Categories
Philosophy

Your savior on long car trips

Yes, we buckled under and got a backseat DVD player in our minivan….so shoot me for not playing the License Plate Game and other more creative car games, but boy does a movie keep the squabbling siblings quiet!

The only problem is that too many hours of looking at a small moving screen in a gently moving vehicle gets at least one of my kids mildly carsick.

Here’s another idea that I found on the tech site Mashable to keep your little darlings occupied — downloadable audio books from AudibleKids.

From the Mashable post:

“The new site, called AudibleKids, has about 4,000 titles from 75+ publishers available at the time of the launch, with exclusive stories from the likes of R.L. Stine (who didn’t love Goosebumps?)”

If your kids are part of the iPod army, you’re all set.

If not, no worries; other mp3 players are compatible and you can also burn to a CD through iTunes or stream from a computer.

Ease on down the road….

Categories
USA

Kids explore the New Hampshire home of Curious George

This is a guest post by writer Andrea Calabretta–thanks, Andrea! Where do we go to meet the “man in the yellow hat?”

A Visit to Waterville Valley, Childhood Home of Curious George

Curious George cottage, Waterville Valley, New Hampshire (courtesy Andrea Calabretta)Hans and Margret Rey, the creators of Curious George, fled Paris in 1940 with the manuscript of a children’s book in their luggage. Like many other Jews of the time, Hans and Margret left the city in a hurry—mere hours before it fell to the Nazis—and the story goes that a German officer who saw their illustrations of the lovable monkey allowed them to pass.

Years later, the Reys had sold the Curious George series to Houghton Mifflin, and Hans was at work on another book: The Stars: A New Way to See Them. Needing a good place to see stars, the couple found a small cottage in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire.

They proceeded to spend summers there, inviting local children to regular “chalk talks,” where kids could watch Hans sketch and help him imagine new adventures for Curious George.

Curious George Cottage

Today, you can visit the Curious George Cottage and Studio in Waterville Valley, about 2 1/2 hours north of Boston in the White Mountain National Forest. Artist Nat Scrimshaw continues the tradition of chalk talks with local and visiting children. On Saturday afternoons, kids crowd around the local illustrator, and each one of them goes home with a poster-sized drawing.

The actual home where the Reys lived still stands, right next to the Waterville Elementary school. The picturesque red cottage is a meeting place for nature walks, snowman-building sessions and other family activities.

New Hampshire sleigh ride (courtesy Andrea Calabretta)Winter Family Fun

The surrounding Waterville Valley provides additional opportunities for family fun—including back-country skiing, snowboarding, snowshoe-ing, an astronomy observatory, an ice-skating rink and more.

Children as young as three can join the Kids’ Venture Kamps, and on-mountain childcare is also available.

After a day of skiing, grab a round of hot chocolates and take a horse-drawn sleigh ride across the valley for great views of the White Mountain National Forest.

Family Festival in August

Though Waterville Valley is often considered a winter travel destination, the Rey cottage also hosts a family festival in August, and summer activities include nature walks, farm visits, children’s theater and swimming.

Before You Go

Pick up a copy of The Journey That Saved Curious George, a children’s book that details the Reys’ story.

For more information on Waterville Valley, check out www.visitwatervillevalley.com.

Andrea Calabretta is a freelance writer, editor and blogger based in Boston, MA. Visit BellyGlad (https://bellyglad.blogspot.com) to read about her culinary adventures.

** Related Family Travel posts: How Books Can Enrich Travel With Your Kids and Literary Travel With Kids

** You can also find Curious George in Mississippi (thanks to my Twitter friend @shawnz for the link. I’m @SheilaS if you want to follow us on Twitter, a sort of mass IM/microblogging site.)

Categories
Philosophy

How Books Can Enrich Travel With Your Kids

Every month and week seem to be designated “National Month/Week of the Something-or-Other,” just like every worthy cause has its own colored ribbon. (How many of us really remember the Tony Orlando and Dawn song “Tie a Yellow Ribbon ‘Round the Old Oak Tree” that was the 1973 kickoff for yellow ribbons for the troops?)

A child's library

I’m willing to get on the recognition bandwagon November 13-19 2006, which the nonprofit Children’s Book Council designated “National Children’s Book Week” in the U.S.

When you’re planning family travel, it adds a lot to the trip if your kids have read books about your destination.

(Movies sometimes work even better, and I have an upcoming post with viewing suggestions.)

A lot depends upon your child’s reading level, of course. There are so many topical books that could tie into a trip, it’s hard to know where to begin, but here are some ideas to get you to the library:

** “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee is a window into the Deep South if you are going to travel there. So is “My Dog Skip,” by Willie Morris. (Anyone have ideas for more recent depictions of places in the South?)

** “The Yearling” and “Cross Creek” by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings are classics for north central Florida.

** “Little House on the Prairie” and the other books in the pioneer girl series by Laura Ingalls Wilder are perfect for road trips in the Midwest. There are museums about the author in De Smet, South Dakota and Mansfield, Missouri. Other homesite links are here.

** There’s “Georgia’s Bones” if you’re going to O’Keefe country in New Mexico.

** “In a Sunburned Country” by Bill Bryson, for Australia.

** “Blueberries for Sal” for a trip to Maine and “Make Way for Ducklings” for a trip to Boston, both by Robert McCloskey.

** Obviously “The Diary of Anne Frank” if you’re going to the Netherlands, but there’s also Corrie ten Boom’s “The Hiding Place.”

** For a visit to New York City, try “Harlem Stomp!” by Laban Hill, or the Eloise books by Kay Thompson (then have tea at the Plaza Hotel!) For NYC atmosphere I like Lyle the Crocodile in “The House on East 88th Street” by Bernard Waber.

** The Madeline books by Ludwig Bemelmans are fun for Paris.

** “The Legend of the Bluebonnet” by Tomie dePaola, for a Texas visit in springtime.

** If you happen to go to a place that was a stop on the Underground Railroad, look for books about Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth.

** Going to Ohio or North Carolina? Consider (based on where you’re going in the state) books about the Wright brothers and their work in aviation.

Children's picture book about Japan, courtesy Flickr

** Naturally, the “Anne of Green Gables” books by Lucy Maud Montgomery, for a visit to Canada’s Prince Edward Island.

** I highly recommend the “Magic Tree House” series chapter books by Mary Pope Osborne. They provide terrific history lessons and fun stories set in a huge number of places and across time and historical events. My daughter and now my young son love them.

Hearing that little voice say, “It’s just like it was in the book!” is always fun for me, and the trip becomes more than getting from Holiday Inn “A” to Waffle House “B.”

Yes, I travel with my kids for general enjoyment of adventures, but also for all of us to learn something. Books can create atmosphere better than anything else.

Update 22 November 2006: Here’s a neat idea from Lark Books, “101 Places You Gotta See Before You’re 12” by Joanne Sullivan. Ideas include a big cave, an ethnic restaurant, a lighthouse and a working farm; none require some exotic vacation.