

We’re going in alphabetical order but started with the end, so our first state for the series was Wyoming, then we investigated Wisconsin , West Virginia , Washington, Virginia and now we’re moving on to….Vermont!

You can find their state tourism organization on Twitter at @VermontTourism and here is the Vermont travel and tourism Facebook page. There is also a Vermont tourism YouTube channel.

When I asked for ideas, here’s what came in….

Twitter Travel Tips for Vermont

***  From the tourism folks via @VermontTourism on Twitter,  a ton of goodies as you’d expect  —  ECHO [Lake, Aquarium and Science Center,] Shelburne Museum, Ben & Jerry’s Factory [in Waterbury,] Fairbanks Museum, Montshire Museum, VT State Parks, Smugglers Notch Resort…

Quechee Gorge, Green Mtn Railroads, LOTs of summer county fairs, farmers’ markets, hikes, swimming holes…Very kid friendly and HUGE year-long event for all of Vermont: Lake Champlain 400 celebration – follow @VTChamplain400 [on Twitter] for more….Great website for kid’s events and attractions in the Champlain Valley: https://www.findandgoseek.net….

VT Statehouse (now with veggie garden!) Rock of Ages granite quarry, UVM Morgan Horse Farm, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum…Also, gotta mention all our ski & snowboard resorts, Cabot Creamery, Church Street Marketplace, VT’s historic downtowns…

And finally, World’s Best Cheddar [cheese,] right? [Follow @CabotCoop on Twitter.] Vermonter’s love their food made locally.

***  From Jinny VanDeusen via @JinnyWJGB on Twitter  — Camping in Winhall Brook [Ball Mountain, Vermont.]

***  From Nancy Kish via @AgapeHillFarm on Twitter  —  Agape Hill Farm offers llama walks, interactive farm visits and birthday parties in Hardwick, Vermont.

***  From Rebecca Lewis via @RebeccaPRChick on Twitter  —  My fave VT resort is Smuggler’s Notch!

Categories
Product Reviews Tips

Hotel deals to help your travel budget

Planning on some summer day trips with the kids?  Turn at least one of them into an overnighter with a free night at one of the Intercontinental Hotels properties.

Guests can earn a free night by registering at https://www.GetAFreeNight.com and staying two nights at any Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, InterContinental, Crowne Plaza, Hotel Indigo, Staybridge Suites or Candlewood Suites around the world (except for Japan) between May 4 and July 3, 2009.

I racked up my two nights this past weekend; I had to go to two different areas in Houston anyway to research my upcoming articles for Texas Highways magazine, so after a search for good rate on the InterContinental Hotels (ICH) Group Web site, I landed at two different Candlewood Suites on Friday and Saturday night.

Categories
USA

The American Girl Place store in Chicago: where dolls rule!

American Girl historic dolls in Chicago store American Place (photo by Sheila Scarborough)If your child is a fan of the American Girl dolls, books, movies and toys, there’s only one place to take her (or him) if you visit Chicago: American Girl Place, the flagship store for the American Girl brand.

The company was founded in 1986 by Pleasant Rowland, and the original dolls were fictional historic characters:  pioneer girl Kirsten, Victorian girl Samantha, World War II-era girl Molly, colonial girl Felicity,  slavery escapee and Civil War-era girl Addy, etc.

Even though I’m not a big doll person and neither was my now-teen daughter (she blew my money and her time on Japanese manga books) I talked about the ins and outs of the store with Char Polanosky, who blogs at Doll Diaries.

Look, call me a curmudgeon, but I wince when I read a store brochure that says, “Shop. Dine. Party, too! Come celebrate all the things girls love to do.”  To me, girls need to back away a little from this “we’re all about princesses and shopping” racket, but Char convinced me to consider it from a history and education angle.

The 1st floor historic dolls section, American Girl Place, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)That appealed to me, so I decided to visit the Michigan Avenue shop myself while in Chicago for a blogging conference.

American Girl Place is part of the Water Tower Place shopping complex on the famous Miracle Mile.

Talk about an empire….whip out those wallets, Moms and Dads. The dolls are certainly wholesome entertainment (I heard that over and over from parents, and the semi-slutty Bratz dolls suffered a lot of slings and arrows) but keeping them outfitted will cost you.

I overheard one customer tell another that at least one family “….flies from New York to Los Angeles regularly, and they arrange a Chicago stopover to come to the store – with an empty suitcase, of course.”

Er, all to support the economy, I guess.

American Girl hair stylist Veronica at American Place, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)The first floor is a display area for the historic dolls – there are artifacts from each era and the dolls are arranged with their era-specific clothing, toys and household items.

The ones for World War II Molly were particularly appealing for me, perhaps because she wears glasses like I did as a child;  the Depression-era Kit dolls were, um, unfortunately quite timely in their descriptions of Kit’s family economic crisis.

All the dolls are plucky. I support plucky! I like Nancy Drew!

Then I rounded a corner and was somewhat appalled to find Julie, an American Girl coming to grips with change in the 1970s. She wears a mood ring and peasant blouse. Her bedroom is pink and orange with a beanbag chair and hanging beads around her bed.

American Girl Nez Perce doll Kaya, American Girl Place, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)Hey, wait a minute – I went to high school in the ’70s, and now I’m a historic doll?! I had pink and orange sheets, too. I slunk off in old-lady shame to look at the rest of the store.

It was pretty amazing.

There’s a doll hair salon, where friendly staffer Veronica was tending to a perpetually-smiling, unblinking plastic head with shiny hair that apparently needed styling (pigtail braids, $20.)

Hairdressers spend a lot of time untangling hairy doll head messes, too, before they can style. Veronica says they will “swap heads, but only for the same head.” No sticking Molly’s head on Kit, apparently.

Doll ear-piercing is available  (18″ dolls only, for $14 – results in those rubbery ears are obviously irreversible.)  There is a photo studio where kids can take a formal portrait with their doll (cheapest package; $22.95.)

You can get a custom T-shirt for your doll or check her into the Doll Hospital for required repairs.  There is a nice café where patrons can dine with their dolls; there are cute little doll chairs that attach to the tables, and loaners if your child arrives doll-less.

There are tons of in-store special events with hands-on activities for kids, including grandparent days, cooking classes, character birthday celebrations, meeting the book authors, dates with Dad and one called “A Smart Girl’s Guide to Money.”

Young patrons of the American Girl flagship store, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)If you visit the Chicago flagship store, take a look at the Web site ahead of time and set a budget for doll fun activities. It’s hard to maintain equilibrium when everywhere you look are cute doll-sized things to buy and do.

Consider tradeoffs – new hairstyle, maybe a new doll dress but no doll furniture. Or, repair the mangled arm at Doll Hospital, get a new set of household items and a pair of shoes, but no hair styling or photo sessions. Or, one hair session, a kid’s Molly-style set of pajamas and a branded beach towel, but no doll clothes.

The café requires set seating times and the special events are usually by reservation, so call ahead to arrange. I was impressed by the cheery professionalism of the staff; they seem to really enjoy working there.

Any other suggestions for enjoying the positive aspects of an American Girl experience (but avoiding wallet meltdown or girly overload?)  Comments below are welcomed….

Categories
Blog Tips

Travel tech tips on NPR (featuring me!)

Austin-based tech journalist Omar Gallaga mentioned me during today’s edition of the National Public Radio (NPR) All Things Considered program All Tech Considered.

Still awaiting my close-up….

The topic is Tech in Travel (here’s a link to the full travel-related NPR broadcast.)

***  The first part of the segment talks about integrating mobile into travel;  using cell phones to check into your airline flight plus using a cell phone-displayed bar code in lieu of a boarding pass.

***  The second part of the segment (about 4:00 minutes in) shifts to other helpful travel sites and tools on the Web. That’s where Omar mentions me and I have my moment of fame.

Did you know that there are 106 pages of iPhone applications that are travel-related? That includes one for American Automobile Association (AAA) travel guidance – pretty handy.

For amplifying information, Omar links to all of the sites mentioned in the broadcast in an associated post on the All Tech Considered blog:  The Tech of Travel.  He included my post on how to find the best hotel deals.

Thanks, Omar and NPR!