Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

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A Tourist With a Shovel and a Hoe

When she arrived in Kenya to volunteer with the Maasai, Daniela Petrova looked down her nose at tourists there to have a good time. But was her own motivation much different?

ASK ROLF
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How Should I Spend My Time in Spain?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

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Paul Theroux: Invisible Man on a Ghost Train

Jim Benning asks the author of “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star” about his new book, aging and the challenge of disappearing in the age of the BlackBerry

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Eat Ceviche in Lima

Grab a Cusqueña and get comfortable. As Nicholas Gill explains, a trip to a Peruvian cevichería can be an all-day immersion in good conversation and raw seafood.

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Unsentimental Journeys: Wrestling With Paul Theroux

Bronwen Dickey considers “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star: 28,000 Miles in Search of the Great Railway Bazaar”

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My Travels, My Feet

After taking one too many headless torso shots of herself, solo traveler Sophia Dembling started snapping photos of her feet around the world, from the Grand Canyon to Red Square


THE LIST
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Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign Fling

Sure, having an overseas romance is fun. But Terry Ward points out seven other benefits to cross-border love, mon petit chou.

TRAVEL BLOG
7.9.07

When Are Children Old Enough to Travel Abroad?

imageI’m a new father, and as I suspected, my wanderlust didn’t subside with the birth of my daughter. So I pored over Beth J. Harpaz’s recent AP story exploring whether children can be too young to travel abroad—Harpaz put the question to a number of well-traveled women and mothers, including Pauline Frommer and Maureen Wheeler. The general consensus: Children under 3 or 4 don’t get much out of it, although at some deep level it might instill in them a sense of adventure and curiosity. Wheeler, who co-founded Lonely Planet, told Harpaz, “I started traveling with my children when they were babies and that’s just stupid. It was exhausting.” But she added, “I honestly think that it gave them an attitude for life, because they learned to be very flexible.”

From the parents’ standpoint, traveling with children can have at least one surprising benefit.

Elisa Bernick, author of “The Family Sabbatical Handbook: The Budget Guide to Living Abroad with Your Family,” told Harpaz that moving to Mexico with her 2-year-old and 7-year-old made getting to know people easier: “One of the primary benefits was that they were the best little diplomats. Kids were our passports into that world.”

I suspect settling into a place, rather than hopping trains and catching lots of planes, helped make the experience so positive.

My one complaint about Harpaz’s story: She didn’t talk to any traveling dads. So I e-mailed travel writers/fathers Tony Perrottet and Larry Habegger to get their take on traveling with kids.

Perrottet, author of “Pagan Holiday” and a World Hum contributor, told me he thinks the AP story “reflects our strange need to find hard and fast rules on how to deal with kids. I don’t think there are any. Except that it really helps all involved to have a pool in your hotel at the end of the day.”

He added:

Parentood in general involves long stretches of agony punctuated by moments of euphoria, so I don’t know why traveling with kids should be any different! But I don’t think it’s ever too early to take kids traveling. We took Henry to the Great Barrier Reef when he was 9 months old and it was great...he was in St Lucia at 3 months, Spain at 12 months...you could say he “got nothing out of it,” but I think it affected his general outlook on life—he’s pretty adaptable, even for a New York kid. Of course, we didn’t take the trips for him—we took them for us, and wanted him along! Sam has traveled a bit less, but has still been to sand islands in tropical Australia, explored the BVIs, toured up and down the West etc., at the age of two.

In general, I guess European cities are less appealing places to take kids, because they hinge on museums and sitting still in restaurants, etc., and a lot of adults can’t quite manage the attention span involved—running wild in the natural corners of the Caribbean, etc. are more relaxing vacations, if that’s what you’re after—but I was just in Venice, and I saw kids having a ball on the ferries, exploring the map room of the Doge’s Palace and so on. It all depends on the kid, depends on the time, depends on the parents.

Habegger of Travelers’ Tales agrees that there isn’t a right or wrong answer.

He wrote:

Any age is fine for taking kids overseas. Ideally, though, they’d be at least 3 years old so they don’t have to be carried everywhere. But I’ve traveled with kids when they were 6 months old and a year and a half, and once you’re off your flight you can get into your rhythms pretty quickly. Dealing with diapers is a nuisance, but you get used to it. When they’re out of diapers they’re a lot easier and that gives you a lot more flexibility. Naturally your travels have to take into account your kids’ interests, but that’s true when you’re home, too. So your travels adapt depending on the kids’ ages. I’ve been all over Ireland, Switzerland, Paris, and parts of Australia with my two daughters at various ages and found the only difficulties were the long flight (on a bad routing) to Australia.

My girls are now 7 and almost 10. Things change as they get older and have different interests. Possibly the most important change is pretty soon my daughter may not want to go away because she won’t want to leave her friends. Now I can just say, we’re going, and we go. When she’s a teenager I expect it may not be so easy to do that.

In any case, traveling with my children has been great, and we’ve been abroad almost every year since my youngest was 6 months old.

That’s encouraging. I like the idea of simply changing the way my wife and I travel, at least in the early years. Instead of hitting several cities on an overseas trip and moving around often, we’ll spend a week or two in one place, renting an apartment, or even house-swapping, trying to balance exploring our surroundings with settling into a daily routine for the benefit of our daughter.

Related on World Hum:
* Wanderlust-Inspiring Travel Books for Kids
* Andrew Steves: Travels in Dad’s Footsteps
* ‘Vamos a Cuba’: Should the Children’s Book be Removed from Miami Schools?
* Youth Travel on the Rise

Photo by Silfverduk via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

Posted by Jim Benning • 7.9.07
Categories: WeblogFamily TravelGlobal Village

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COMMENTS

Our daughter Charlotte is now 9 years old, at three she traveled with us to New Zealand where we all spent a grand time. While it is true she remembers very little it did give her the traveling bug.  Since then she’s been to London a number of times (lots of theatre) but her best trip was to Egypt where she definitely wants to go back.  She was 7 years old when we went and she had a great time - especially having ner neck drapped with a defanged cobra.

By  on  7.10.07  at  06:13 AM

I took my 3 month old to Jamaica and found it actually quite effortless. I was inspired by my sister in law whose parents moved her to Japan when she was two. She has 12 brothers and sisters and has seen half the world. Now clearly her parents are some kind of odd superparents but I after having taken my child on her first trip and making sure I didn’t do it alone I see the benefit of well travelled children. I pasted a URL that actually focuses on child travel and its importance.

By Natalie Arthur  on  7.10.07  at  07:58 AM

We got our daughter’s passport at age 3 and started traveling abroad with her then. Maybe if we could have just flown to one place and stayed there I would have done it earlier, but traveling with a baby is a pain and traveling with a toddler who can’t walk is pure hell if you ask me. You have to haul twice as much luggage along and you spend a lot of time dealing with frustration. For me, that was hard enough just going to grandmas--forget going overseas somewhere! Now that’s she’s six, it’s a dream. As a day at Disney World will show you, most parents would be better off waiting longer than they do to embark on trying days of travel.

By Tim  on  7.10.07  at  12:34 PM

I learned a nice little lesson while traveling in Portugal in May. I’m pregnant with my first child, and had been feeling rather down after the first trimester. In America, nobody could tell I was pregnant because I hadn’t started to show, but the Portuguese must have some sixth sense about babies: use any cliche to describe the delicacy of pregnant women, and it applied to me. I got free pastries foisted on me in wine bars because the waitress thought I looked peaky. An old man hobbling on two canes and carrying many bags practically forced me into his seat on a rickety tram because he said I’d fall over and have to go to the hospital.

Sounds cheesy to say, but being in a country that loves children so unconditionally and communally made me view my pregnancy in a much better, more cheerful light. I think the same could apply when traveling with young children—it’s not just what we hope they’ll get out of it, it’s what we can learn about our own attitudes toward parenthood.

By Antonia  on  7.10.07  at  01:09 PM

My oldest child boarded a plane for Moscow when he was just 5 weeks old. We were there until he turned 1, when we moved to Armenia. At 3, he moved with us to Kazakhstan, where our second child was born. Now we have three children, and we live with them (and a dog) in Beijing.

I have to say: the GETTING there is a pain, but the BEING there is fabulous.

My eldest, now 7, has seen Red Square and Mt. Ararat. My youngest, now 1, just took her first walk on the Great Wall of China last weekend.

My kids can be as annoying as the next ones, but from all of this travel, they’ve gained an understanding of how well off we as Americans are (well, the 1-year-old doesn’t get it yet, but she will soon enough).

I say, take ‘em as soon as you can afford the tickets. But make sure their vaccines are up-to-date, don’t take them anywhere dangerous, carry medevac insurance (we’ve had some close calls) and bring lots of lollipops for those interminable airline flights…

By Donna  on  9.20.07  at  03:43 AM

very interesting…

can you tell me litle bit more about that, infact I gave my tips too, pls check on the http://stonechok.blogspot.com for more info.

thanks and warmest regards…

By Stone Chok  on  9.30.07  at  10:50 PM

Just thought I share this with you.  I emailed Dr Courtney after reading your dad’s email.  She suggested that we read this article.

By  on  7.11.08  at  02:19 PM


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