Skip to main content

Summer Travel Tips

Many of us are hitting the roads, or taking off into the skies this time of year. Vacations and family reunions are the top reasons. While we may look forward to getting some time away from the daily grind, travel is stressful. That's especially true if the back seat is full of clamoring children.To help avoid some of the angst, whether you're on a road trip or flying across the country, here are some helpful tips. Let's make it a real vacation, so you arrive with your sanity, hair, and sweet disposition all intact.

Road Trips

1. Load your GPS with all of your stops and final destination a day or two before you leave. Don't expect your spouse to do it on the fly...oops we missed an exit. It wouldn't hurt to look an actual map before you leave too. It's good to see the big picture of your trip.

2.  SNACKS! Why is it that you're immediately hungry on the road? Individual-sized snacks in zip-loc bags make it easy. Divide up chips, etc. yourself to get the best price. Don't bring sticky or crumbly snacks, like jelly doughnuts or Twinkies. Popcorn, plain chips, pretzels, apples, grapes, crackers, raisins, and nuts are much easier to handle. Remember cheesy chips or BBQ snacks have a nice orange coating that will appear on upholstery and clothing.

3.  "I'm thirsty, Mom." Bottled water is best. If spilled, it's not the end of the world! Flavored water is good too. Coffee for adults. No caffeine for the kids, no matter what age. You want them to be lulled to sleep, don't you?

4.  Entertainment is essential with kids. The advent of DVD players has saved the sanity of many parents on road trips. (Where were they when we needed them?) If everyone tires of movies, dust off some of the old-fashioned games like looking for out-of-state license plates, memory games like "I looked in my grandmother's trunk and found (alphabetical list) items that each in turn has to remember and add the next appropriately lettered item. e.g. I looked in my grandmother's trunk and found an apple, a bear, a clock, and...so forth.  Audio books on iPods are great and of course conversation is a good one.When was the last time you actually had the time to talk with each other?

5.  Everyone needs to stretch their legs and take a potty break. Plan to take 15-20 minutes every three hours. Some would argue every two hours, but you decide.

Airline Trips

1. Make sure all ID documents are in hand BEFORE you head to the airport. Print off reservation information for rental cars and hotels, and keep in an accessible place.

2. Print off boarding passes and check in online at home. If you can drop off your luggage at an outside kiosk, you'll save time in line and get to the gate sooner.

3. Don't forget to get rid of liquids before you go through security. Finish that coffee or you'll lose it. Empty pockets of change and put it in your carry-on.

4.  Remember to corral small liquid items  in a quart-sized zip-loc bag packed in the carry-on. Personally, I put all liquid stuff in the checked luggage.

5. Laptop sleeves are great for getting your computer through security quickly. The power cord is in your carry-on and you won't have to haul it out from the bag, etc.

6. Snacks are important on flights too.Airlines are stingy about snacks, so bring your own. I recommend the road trip snacks above.  Those sitting next to you will agree. Messy snacks on a tightly packed flight are dangerous to yourself and others.

7.  Entertainment is important since flying is a hurry up and wait activity. Books and electronic gadgets are nicely packable and provide lots of variety. Play nice and observe the instructions to use them when given permission. Don't be guy who holds up the flight because you have to yak on your phone or play one more level of a game. You are NOT the most important person on the flight. Yes, I've sat next to that person before.


Wherever your summer travel takes you, be safe and enjoy! Happy Trails!

Comments

Anonymous said…
I really admire the way you present your ideas. Excellent blog post. Highly informative. Thank you.

Travel Tips

Popular posts from this blog

The Castile Knapper

It's always fun to have family members who have a bit of notoriety because of interesting pursuits. My husband's cousin, Ken Wallace is one of those.  Ken is an artist who works in stone as a flintknapper. Flintknapping is the ancient art of shaping tools and weapons from pieces of stone. Knapping was part of the survival skill set of Native Americans. Arrowheads, knives, hatchets, and more were shaped from raw pieces of flint or chert.  Ken knapping at the Wallace Reunion Ken became interested in this process back in 1985. One of his favorite pastimes was searching fields for arrowheads, both of which are pretty plentiful in Western New York. Freshly plowed ground in rural areas often yields many different types of arrowheads since the Iroquois were the original residents of what are now corn fields and cow pastures. Fascinated with how the Iroquois made their weapons and tools, Ken started to try and recreate them. He says a lot of trial and error were involved in the...

Victim of Circumstances?

 The article below has been getting a lot of hits lately, and I thought it may be time to repost it. A couple of weeks ago, I took the picture below. I thought it pretty much sums up our life journey. We never know what's around the corner for us.  Circumstances change in seconds some days. Whether the circumstances of life are good or bad, we're fond of blaming them for how we behave and think. Here are a few of the well-used excuses:  "I'm a victim of circumstances.""The situation is impossible." "The circumstances are beyond my control." "Under the circumstances"...fill in the blank. Funny how principles, self-control, and  positive thinking can go out the window when we're "under the circumstances."  And lest you think the author is above blaming circumstances, she is not. I've used most of the excuses above, whether spoken or unspoken.  An imprisoned and wrongly accused Jewish C...

Smores Anyone?

We lived in the same house for 25 years just outside of our small hometown of Castile. It was a good little neighborhood and was mostly quiet except for the traffic on Route 39. When the signs of spring arrived, it was also time to pile up tree branches, and clean out the garage or the shed of burnable miscellany. Each year there seemed to be a contest between my husband and the next door neighbor to assemble a burn pile of enormous proportions.  Day after day I watched their piles grow until tepee-shaped woodpiles were just right to be torched. There was an art to the arrangement so that it would be totally consumed in a short amount of time. It was sort of like a bonfire on steroids. Now the neighbor enjoyed the element of surprise on the neighborhood and waited for quiet Saturday afternoons to begin his incendiary activity. KABOOM! You would have thought we were under attack by enemy forces. Then there was a rush of wind and the crackling of the k...