Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts

Thursday, June 17, 2010

10 simple tips to take the bumps out of your next family road trip

Every year we drive 10 hours to our vacation destination. The first time we made the trip with our son he was 9 months old and let's just say it was not fun for any of us. A trip that usually took us 10 hours turned into 15! I have picked up a lot of tips for traveling with kids since then, and now we all look forward to the long drive each year. Preparation is the key to a happy trip. We must arm ourselves with activities, snacks and be prepared for just about anything. Below is my compiled list of 10 tips that will help bring fun and adventure back to the family road trip!

• Plan Ahead Activities
Pack an activity bag for everyone or one for each child. Include games, crafts, coloring books, crayons, pens/pencils, and anything else age appropriate that will entertain. See our kids travel activities article here.

• Take along plenty of snacks
Fill up a carry along bag with travel friendly snacks, or make a snack kit using lunch boxes and bags for each kid. See our one minute snack mixes article for plenty of healthy snack mix ideas to get started.


• Stay hydrated
Along with snacks, your going to want to bring along plenty of drinks. What I do is fill up everyones reusable bottles before we go, and keep cooler in the trunk with larger bottles to refill drinks at each stop we make. You could also bring a long a smaller cooler to keep in the vehicle.


• Don't forget comfort items
Special blankies, travel sized pillows, and your toddlers ragged teddy will be welcome additions for the long drive.

• Vehicle Maintenance
Be sure to perform an inspection on your vehicle in advance of your trip, or take it to a dealer or your mechanic. You will want tocheck fluids, tire pressure and tread, brakes, belts, hoses, and so on. Nothing is worse than breaking down on vacation!

• Roadside Service
AAA, wireless providers, dealerships, insurance companies, and many others have roadside service programs. Vacation is a perfect time to look into getting such a service or checking up on the terms and conditions of your current program. When the worst happens, having roadside assistance will save you a lot of headaches.

• Map it
Plan out your route ahead of time and take along maps or an atlas. AAA has very detailed maps and directions called triptiks that even find ways to get you around construction. You may think you know your way, but what happens if you run into an accident and need to get off an exit and work around for several miles? You can also use a navigator, as we do..but I still bring maps along anyways. They make for fun scrapbook additions later, and are another way to keep your kids entertained on the trip, they can pretend to navigate.

• Potty Breaks
Your husband may be able to hold it for 6 hours but more than likely your 3-year-old cannot. Be sure to stop plenty, and add these stops into your time schedule. Mapquest may say you'll be to your destination in 8 hours, but that's not including stops along the way. I love stopping at the really big rest areas that have picnic areas so we can get out and stretch, enjoy a packed lunch and let our son run around for a little while. Be sure to keep some hand sanitizer and antibacterial wipes, and tissues in your purse! You may come across a rest area that with bathrooms in less than desired conditions.

• Bring the camera
I'm sure you'll be taking it along for vacation anyways, but snap some pictures along the way also. Your kids will enjoy making a scrapbook of their adventures later.

• Emergency Kits (first aid and roadside)
It's a good idea to always keep emergency kits in your vehicle. If you don't have either of these vacation is the perfect time to get them or take inventory and replace out of date items in your existing.
For the first aid kit be sure to include Band-Aids in a variety of sizes, Gauze pads, Q-tips, cotton balls, alcohol wipes, hand sanitizer, antibacterial cream, Ace bandages, scissors, tweezers, ice pack, and any medications you feel safe for your family such as Tylenol or Ibuprofen for pain and swelling. See the about.com build your own first aid kit guide.
For the roadside emergency kit you need flares, jumper cables, tire gauge, roadside triangles, jack and lug wrench, rags, jug of water, and a flashlight. See Consumer Reports roadside emergency kit directions. Of course you could always buy pre-made kits as well.

   












Overall, have fun and prepare for the unexpected. Keep your time schedule negotiable, and enjoy the ride!

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Roadtrip Games

Are we there yet?  
I have come to dread those words! But, with a little work you can make your next family roadtrip or long drive a fun experience for everyone. Items such as lunch boxes, snack bags, drink bottles, coolers, pillows, blankets, games and activities, favorite toys, diaper bag filled with everything you might need for baby, and an emergency first aid kit will help make the experience memorable for everyone.

• I Spy
This simple game will be easy for even the youngest of travelers. Simply start out with "I spy something (insert color here)" and the kids will pick up on the idea fast. It's a great way to teach colors while on the road too!

• The banana game
Yes it's as silly as it sounds. Everyone calls out "Banana" when they see a yellow car, truck, etc. You could keep track on a piece of paper and see who has the most "bananas" when you reach your destination.

• Name that tune
Turn the radio to a station everyone can enjoy and see who can name the song the fastest. You could also download fun songs your kids will know on an mp3 player or to a Cd for the game.

• License plate games
#1- Print out a map outline of the 50 states for each kid, give them crayons during the trip to color in each state as they find the matching license plate.
#2- Call out the letters on the license plate in front of you and see who can come up with a phrase with the letters. Example- Dbg= double bubble gum
#3- Take a picture of license plates from different states and see how many you can get. Make a collage of all the photos or a scrapbook page when you return home.
#4- Call out a State and see who can find a matching license plate first by yelling it out when they see it.
#5- Try to get all of the letters in the alphabet in a certain amount of time. Someone times it, says go and stop, and everyone else jots down the license plate letters until you have a winner.
Amazon sells a great magnetic version of the license plate game

• Pipe cleaners will entertain toddlers
Buy a bag of pipe cleaners that come in an assortment of colors and ask your toddlers and preschoolers to try to make different things, or simply let them play independently.

• Puppet Show
Take along some puppets from home and put on some skits as your going down the road. Don't have puppets? Try making some out of socks. Melissa and Doug has some really great puppets.

• Storytelling
Everyone can take turns telling entertaining stories

• Spelling Bee
Have a family spelling bee on the road

•  Slug Bug
Whenever someone spots a Volkswagon Beatle they yell out Slug Bug!

• Counting Colors
Someone starts and names a color. Then you say how many highway exits or miles the game goes for. Everyone points out trucks, cars, vehicles, etc of that color. The first person to call it gets the point, keep a running tally of the points. It teaches colors and counting in a way.

• Town Scramble
You take the name of an upcoming town, state, or county and everyone writes down all of the words they can think of that uses the letters in the name. We use a 3 letter minimum for the words.

• Animal Sounds
Simple fun for toddlers and preschoolers. Make an animal noise and let them guess what you are, or let them take turns making animals sounds and everyone else guessing.

• Travel Packs
Make each kid a travel bag filled with goodies such as stickers, coloring books, picture books, special on the road treats, whatever you feel is age appropriate and safe for travel.

Comedy act/Tell jokes
Have each family member take a turn putting on a comedy act and see who can get the most laughs. You could also just tell jokes, or take along a joke book and take turns reading them.
 












Free stuff from home to take along for games
Coloring books, crayons, scrap paper, notebooks, storybooks, pipecleaners, construction papers, pens, pencils

Other fun stuff you can buy to make a long trip seem much shorter
Books
 















Games
My favorite travel games come from Melissa and Doug. They have some really great games that will entertain even the youngest of toddlers. My toddler son loves his Melissa and Doug magnetic habitats and the magnetic shape blocks. Both will keep your kiddos busy for hours!