Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Taking. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Taking. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Chủ Nhật, 12 tháng 5, 2013

Taking the Kids -- how much family travel has changed

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    Beach time at Curtain Bluff.James Callaghan

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    Tranquil view of Morris Bay.Curtain Bluff

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    Kids tennis, Curtain Bluff.Curtain Bluff

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    Curtain Bluff, Morris Bay.Curtain Bluff

The kids are everywhere.

They're chasing lizards in the glorious tropical gardens, building sandcastles with resort-provided sand toys, paddle-boarding, kayaking, fishing, playing beach volleyball and basketball and doing cannonballs into the pool. They're even getting lessons from the bartender in whipping up mocktails.

"The banana smoothies are the best!" an 8 year old named Brady told me.

Talk about kid vacation heaven -- Caribbean style. "They really cater to the kids here at Curtain Bluff observes Dr. Tania Spenlinhauer, here in Antigua from Maine with her husband and three kids, including Brady, for her sister's wedding at the resort. That the small (just 72 rooms) all-inclusive resort offered so much for the six young grandchildren was a big factor in why the family opted to gather here, they said.

"We could even give the older kids some independence because we knew they'd be safe," said the bride's mom, Peg Spenlinhauer.

Another mom confides that her son who has Asperberger syndrome is having the vacation of his life, trying things he's never done like snorkeling. "He is completely relaxed," she said. "There is no comparison to a regular hotel."

I can't help but flash back 30 years when my husband and I honeymooned here. He had found the place in a book, charmed by the story of how the late owner Howard Hulford decided to build a hotel on this peninsula after spotting the land -- surrounded by reef -- and seeing the two beaches -- one tranquil, one with crashing waves.

Seeing all the kids -- and their parents and grandparents -- having so much fun here recently made me realize that Curtain Bluff is emblematic of how much family travel has changed in the last three decades -- and how the travel industry has changed as a result.

On our honeymoon, we sat on the windswept surf beach outside our room -- every room faces the ocean -- drinking champagne left over from our wedding, watching the crashing waves and talking about the kids we would have and, just as important, the adventures we would share with them. And that, of course, is the sea change resorts like Curtain Bluff have had to face.

"When I was a kid, my parents left us and they went away. This generation takes our kids," said Steven Rosenbaum, here with his family from Connecticut.

Grandparents too. Alida and Rod McRae have been coming here for 30 years, mostly with another couple and only occasionally with one son or another when they were nearly grown. This summer, they're returning with all three sons and their families -- five grandchildren ranging in age from six to 16.

Kids were not a big part of Hulford's equation when Curtain Bluff opened in 1962. Wine was (the resort boasts the biggest wine cellar in the Caribbean), so was food. The resort has long been known for its cuisine. Kids were only here during the holidays and sometimes, spring break; some months they weren't permitted at all. There certainly wasn't a playground or a kids' club. The resort wasn't open in the summer when most families vacation.

Today, you can vacation through July and it's a bargain, with rates as much as 40 percent lower than winter and free-night deals on certain category rooms. (For more summer vacation ideas in the Caribbean and elsewhere, check out our new Summer Fun section.)

The best part is that parents are guaranteed a break too -- maybe a massage at the spa or a soak in the hot tub on the bluff overlooking the sea -- because there are some organized kids' activities and the watchful staff keeps an eye on those old enough to wander on their own. Tired kids old enough to be in their room on their own can even order room service for dinner at no extra charge while parents linger over theirs.

The all-inclusive nature of the resort means the family can enjoy any activity -- even scuba diving and deep sea fishing -- and eat as much as they like without any sticker shock, which McRae says he's faced at other resorts when it comes time to pay the bill. (All-inclusive rates for two start at just $625 a night; with kids and teens sharing the room it's $155 a night). That's certainly not cheap -- this is an upscale resort -- but it's a good value when you realize it doesn't cost anything extra, even if you go fishing every morning and snorkeling every afternoon; even if the boys order three portions of French toast at breakfast or a double portion of lobster salad at lunch; no matter how many tropical cocktails you drink or how many smoothies the kids order. (And those add up fast!)

The young general manager, Chris Eastmond, himself the father of a 5 year old, says he wants to preserve "the magic dust" that has made so many guests return to Curtain Bluff year after year, while meeting the needs of today's guests -- whatever their age.

They're ramping up organized kids' activities (think learning to fish and sailing instruction) and special early kids' dinners when a lot of children are in house. There are even plans to partner with a local school so visiting kids can learn what it is like to grow up on a Caribbean island. Already on weekends, when local kids come to the resort to learn to play tennis, they meet the guests at lunch. (The most promising tennis players are awarded scholarships to a tennis camp in Maine through Curtain Bluff's guest-supported Old Road Fund.)

"We want to incorporate what's new with the soul that is here," Eastmond said.

That soul is a long-term staff that hugs each guest when they arrive and when they leave. Hulford's widow, Chelle, still lives on the property and is a constant presence, chatting up the guests and their kids.

"We'll keep coming back as long as we're able," vows Alida McRae.

Us too.

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog, and is the author of the new series of Kid’s Guide to NYC, Orlando and the just released Washington, DC  from Globe Pequot Press. 


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Chủ Nhật, 5 tháng 5, 2013

Taking the Kids -- a Mother's Day gift guaranteed to be a winner

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    Experiencing Scotland with Adventures by Disney.Disney

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    The new Senses spa at Walt Disney World Resort.Disney

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    Horsing around at the C Lazy U Ranch, Colorado.C Lazy U Ranch

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    The kids' mini club at Palladium's Grand Palladium Bavaro Resort & Spa, Punta Cana.Ruben Hidalgo

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    The Spa at Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore.Four Seasons

Enough with the flowers.

Ditto for scarves (as much as I love them) and those fancy overpriced Mother's Day brunches. (Are you listening, guys?)

This Mother's Day, give the moms in your life something they will really appreciate -- "Me Time with a Bow," suggests Nancy Schretter, managing editor of familytravelnetwork.com.

And there's no better time for moms to get that all-to-illusive time for themselves than on a family vacation -- even at the airport. Kyle McCarthy, creator of familytravelforum.com, said she loves to steal time to get a pedicure at an airport spa. "I let them wait at the gate, since they always like to be early, and I relax until the plane is ready to board."

Any mom -- or grandma -- who has traveled with kids, especially young ones, knows that all too often a vacation is not a vacation at all for moms. "It's just like home without the washing machine," one young mom told me glumly as she watched her kids splash in a hotel pool.

What she meant was that on vacation with the kids, moms still do everything they do at home -- arrange meals and activities, facilitate sibling squabbles, act as nurse when one child gets sick or another scrapes his knee -- all without the conveniences of home. Too often, they come home exhausted, wondering why they left in the first place.

Don't get me wrong. Of course, dads and partners do their part -- more than ever -- on vacation as well as at home. It's just that I think most moms are still planners and organizers in chief and truth be told, typically feel guilty about stealing time for themselves. I know I always did. "Moms feel guilty about spending money just on them," agreed Schretter, the mom of two daughters.

Amie O'Shaughnessy, creator of the family travel website ciaobambino.com, suggests the gift ideally should enable moms to spend time doing something they never get the chance to do at home ... like taking an art or photography lesson, a cooking class, going to a gallery with a guide or taking an architecture tour in a city. "The key thing is it should be something she'd never do at home and something that wouldn't be more fun with kids," said O'Shaughnessy.

Nancy Schretter suggests you surprise mom with "a little basket with a note that lets her know that the whole family wants her to enjoy some special time because she's given them so much. It can come with a hotel or resort gift certificate to the spa, or a ticket for a special tour or shore excursion ... something that's uniquely her that you know she'd love. Have everyone give it to her -- along with a big hug."

I stole an hour for myself at the Four Seasons Baltimore Spa after a day exploring the city's historical sites (more about that in another column.) Moms can do that even at Disney World with the new Senses spa at the Grand Floridian Resort.

But this me time doesn't have to cost a lot -- or anything. You can sign mom up for wonderful free city tours designed around her interests and led by volunteers like those in New York with Big Apple Greeter and in Paris.

"The best gift my husband can give me is an offer to hang out at the hotel pool with the kids while I go off on my own to wander," said Pauline Frommer, co-president of Frommer's Media and publisher of the Frommer guidebooks and website, explaining that what she loves is "to have some time on my own to explore, away from the kids and husband."

Kara Williams, one of the Vacation Gals, suggests it's easier to guarantee mom that time for herself if extended family or friends are part of the vacation equation. "We've invited my mom and mother-in-law on family trips -- everyone wins," she said. "The kids get special time with beloved grandparents and the husband and I get time away together while they're being looked after by family."

If you're not traveling with extended family or friends, pick a place that has lots of planned activities for kids of all ages. Schretter suggests "great family-friendly all-inclusive resorts or cruise on a ship with superb kids/teens programs. With the kids busy enjoying so many fun activities it makes it easier (and guilt-free) for Mom to take a little time for herself."

You'll find deals this summer from all-inclusives like Palladium while ships, including those from Disney and Royal Caribbean, have added nurseries at sea and offer so many kids and teens activities that you may have to persuade them to spend any time with you. (For more ideas, check out the new Taking the Kids Summer Fun and Family Cruise sections.)

If your gang loves the outdoors, surprise mom with a guided family adventure trip (like the one we did to Yellowstone with Austin-Lehman Adventures or a stay at a ranch like the C Lazy U or Vista Verde Guest Ranch where we've happily vacationed in Colorado. Or try an Appalachian Mountain Club lodge in New Hampshire where you can easily borrow any gear you need. Here, there's no playing tour guide, cooking or even entertaining the kids.

Guided tours with special family itineraries overseas from companies like Adventures by Disney, Tauck Bridges and Backroads also can guarantee that mom -- and dad -- are freed from working on a family vacation.

"Mom can simply relax and have a good time," said Schretter.

And really, that's the best Mother's Day present you can give.

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog, and is the author of the new series of Kid’s Guide to NYC, Orlando and the just released Washington, DC  from Globe Pequot Press. 


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Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 4, 2013

Taking the Kids -- to California beach towns

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    Yoga on the beach, Santa Monica.Loews Santa Monica Beach Hotel

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    Getty Villa Family Forum.Elon Schoenholz

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    At the Getty Museum's Family Forum, kids can act out a scene from an ancient vase.Elon Schoenholz

Ready to show off?

If you've got any gymnastics moves, now is your chance to strut your stuff -- and it won't cost you a penny. Try the rings or climb the rope -- right on the beach in Santa Monica. Maybe you'd rather just swing or kick back in the sand while the kids show off.

On a sunny afternoon recently, kids as well as fit adults were doing that and more on Santa Monica beach's famous Muscle Beach.

"The idea of having a gymnasium right at the ocean is really cool -- the ropes and the swings and bars ... you don't have that at other beaches," said Elizabeth Gevorkian, 16, who lives nearby in Burbank.

"It is really cool to watch people who know what they are doing and then try it yourself," said a very happy 13 year old visiting with her brother from Canada.

There is even an area for the kids to climb mini ropes and other equipment. Adults -- and kids -- were doing yoga, inline-skating, riding bikes (you can rent both right here and bike along the beach on the South Bay Bicycle Trail that runs for 22 miles) and jumping in and out of the surf and squealing with laughter. They were playing beach volleyball on the many free courts and lining up for fresh lemonade and tacos, playing games in the arcade on the pier.

In case you're wondering, the original Muscle Beach -- a few miles away in Venice -- is plenty busy too and a great place to people-watch -- if you prefer characters. (I saw one guy skateboarding with a black cat on his shoulder.)

"Teens feel like this is sooo cool," says my friend Jennifer Miner, one of the Vacation Gals, who lives nearby, as we stroll down Ocean Front Walk in Venice. It's certainly grubbier than neighboring Santa Monica but that contributes to the ambiance and Miner suggests that during the day, local parents like her feel it is perfectly safe to allow their young teens to come on their bikes for a snack, a little shopping at the beachfront stands and maybe a henna tattoo. Did I mention you can get a palm reading right here too?

Venice started as one man's fantasy to copy Venice, Italy. And when it was first built, it had canals, floating gondolas, bridges and at one point, even camel rides. Today, people -- and the famous ocean waves -- are the attractions.

"If you want to see surfers who know what they are doing, get up early and come watch as the sun is rising," suggests Miner. And if you've got young surfers in your gang, stop in at the International Surfing Museum in nearby Huntington Beach where you will learn how surfing was imported to Southern California nearly a century ago by legendary Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanamoku. (Got your board shorts?)

Kids who visit Los Angeles, especially tweens and teens, want to hit the beach and the beach towns are guaranteed to please -- no town more so than Santa Monica with its world-famous pier, which has been drawing visitors since it was built in 1908 -- the first pleasure pier on the West Coast.

I met families from around the world here, including one family from Australia whose teens wanted to come to the pier so much they took a very expensive cab ride from Hollywood. "We don't have anything like this at home," explained 13-year-old Kristin Thiele, here with her family from Brisbane. (If you don't want to drive, Starline Tours also offers trips to Santa Monica from Los Angeles.)

Ride the solar-powered Ferris wheel -- it's nine stories tall -- the twirling cups, the roller coaster, carousel or bumper cars. Maybe you'd rather fish from the end of the pier or snack on a funnel cake or cotton candy. "It's really fun to eat on the pier," said 17-year-old Stephanie Simmons who lives in LA and was here with her friends.

When it's time for a little shopping therapy, head to the Third Street Promenade, a three-block, open-air pedestrian mall with lots of stores, restaurants street performers -- musicians, mimes, acrobats, even bubble blowers and psychics -- and if you're lucky, a celebrity or two. Some TV shows are taped right here.

Of course, there's more here than just fun in the sun -- even the chance for a unique cultural experience at the J. Paul Getty Villa just north of Santa Monica in Pacific Palisades high on the Pacific Coast Highway. It's famous around the world for its collections from ancient Greece and Rome but we like it for its special family guides to the galleries and kid-friendly activities. At the Family Forum, kids can act out a scene from an ancient vase (Do they prefer being an athlete or a monster?) or paint their own masterpiece. Kids can roam around the gardens, too. Another plus: Admission is free, but get tickets in advance.

I'm glad I was able to avoid LA traffic for a night and stay at the recently renovated Loews right here in Santa Monica where it overlooks the beach. The fish at dinner just came off the boat and I can see the gorgeously lit-up Ferris wheel from my room.

Not only is the hotel revamping its kids menus to make them tastier and healthier and initiating a Precocious Plates program so kids can order smaller portions from the adult menu, but they have initiated a Fit for Fun family wellness program that includes culinary tours of the Santa Monica Farmer's Market with Chef Keith Roberts, organized bike rides and Yoga on Muscle Beach, surfing and stand-up paddle lessons and guided hikes through the Santa Monica Mountains. (Check the progressive dining credit deal -- the longer you stay, the more you save -- $25 each night up to $175 for a seven-night stay.)

Kristin Thiele looked out at all the people enjoying the Santa Monica Pier and beach and smiled happily. "It has its own character," she said.

Welcome to Southern California. Got your shades?

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog, and is the author of the new series of Kid’s Guide to NYC, Orlando and the just released Washington, DC  from Globe Pequot Press. 


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Chủ Nhật, 14 tháng 4, 2013

Taking the Kids -- how a museum exhibit is changing lives in Los Angeles

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    Touch the tires of a NASA space shuttle.Leroy Hamilton

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    Space potty exhibit, California Science Center.Leroy Hamilton

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    The Endeavour.Leroy Hamilton

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    The Mercury 3: Richard Hercules, Taylor Semaganda and Keilyn Wells â future astronauts discussing the Endeavour missions.Amy Davis

Richard Hercules, 10, lives in L.A.'s inner-city and has never been on an airplane, but that hasn't stopped him from dreaming of becoming an astronaut when he grows up.

He was moved to tears when he saw the Space Shuttle Endeavour fly over his school on its way to its new home at the California Science Center and even more excited when he could walk around the gargantuan space craft -- 122 feet long -- at the museum, touching tires that flew in space, peering up at the tiles crucial to re-entry, inspecting a space potty and galley. (Tortillas, it turns out, are the perfect space food because there were no crumbs to fly around in the gravity-less environment.)

"When I grow up and have my own kids, I can show them the Endeavour and tell them my story about when I first saw it," he said.

"When I saw the Endeavour up close," added Taylor, Richard's classmate at Century Park Elementary School, "I realized that one day I could travel to space."

New museum exhibits often foster excitement and increase tourism and, since it opened last fall, "The Space Shuttle Endeavour Exhibition" has done both in spades. (Did I mention there is no entrance fee to the wonderful hands-on museum, though you can pay $2 for a timed entrance to Endeavour?) But besides garnering excitement and enthusiasm, this exhibit has the potential to change children's lives.

"The shuttle coming here opened a world of possibilities for these kids, many of whom are the children of immigrants," explained Amy Davis, Taylor and Richard's fifth-grade teacher. Suddenly, they saw the possibilities of a career in math, science, technology and engineering. "It was so hard for them to grasp from a textbook," said Davis. "Seeing the shuttle in front of them makes all the difference."

The children's enthusiasm and engagement spurred Davis to thank the Science Center in a letter. "Thank you from the bottom of my heart for investing time and money so a small, 10-year-old, inner-city child could see that dreams can come true and for giving him hope in his future," she wrote. That missive, in turn, inspired the museum to feature the Century Park fifth graders' Endeavour projects in their shuttle exhibit.

An astronaut raised in California came to speak to the children at school. And now, four of Davis' students, including Richard and Taylor, have been offered scholarships to a week at Space Camp this summer in Huntsville, Ala. (Davis is working on sponsors to cover the kids' flights.) Keep in mind that these are kids who haven't been to camp, who typically don't have the opportunity to go on family vacations. "I'm most excited about living like an astronaut," Richard said.

The Endeavour, which was the doomed space shuttle Challenger's replacement and the only shuttle to be named by schoolchildren, arrived with great fanfare at the Science Center on Oct. 31, carried on the back of a specially equipped Boeing 747 from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida and paraded through the heart of urban Los Angeles as 1.5 million people turned out to watch and cheer.

The other three shuttles are on public display on the East Coast -- The Enterprise at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum Complex in New York, the Discovery at the National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Washington Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C., and the Atlantis in Florida at the Kennedy Space Center. (The Enterprise was a prototype that never actually went into space like the others.)

"For 30 years (19 years in the case of the Endeavour) humans crossed the threshold from being tentative about space exploration with long periods of time during which there were no humans in space to an era of permanent human presence in space (at the International Space Center)," said Dr. Kenneth Phillips, curator for Aerospace Science at the California Science Center.

"We hope that visitors will appreciate the role of the space shuttle program in transforming the human approach to spaceflight and human thinking about what is possible," he added.

That's certainly the case for one group of inner-city kids now thinking differently about their own futures.

In the last six months, more than 1 million people, including thousands of kids, have turned out to see Endeavour at the Science Center -- remarkable when you consider that until now, the Science Center's annual attendance was 1.6 million, observed William Harris, the museum's senior vice president of development. Harris escorted me around the Space Shuttle Endeavour Exhibition as excited kids on field trips gawked and chattered as they checked out spacesuits, a moon rock, earlier space capsules and articles astronauts carried with them in space (a small Slinky, beads blessed by the Dali Lama, a New York Giants cap). They also inspected the control room that monitored the first minutes of every shuttle launch from nearby Canoga Park, Calif., learning that all of the orbiters were built locally.

When the permanent home for the shuttle is completed in 2017, visitors will be able to observe it upright -- and even slide down a 50-foot slide that will simulate how it would feel to land.

"Its size is the coolest thing ever," said 14-year-old Samantha, a member of the Science Center's Curator Kids Club, a group created for kids who live in the underserved communities around the museum. "You can compare how small you are next to it!"

The shuttle, said Harris, is single-handedly turning the California Science Center in L.A.'s Exposition Park into a must-see attraction for those visiting Los Angeles and spurring more people to visit Exposition Park and the neighboring L.A. County Natural History Museum with its amazing dinosaur exhibits.

"Be prepared to be amazed," said 11-year-old Oracio, also a young curator.

I was.

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog, and is the author of the new series of Kid’s Guide to NYC, Orlando and the just released Washington, DC  from Globe Pequot Press. 


View the original article here

Thứ Sáu, 5 tháng 4, 2013

Taking the Kids -- and staying in a 21-century-designed hotel room for kids

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    Disney's Art of Animation Resort: Finding Nemo family suite.Disney

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    Jurassic Park-themed kids suites at Loews Royal Pacific Resort.Loews Royal Pacific Resort

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    Royal rooms at Disney's Port Orleans Resort.Disney

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    Azul Hotels by Karisma Debut Fisher-Price Family Suites, Riviera Maya, Mexico.Hotels by Karisma

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    LEGOLAND Hotel.LEGOLAND California Resort

Pirate or royalty?

Maybe your kids are really adventurers at heart. They can take their pick at the brand-new LEGOLAND Hotel at LEGOLAND California Resort in Carlsbad, Calif., and your suite, complete with bunk beds and a separate TV for the kids, will be decorated accordingly with everything from LEGO models, wallpaper and even a treasure chest.

Did I mention the 250-room hotel, opening April 5, which features more than 3,500 LEGO models created out of more than 3 million LEGO bricks? That means you might have a LEGO parrot in your pirate suite or a frog in your kingdom suite. The Skyline Cafe features a LEGO city skyline with 35 miniature scenes made out of what else -- tiny LEGOS. (I especially liked the woman trying to entice a monkey off the balcony with a banana and one fighting a turkey that came out of her oven.) I got a sneak peak just before opening.

Check out the LEGO trees at the pool outside! Young kids -- this place really is designed for the under-10 crowd -- will especially like the pool with its "talking" and bubble-blowing dragon and the giant smoke-breathing dragon that greets you at the entrance to the hotel. You won't be able to get them to leave the Castle Play area (check out the LEGO filled moat!) and they will give a thumbs-up to the Bricks restaurant where the buffet station is designed so kids can reach the food, which incidentally will include plenty of fruit, veggies and other locally sourced and healthy eats.

Hotels are so much more than a place to sleep these days, especially for families. Check into the Thayer Hotel at West Point, N.Y., and kids might even learn a little history in a room dedicated to famous graduates like astronaut Buzz Aldrin, complete with memorabilia. (The newest is the Army Baseball Room.)

In many cases, rooms have morphed into suites with kitchenettes so that families (often including grandma and grandpa) can spread out. For another, they come complete with toys, kid-sized robes and special decor all designed to continue a specific theme -- pirates, princesses, or favorite characters. Royal Caribbean has even launched The Barbie Premium Experience complete with special pink sheets, fashion show and fashion designer workshop.

Are your little ones fans of Fisher-Price Little People? In Mexico's Riviera Maya, the Azul Hotels by Karisma all-inclusives have just introduced Fisher-Price Family Suites complete with Little People toys, decor (even special kids' bathrobes and pillows) and breakfast with Little People favorites Eddie and Mia. I like that the suites will be stocked with age-appropriate toys and books.

Got a future movie star in your gang? Check into the Little Divas Suite at the boutique Diva Hotel in San Francisco's Union Square that comes complete with karaoke machine, a drawing table, giant stuffed animals and photographs of famous child stars.

At New York's Tony Plaza Hotel, the Eloise Suite complete with tea set, Eloise books, robes and towels -- all designed with the fictional 6-year-old heroine of Kay Thompson's classic tale of the rambunctious Eloise who lived at the hotel -- has proved so popular that there is now a Tower Suite for young knights in training.

Think round bed in a round bedroom with a 23-foot exposed cathedral ceiling and a closet full of knight dress-up outfits and toys from FAO Schwarz. Let's not forget a huge chocolate knight and a picnic lunch at Belvedere Castle in Central Park -- all for $1,345 a night.

In Orlando, Fla., Disney's Art of Animation Resort is far more affordable -- it is a "value" resort, which means it is among the most affordable of the Disney properties with rates that can be as low as $100 a night ($252 for a suite that sleeps six).

Take your pick of four different wings that celebrate characters from "Finding Nemo," "Cars," "The Little Mermaid" and "The Lion King." Parked at the entryway to the "Cars" wing, Sheriff and Doc Hudson welcome us; inside the suite where I stayed, the pull-out bed looks like the back seat of an old car, the dresser looks like a tool chest and the bathroom design is inspired by a car wash. Stay in a "Lion King" suite and kids can chill on a leaf-shaped chair; in the "Finding Nemo" suites, the lampshades look like jelly fish. (No worries if you are going to Disneyland, the Disneyland Hotel offers five signature suites, including the Mickey Mouse Penthouse and the Fairy Tale Suite.

I loved the options for healthy eats at the food court at Art of Animation -- think omelets made to order or smoothies for breakfast. Parents will love the space in these suites, as well as the fridge and microwaves. Kids will love everything -- from the easels set up outside the entrance (the theme of the resort tells the story of the animation process, starting with sketches) to "Big Blue" the largest pool at Walt Disney World, 11,859 square feet, where kids can get underwater messages from the characters.

Across town, kids can channel their inner rock star at the music-themed suites at the Loews Hard Rock Hotel kids' suites while dinosaur lovers can check in to "Jurassic Park" suites at the Loews Pacific Resort. Families are already booking stays at Universal's Cabana Bay Beach Resort that won't even open until next year and is designed to evoke memories of beach resorts from the 1950s. (Family suites that sleep six start at just $174.)

And while we're talking Orlando, we have to mention The Nickelodeon Suites Resort where the generously sized suites with kitchens are designed with Nick character wallpaper, (take your pick of SpongeBob Square Pants or Dora the Explorer) and there's a chance to get slimed and play Nick-themed games at the water playground.

The only down side to all these themed hotels: Your kids won't want to leave the property. You won't, either.

Ready for another ride down the water slide?

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog. Follow "taking the kids" on www.twitter.com, where Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.


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Thứ Ba, 2 tháng 4, 2013

Taking the Kids -- and letting the kids lead the way in Washington, D.C.

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    The Tidal Basin and cherry blossoms, Washington, D.C.Washington.org

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    Young visitors enjoy story time at the National Air and Space Museumâs Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center.Dane Penland

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    Learning about Japanese screens at the Smithsonian's Freer Sackler Galleries.Freer Sackler Galleries

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    Boy participates in a paper airplane contest in the National Air and Space Museum's How Things Fly gallery.Smithsonian Institution

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    The Jefferson Memorial, Washington, D.C.Washington.org

Got your umbrella?

On a rainy day, grab an umbrella and go to the National Mall in Washington, D.C. "Nobody's there," reports 11-year-old Sean, who is from suburban Virginia and was one of the local and visiting kids we interviewed for my new "Kid's Guide to Washington, D.C." While you are there, pick up a mini Washington Monument, "The best souvenir from Washington, D.C.!" offers William, 12, who lives in suburban Maryland.

Take time to read the quotes on the wall of the Lincoln Memorial, suggests Hayley, 13, from Fort Worth, Texas. "My favorite place that I visited in Washington, D.C., was the Lincoln Memorial," she said, adding that she especially enjoyed reading the quotes on the walls.

Any parent or grandparent who has traveled with kids knows that if the kids are happy and engaged, everyone will have a good time. It makes sense. No one wants to be dragged along -- especially on vacation -- doing someone else's bidding.

Of course, when we were kids, no one asked us where we wanted to go on vacation or what we wanted to do when we got there. We were told we were lucky to be going anywhere -- I especially remember my dad saying that when he shepherded us from memorial to monument in Washington, D.C. -- and I guess we were. But these days, according to the newest Portrait of American Travelers research, among leisure travelers who have kids at home, six out of 10 surveyed report that their kids actively help with planning what their families will do for fun.

More parents reported that their kids are involved in planning what they do on vacation (57 percent) than what they watch on TV (50 percent). Fifty-five percent of those polled for this major national study said the kids have a role in deciding where to go; more than a third helped decide on the hotel. (Note: Hotel Industry: If you want parents to book, you've got to appeal to their kids!)

Certainly you aren't going to let the kids dictate a trip that is beyond your budget, no matter how appealing the hotel's water playground or how badly they want to ride the London Eye, see a Broadway play or step into the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando. But once you decide where you want and can afford to go this spring break and summer, invite the kids -- if you haven't already -- to help plan the itinerary. Think of how much that will de-stress the experience for you. The kids can't whine or blame you if they don't like the tour, the restaurant or the theme park attraction they chose.

Park them in front of the computer -- where they live anyway -- and suggest they start planning. (Just make sure each child in the family has an equal say. Parents get a vote, too, and here's a tip: Kids will be more accommodating to your picks when they've had a say in the itinerary.)

This is easier than ever since you can take virtual tours to just about anywhere you might want to go -- from Orlando's theme parks to the Smithsonian, which incidentally, has a terrific website for kids with online activities to prepare them for their visit. (They can try their hand at planetary research before they visit the National Air and Space Museum or check out the traits they share with other mammals before heading to the National Museum of Natural History.)

On the Smithsonian's site, you can also find special activities for families like the Art a la Cart program at The Smithsonian American Art Museum or the chance to meet a Kiwi bird from New Zealand (did you know they don't fly?) at the National Zoo. Let's not forget all the apps that will help kids lead the way in Washington, D.C. There's even a free one from the National Park Service for the National Mall compatible with the Android, iPhone and iPad.

Also check out the FamilyiTrips Washington, D.C., available at the iTunes store for $3.99, which lists more than 250 attractions and is the most comprehensive Washington, D.C. family app around.

One reason Washington, D.C., is a good place to let kids lead the way is because so many of the attractions are free -- the monuments, all of the Smithsonian's 19 museums, including the National Zoo, visits to the Capitol or the Supreme Court, a walk on the African American Heritage Trail or a hike in the enormous (more than 1,754 acres) Rock Creek Park.

Even the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has free daily performances -- at 6 p.m. on the Millennium Stage. So what if the kids' pick turns out to be a dud, or they get bored in the museum? Move on! Better yet, go outside on the National Mall and turn cartwheels or fly a kite! Let's not forget we are in the midst of the National Cherry Blossom Festival, which lasts until mid-April and includes Family Days (March 23 to 24) and the National Cherry Blossom Festival Parade (April 13).

Come back to view the monuments at night. That doesn't cost anything, either. "They were all lit up beautifully," said 11-year-old Greta, from Boise, Idaho. "My favorite memory from Washington, D.C., was visiting all the monuments in the dark."

Creating those memories, of course, is what family vacations are all about. Just make sure you've got the camera -- and the umbrella.

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog. Follow "taking the kids" on www.twitter.com, where Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.


View the original article here

Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 3, 2013

Taking the Kids -- and letting the kids lead the way in Washington, D.C.

  • 20130328msttk-e.jpg

    The Tidal Basin and cherry blossoms, Washington, D.C.Washington.org

  • 20130328msttk-a.jpg

    Young visitors enjoy story time at the National Air and Space Museumâs Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center.Dane Penland

  • 20130328msttk-b.jpg

    Learning about Japanese screens at the Smithsonian's Freer Sackler Galleries.Freer Sackler Galleries

  • 20130328msttk-c.jpg

    Boy participates in a paper airplane contest in the National Air and Space Museum's How Things Fly gallery.Smithsonian Institution

  • 20130328msttk-d.jpg

    The Jefferson Memorial, Washington, D.C.Washington.org

Got your umbrella?

On a rainy day, grab an umbrella and go to the National Mall in Washington, D.C. "Nobody's there," reports 11-year-old Sean, who is from suburban Virginia and was one of the local and visiting kids we interviewed for my new "Kid's Guide to Washington, D.C." While you are there, pick up a mini Washington Monument, "The best souvenir from Washington, D.C.!" offers William, 12, who lives in suburban Maryland.

Take time to read the quotes on the wall of the Lincoln Memorial, suggests Hayley, 13, from Fort Worth, Texas. "My favorite place that I visited in Washington, D.C., was the Lincoln Memorial," she said, adding that she especially enjoyed reading the quotes on the walls.

Any parent or grandparent who has traveled with kids knows that if the kids are happy and engaged, everyone will have a good time. It makes sense. No one wants to be dragged along -- especially on vacation -- doing someone else's bidding.

Of course, when we were kids, no one asked us where we wanted to go on vacation or what we wanted to do when we got there. We were told we were lucky to be going anywhere -- I especially remember my dad saying that when he shepherded us from memorial to monument in Washington, D.C. -- and I guess we were. But these days, according to the newest Portrait of American Travelers research, among leisure travelers who have kids at home, six out of 10 surveyed report that their kids actively help with planning what their families will do for fun.

More parents reported that their kids are involved in planning what they do on vacation (57 percent) than what they watch on TV (50 percent). Fifty-five percent of those polled for this major national study said the kids have a role in deciding where to go; more than a third helped decide on the hotel. (Note: Hotel Industry: If you want parents to book, you've got to appeal to their kids!)

Certainly you aren't going to let the kids dictate a trip that is beyond your budget, no matter how appealing the hotel's water playground or how badly they want to ride the London Eye, see a Broadway play or step into the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando. But once you decide where you want and can afford to go this spring break and summer, invite the kids -- if you haven't already -- to help plan the itinerary. Think of how much that will de-stress the experience for you. The kids can't whine or blame you if they don't like the tour, the restaurant or the theme park attraction they chose.

Park them in front of the computer -- where they live anyway -- and suggest they start planning. (Just make sure each child in the family has an equal say. Parents get a vote, too, and here's a tip: Kids will be more accommodating to your picks when they've had a say in the itinerary.)

This is easier than ever since you can take virtual tours to just about anywhere you might want to go -- from Orlando's theme parks to the Smithsonian, which incidentally, has a terrific website for kids with online activities to prepare them for their visit. (They can try their hand at planetary research before they visit the National Air and Space Museum or check out the traits they share with other mammals before heading to the National Museum of Natural History.)

On the Smithsonian's site, you can also find special activities for families like the Art a la Cart program at The Smithsonian American Art Museum or the chance to meet a Kiwi bird from New Zealand (did you know they don't fly?) at the National Zoo. Let's not forget all the apps that will help kids lead the way in Washington, D.C. There's even a free one from the National Park Service for the National Mall compatible with the Android, iPhone and iPad.

Also check out the FamilyiTrips Washington, D.C., available at the iTunes store for $3.99, which lists more than 250 attractions and is the most comprehensive Washington, D.C. family app around.

One reason Washington, D.C., is a good place to let kids lead the way is because so many of the attractions are free -- the monuments, all of the Smithsonian's 19 museums, including the National Zoo, visits to the Capitol or the Supreme Court, a walk on the African American Heritage Trail or a hike in the enormous (more than 1,754 acres) Rock Creek Park.

Even the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has free daily performances -- at 6 p.m. on the Millennium Stage. So what if the kids' pick turns out to be a dud, or they get bored in the museum? Move on! Better yet, go outside on the National Mall and turn cartwheels or fly a kite! Let's not forget we are in the midst of the National Cherry Blossom Festival, which lasts until mid-April and includes Family Days (March 23 to 24) and the National Cherry Blossom Festival Parade (April 13).

Come back to view the monuments at night. That doesn't cost anything, either. "They were all lit up beautifully," said 11-year-old Greta, from Boise, Idaho. "My favorite memory from Washington, D.C., was visiting all the monuments in the dark."

Creating those memories, of course, is what family vacations are all about. Just make sure you've got the camera -- and the umbrella.

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog. Follow "taking the kids" on www.twitter.com, where Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.


View the original article here

Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 3, 2013

Taking the Kids -- on an Easter weekend getaway

  • easter1.jpg

    Kids at play at Hershey Gardens.Hershey Gardens

  • easter3.jpg

    The culinary room at Atlantis in the Bahamas, which has a first-rate kids-size demonstration kitchen for their COOKSPLY program.Atlantis

  • easter2.jpg

    Easter fun at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay.Ritz-Carlton

Got your bunny ears?

It's Easter Sunday and at the sumptuous brunch at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay in California, little girls are dressed in brightly colored dresses, boys in dress shirts that don't want to stay in their pants and kids and grown-ups proudly sport bunny ears, some with blinking lights. Outside there was an Easter egg hunt going on and a visiting petting zoo with baby goats, chicks and bunnies.

But the real attraction -- other than the drop-dead gorgeous views of the Pacific Coast -- is the food -- sushi, dim sum, corn bisque, chilled mint pea soup, Peking duck, roast beef, ham, Thai curry, freshly shucked oysters and shrimp -- some 300 choices in all, much of it locally sourced -- the fruits, vegetables, chicken, beef, ham and lamb. And despite all the kids, there's not a chicken finger in sight.

"I don't do kids food at the brunch," says Xavier Salomon, the executive chef at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay, and he adds, parents rarely ask for it -- not when kids can eat delectable mashed potatoes, roast beef, just-made sushi rolls, veggies in season and mini quiches that they can serve themselves. "And, of course, they go crazy for the desserts," he says with a smile -- Nutella crepes, apple, blackberry and peach marshmallows, chocolate mousse, flan, tiny tarts, fresh berries and cream and miniature cakes too pretty to eat (chocolate raspberry dome, anyone?)

Chef Salomon says he's most proud that the food at the brunch is so fresh, coming from a dozen local farms and purveyors with 11 chefs cooking, slicing and serving as we eat -- shucking oysters, carving ham and beef, cutting chicken. No wonder this brunch is so popular in the Bay Area that people drive an hour or more to indulge. For some, it becomes an annual tradition to celebrate a birthday -- or Easter.

Half Moon Bay famous for its fall pumpkin crop and pumpkin festival, of course, is also known for its spectacular beaches, redwood forests and hiking trails along the bluffs. The region south of San Francisco also offers terrific opportunities for families that want their kids to see where their food comes from. There are farms here that date back to the 1800s and many welcome visitors. Kids will especially like Harley Farms Goat Dairy in Pescadero, where they can ogle the baby goats and sample goat cheese and fudge made with goat milk.

This coast with its hidden coves, thick fog and isolated canyons was ideal for Canadian rum runners and local moonshiners. Now there are farms, miles of beaches (here's the place to horseback ride along the beach), redwood forests and countless trails. There's whale-watching through April, kayaking, fishing, and of course, the chance to sample plenty of farm-to-table eats.

The hotel sits high on scenic bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean with two golf courses, tennis courts, walking trails to the beach and outdoor fire pits. Some of the rooms even have their own private fire pits where guests can sit and take in the ocean views while the kids make s'mores with the hotel' s'mores kits. Fun!

Wherever you live or are visiting, spring is a great time to visit a farm (all of those baby animals) or a farmer's market (all of those fresh veggies). (It's not too late for a spring getaway. 

You'll find plenty of ideas on the Taking the Kids Spring Break Adventures Guide.

Vacation is also a great time to encourage kids to try new foods and if you can afford it, splurge on a "special" meal, like an Easter brunch. It's guaranteed to be memorable. (Another over-the-top brunch your gang is guaranteed to like is at the historic Broadmoor at the base of Pikes Peak in Colorado Springs, Colo. (The kids will love the chocolate fountain!)

Of course, it's not just big fancy places where you can enjoy a memorable meal. At Dorothy's Tamales in Fair Play, Colo., for example, we chatted up Dorothy, the 70-something grandmother and mother of eight, who has won a loyal following for the tamales she learned to make from her grandmother.

You can also get your junior foodies into the kitchen. In Hershey, Pa., this spring, the Chocolate Lab at the Hershey Story offers chocolate-themed classes daily, including Chocolate Bird Nests, "Eggs-citing" Chocolate Creations and Hoppin' Chocolate Bunnies. Kids are also invited to construct an old-fashioned toy pinwheel in the "Sugar, Spice, Slugs and Snails: Childhood in Early America" exhibit on Saturdays and Sundays in April from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

And this summer, kids and teens not only get cooking lessons at Vermont's Essex Resort and Spa's Camp Cook, but they visit the chicken coop, the onsite gardens and local farms. (Rates start at $199 per night per room; the price for Camp Cook is $400 per child per week, not including taxes.)

Georgia's Jekyll Island Club Hotel also offers a kids cooking camp this summer. And Atlantis in the Bahamas has a first-rate kids-size demonstration kitchen for their COOKSPLY program where your budding chefs, ages 6 to 12, can take a break from the sun and waterslides for a few hours and make molten chocolate cakes, homemade pretzels and more.

Maybe you've got kids who think they've got an idea for the next best snack. Take them to visit a local food factory. A perennial favorite is Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream Factory tour in Waterbury, Vt., complete with ice cream samples. It's impressive that milk for all the ice cream produced here comes from Vermont cows!

Did you know that the national headquarters for PEZ candies is in Orange, Conn.? You can even watch the production process and make your own dispenser.

In Half Moon Bay, we spent the weekend hiking and eating -- from local cheese and freshly baked bread to just-harvested asparagus. We whet our appetite for the Easter brunch by taking a long walk along the coastal trail, as popular with local dog walkers as with visitors.

We arrived for brunch determined not to feel guilty about our Easter indulgence.

Another dumpling, please; and pass the chocolate dome!

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog. Follow "taking the kids" on www.twitter.com, where Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.


View the original article here

Thứ Sáu, 22 tháng 3, 2013

Taking the Kids -- on an Easter weekend getaway

  • easter1.jpg

    Kids at play at Hershey Gardens.Hershey Gardens

  • easter3.jpg

    The culinary room at Atlantis in the Bahamas, which has a first-rate kids-size demonstration kitchen for their COOKSPLY program.Atlantis

  • easter2.jpg

    Easter fun at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay.Ritz-Carlton

Got your bunny ears?

It's Easter Sunday and at the sumptuous brunch at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay in California, little girls are dressed in brightly colored dresses, boys in dress shirts that don't want to stay in their pants and kids and grown-ups proudly sport bunny ears, some with blinking lights. Outside there was an Easter egg hunt going on and a visiting petting zoo with baby goats, chicks and bunnies.

But the real attraction -- other than the drop-dead gorgeous views of the Pacific Coast -- is the food -- sushi, dim sum, corn bisque, chilled mint pea soup, Peking duck, roast beef, ham, Thai curry, freshly shucked oysters and shrimp -- some 300 choices in all, much of it locally sourced -- the fruits, vegetables, chicken, beef, ham and lamb. And despite all the kids, there's not a chicken finger in sight.

"I don't do kids food at the brunch," says Xavier Salomon, the executive chef at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay, and he adds, parents rarely ask for it -- not when kids can eat delectable mashed potatoes, roast beef, just-made sushi rolls, veggies in season and mini quiches that they can serve themselves. "And, of course, they go crazy for the desserts," he says with a smile -- Nutella crepes, apple, blackberry and peach marshmallows, chocolate mousse, flan, tiny tarts, fresh berries and cream and miniature cakes too pretty to eat (chocolate raspberry dome, anyone?)

Chef Salomon says he's most proud that the food at the brunch is so fresh, coming from a dozen local farms and purveyors with 11 chefs cooking, slicing and serving as we eat -- shucking oysters, carving ham and beef, cutting chicken. No wonder this brunch is so popular in the Bay Area that people drive an hour or more to indulge. For some, it becomes an annual tradition to celebrate a birthday -- or Easter.

Half Moon Bay famous for its fall pumpkin crop and pumpkin festival, of course, is also known for its spectacular beaches, redwood forests and hiking trails along the bluffs. The region south of San Francisco also offers terrific opportunities for families that want their kids to see where their food comes from. There are farms here that date back to the 1800s and many welcome visitors. Kids will especially like Harley Farms Goat Dairy in Pescadero, where they can ogle the baby goats and sample goat cheese and fudge made with goat milk.

This coast with its hidden coves, thick fog and isolated canyons was ideal for Canadian rum runners and local moonshiners. Now there are farms, miles of beaches (here's the place to horseback ride along the beach), redwood forests and countless trails. There's whale-watching through April, kayaking, fishing, and of course, the chance to sample plenty of farm-to-table eats.

The hotel sits high on scenic bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean with two golf courses, tennis courts, walking trails to the beach and outdoor fire pits. Some of the rooms even have their own private fire pits where guests can sit and take in the ocean views while the kids make s'mores with the hotel' s'mores kits. Fun!

Wherever you live or are visiting, spring is a great time to visit a farm (all of those baby animals) or a farmer's market (all of those fresh veggies). (It's not too late for a spring getaway. 

You'll find plenty of ideas on the Taking the Kids Spring Break Adventures Guide.

Vacation is also a great time to encourage kids to try new foods and if you can afford it, splurge on a "special" meal, like an Easter brunch. It's guaranteed to be memorable. (Another over-the-top brunch your gang is guaranteed to like is at the historic Broadmoor at the base of Pikes Peak in Colorado Springs, Colo. (The kids will love the chocolate fountain!)

Of course, it's not just big fancy places where you can enjoy a memorable meal. At Dorothy's Tamales in Fair Play, Colo., for example, we chatted up Dorothy, the 70-something grandmother and mother of eight, who has won a loyal following for the tamales she learned to make from her grandmother.

You can also get your junior foodies into the kitchen. In Hershey, Pa., this spring, the Chocolate Lab at the Hershey Story offers chocolate-themed classes daily, including Chocolate Bird Nests, "Eggs-citing" Chocolate Creations and Hoppin' Chocolate Bunnies. Kids are also invited to construct an old-fashioned toy pinwheel in the "Sugar, Spice, Slugs and Snails: Childhood in Early America" exhibit on Saturdays and Sundays in April from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

And this summer, kids and teens not only get cooking lessons at Vermont's Essex Resort and Spa's Camp Cook, but they visit the chicken coop, the onsite gardens and local farms. (Rates start at $199 per night per room; the price for Camp Cook is $400 per child per week, not including taxes.)

Georgia's Jekyll Island Club Hotel also offers a kids cooking camp this summer. And Atlantis in the Bahamas has a first-rate kids-size demonstration kitchen for their COOKSPLY program where your budding chefs, ages 6 to 12, can take a break from the sun and waterslides for a few hours and make molten chocolate cakes, homemade pretzels and more.

Maybe you've got kids who think they've got an idea for the next best snack. Take them to visit a local food factory. A perennial favorite is Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream Factory tour in Waterbury, Vt., complete with ice cream samples. It's impressive that milk for all the ice cream produced here comes from Vermont cows!

Did you know that the national headquarters for PEZ candies is in Orange, Conn.? You can even watch the production process and make your own dispenser.

In Half Moon Bay, we spent the weekend hiking and eating -- from local cheese and freshly baked bread to just-harvested asparagus. We whet our appetite for the Easter brunch by taking a long walk along the coastal trail, as popular with local dog walkers as with visitors.

We arrived for brunch determined not to feel guilty about our Easter indulgence.

Another dumpling, please; and pass the chocolate dome!

Eileen Ogintz is a syndicated columnist and writes about family travel on her Taking the Kids blog. Follow "taking the kids" on www.twitter.com, where Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.


View the original article here