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Site reviews Tips

Finding value in vacation home rentals

At Poggio Etrusco (photo courtesy Ciao Bambino)One of the many family-friendly companies that I’ve found online since I started blogging is Ciao Bambino.

I first read about them in Budget Travel — can’t remember if it was the print magazine or their blog, but both are stuffed with good info that I tuck away for future reference.

(Disclosure: I’m writing this because I like the Ciao Bambino site and my interactions with the site’s staff have been very positive. No one is paying me or offering me anything to write this post.)

Since I’m always looking for cheaper accommodations that can also handle a bunch of kids, I checked around on the Ciao Bambino site, and was particularly impressed by their diverse offerings in Europe. Many of the villas, homes and apartments, however, seemed a little pricey.

After an email exchange with Kristi Marcelle, one of the company’s staff, I’m pleased to report that they are NOT all about high thread count linens and big bucks.

Kristi wrote, “….because I am not on the ‘fatter wallet’ side either, I search quite a bit for the great finds….We definitely have some more value-oriented options and as a priority have been working on getting more.”

(Update/clarification from Ciao Bambino owner Amie O’Shaughnessy:  many of the listed properties are a mix of “condo resorts” – i.e. apartments with shared onsite amenities, and hotels, rather than independent vacation home rentals.)

Here are some examples from the Ciao Bambino database, along with Kristi’s comments:

“1. Canada Mystic Springs, Canmore, Banff – Located 15-minutes outside of Banff, so families can still access Banff activities without the higher in-park price points. A fun pool that is continually filled with kids.

2. MexicoNa Balam, Yucatan Peninsula – We’ve heard from a few users about this property in Mexico. Although it can only accommodate families of 4, it is simple and laid back, away from the tourist bustle.

3. FranceHotel Mas des Carassins, Provence, France – Rave reviews from the user that stayed here, and St. Remy de Provence is a perfect homebase for exploring this area.

4. SpainRoom Mate Laura, Madrid – Definitely a good value for Madrid. Rooms are simple and very modern – but they are comfortable with fun decor in an excellent location.

5. Italy – our destination with the most inventory right now has quite a few value-oriented options.  Favorites are:

  • Al Gelso Bianco, Tuscany – Ideal location for exploring Tuscany. A wonderful young Florentine runs the property and provides amazing service.
  • Poggio Etrusco, Tuscany – We’ve had a few clients come back with just rave reviews about the owner and her warm and friendly service.”

As a bonus, Kristi had a personal tip about condos in Hawaii (Maui) that are not in the Ciao Bambino directory. She describes the Hale Kai:

“For Maui prices, it was a great find and right next door to a park which was great with the kids and right on the beach. Perfect for toddlers and lots of family reunions. I would highly recommend [it] for a budget accommodation – we stayed there a week. They are also very close to a great take-out restaurant that has since changed hands, but the owner used to be the chef at Mama’s Fish House so the food is very good and across the street from a small farmer’s market.”

Another excellent place to look for guidance on these sorts of rentals is with Wendy Perrin, the Condé Nast Traveler Consumer Travel Editor. Take a look at her always-comprehensive annual “Worldwide Guide to Affordable Villa Vacations.” This past year she toted her kids along to research a place in Europe, and she learned some valuable lessons.

Readers, break out that secret list you might have stashed away – any good recommendations for family-friendly vacation home rentals? Please tell us your experiences down in the comments.

Categories
Blog Europe

Tips for Tuscany and the ProBlogger Guy

Duomo di Siena, Tuscany, Italy (courtesy Geo8 at Flickr Creative Commons)If you want some fresh, no-holds-barred advice on travel to Tuscany (my post on Pisa/Florence with kids is a bit long in the tooth, although I try to add links with updated info) look no further than the Tuscany lists.

It’s Leif Pettersen’s latest post on his trenchant Killing Batteries travel writing blog.

Leif is usually offering up his expertise in Romania and Moldova, among other garden spots, but thanks to a scheduling glitch with Lonely Planet‘s guide to Tuscany, he’s been able to live the “high life” (not!) updating the LP Tuscany guidebook.

He’s definitely become one of my Five Travel Blogs You Gotta Read, which is the post I did for the Perceptive Travel blog as a part of Aussie Darren Rowse’s latest ProBlogger Group Writing Project.

If you’ve never participated in one of these Projects, and you’re a blogger or like to read blogs, get your self over (Down Under?) to the fabulous ProBlogger site and check out the Project.

It’s a no-brainer for fun and bloggy traffic.

If you participate in his Group Writing Project, and follow the directions, Darren generously links up to your blog and your post. Now, if you’re a biggie like LifeHacker or something, that’s no big deal to you. But if you’re like most of us, toiling out here in the hinterlands with pretty good traffic but not blowing anyone away, a couple of big fat links from ProBlogger are a nice gust of exposure.

Even better, you’ll find hundreds of new blogs to enjoy, and they will find you.

Technorati tags: travel, blogging, travel blogs, ProBlogger, Group Writing Project

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
Europe

Pisa & Florence With Kids.

Giotto's Tower, Florence, Italy (Scarborough photo)The Leaning Tower of Pisa is recognized by children and parents everywhere, mostly because it’s pictured on almost every take-out pizza box in the world. If you’re looking for a good stop in Italy with your family, consider a visit to Pisa either on its own or as a side trip from Florence.

We flew Ryanair into Pisa (we were living in Europe at the time) and were pleased that the Galileo Galilei airport was not far away from city center, as Ryanair airports often are (for example, Frankfurt Hahn is hours away from Frankfurt, although they do run an efficient motorcoach link service.)

We stayed at the Hotel Royal Victoria. Our room was comfortable, breakfast was good and our view of the Arno River was lovely, but we did run into a mosquito problem overnight.

It was too hot to close the windows but there were no screens on them (pretty standard in Europe I’m afraid.) Being eaten alive made us a bit cranky.

The town itself was very walkable and full of lively students from the Università degli Studi di Pisa….somehow everything sounds more elegant in Italian, including plain old “University of Pisa.” The Leaning Tower is only one of many gorgeous, ornate buildings on the Campo dei Miracoli, a large grassy area that invites a picnic or even a quick Frisbee toss in front of history.

What’s funny is that once you finally get there, you inanely say what everyone else says; “Wow, it really DOES lean!”

Campo dei Miracoli, Pisa, Italy (Scarborough photo)

You can buy tickets online ahead of time, but children under 8 are not allowed into the Leaning Tower.

The streets around the Campo are full of overpriced restaurants and shops selling T-shirts and leaning towers in resin.

I must confess that my young son adores his Leaning Tower T-shirts with Pikachu and Snoopy on them, and I turned one of those resin towers into a nightlight.

It was too marvelously kitschy to pass up — Pokemon in Pisa!

Obligatory Dorky Hold-Up-The-Tower Photo, Pisa, Italy (Scarborough photo) Pop Culture T-Shirts in Pisa (Scarborough photo)

We took the train to Florence from Pisa, and despite its deserved reputation for tons of art & atmosphere per square mile (not always what kids are interested in seeing) we had a lovely time.

I’ve talked about the Hotel Casci in a previous post, and want to commend it to you again as a very family-friendly and well-located place to stay.

This UK mother’s assessment is quite accurate; how can you miss with kids when there’s pizza and ice cream/gelato everywhere? It’s so blessedly difficult to get bad food or a bad cup of coffee in Italy.

We did go to the Uffizi Gallery with our children, and it was a pretty successful visit.

Everyone OD’d on Madonnas and cherubs after awhile, but my son had a great time giggling at all of the nudes (hey, as a parent you take whatever art appreciation you can get.)

We climbed Giotto’s Tower near the Duomo and were rewarded with some expansive views, but mostly we enjoyed wandering the city’s piazzas, listening to the occasional street musician and enjoying the famous Tuscan sun.

Categories
Europe

Good Family Hotel in Florence

Here’s a recent TripAdvisor review of the Hotel Casci in Florence; I’m happy to see that it’s still the same great place where I stayed with my family.

The staff is super-friendly, the location is good, the rooms are family-sized (by the standards of metro Europe) and the price is right for a central hotel in a major tourist city.

Related Family Travel post: Pisa & Florence with kids