École pour notre fille en voyage: cours du CNED?
by Rove
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Nous préparons notre voyage au long court à travers l'Asie.
Notre fille va faire son ce1 on the road, j'aimerais avoir un aperçu de vos expériences d'enseignement à distance.
Quand faut-il avertir l'inspection académique, vaut-il mieux prendre les cours au cned ? Qu'est-ce qui est obligatoire ?
Combien d'heures par jour de travail ? etc...
merci de vos conseils
- à autant de projets de voyages familiaux autant de réponses ! On ne peut donner des "recettes" en la matière. Le choix du CNED ou non + nombre d'heures de travail/jour est déterminé par votre organisation personnelle et ce que vous vivrez en voyage (bougerez-vous beaucoup ? aurez-vous un accés internet facile ? combien de kilogs d'affaires scolaires êtes-vous en capacité de transiter ?...)
Il y a des familles qui partent sans le CNED (nous en faisons partie) et d'autres avec. Les 2 systèmes sont interessants.
- selon les textes légaux, l'école n'est pas obligatoire, seule l'enseignement l'est.
- rencontrer d'abord les enseignants de votre enfant et envisager avec eux comment vous allez pallier au suivi scolaire puis téléphoner à l'inspection pour faire de même puis courrier. Vous pouvez faire cela quand vous voulez dans l'année qui précède votre départ.
cf le moteur de recherche sur VF où de nombrex post à ce sujet existent déjà....
cf le moteur de recherche sur VF où de nombrex post à ce sujet existent déjà....
www.ceciletoulonneau.com
Bonjour,
Nous partons en août 2010 pendant 1 an en Asie avec nos 3 enfants (14 1/2, 10 , 5 ans au moment du départ). Nous avons rencontré les enseignants de nos enfants et ceux concernés par le retour (les deux grandes font leur 2nde et leur 6e pendant le voyage). Si ils adhèrent au projet, ils peuvent être de très bons conseils (ils vont nous donner les fichiers GS maternelle pour notre fils). Nous avons fait le choix du CNED pour les deux grandes car les cours sont sans manuels et sur CD-Rom avec possibilité d'envois des devoirs par internet. Par contre nous achetons deux ordis ultra-portable pour qu'elles puissent travailler. Attention, le CNED n'envoie pas les cours en une seule fois, il faut donc prévoir le moyen de les récupérer en cours de route ...
Si vous avez d'autres questions, n'hésitez pas, on a pas mal "bossé" le sujet.
Par curiosité, vous faites quel parcours ?
Nous partons en août 2010 pendant 1 an en Asie avec nos 3 enfants (14 1/2, 10 , 5 ans au moment du départ). Nous avons rencontré les enseignants de nos enfants et ceux concernés par le retour (les deux grandes font leur 2nde et leur 6e pendant le voyage). Si ils adhèrent au projet, ils peuvent être de très bons conseils (ils vont nous donner les fichiers GS maternelle pour notre fils). Nous avons fait le choix du CNED pour les deux grandes car les cours sont sans manuels et sur CD-Rom avec possibilité d'envois des devoirs par internet. Par contre nous achetons deux ordis ultra-portable pour qu'elles puissent travailler. Attention, le CNED n'envoie pas les cours en une seule fois, il faut donc prévoir le moyen de les récupérer en cours de route ...
Si vous avez d'autres questions, n'hésitez pas, on a pas mal "bossé" le sujet.
Par curiosité, vous faites quel parcours ?
En balade en Asie avec nos 4 enfants pendant 1 an : www.heureuxquicommenous.fr
Bonjour,
en fait la question c'est que pour le Ce1 je me demande si c'est bien utile de payer le Cned, le programme étant assez
"facile". J'ai appelé l'inspection , je dois rédiger un courrier vers le mois d'avril, je suis ok. Je dis ça parce que il y a tellement de trucs à penser !!!!! comme vous je suppose! Nous allons aussi emmener un petit ordi portable.
Je réfléchis surtout à la première partie du voyage en train avec un petit de deux ans je pense qu'il va falloir jouer de créativité pour occuper tout ce temps !
Nous on pars en juillet : paris, moscou, lac baîkal, oulan bator, pekin, traversée de la chine, laos, birmanie, thailande, vietnam, indonésie (après la chine le reste s'organisera au fur et à mesure)
Et vous votre itinéraire ?
Bonjour tout le monde !
C'est génial, je suis super contente de tomber sur ce post, car il y a beaucoup de messages ds VF sur ce sujet, mais pas forcément récents, et c'est cool d'avoir des infos et expériences récentes sur le CNED !
Alors c'est marrant, nous aussi nous partons en famille avec notre fille de 11 ans en aout 2010, direction l'Asie du Sud Est (rien de défini pour l'instant mais nous aimerions aller en Thailande, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodge, Malaisie, Japon...)!
Dalmace, c'est très intéressant tout ce que tu dis là pour tes 2 filles : pas de manuel, cours sur CD ROM et envoi des devoirs par mail (ça me paraissait incroyable que cela ne soit pas possible, et envoyer des devoirs dans des délais quand on est à l'autre bout du monde, je pense que c'est pas simple...et que ça doit etre un sacré budget !). Tout ce que j'ai lu jusqu'a présent + sur le site du CNED disait que l'on pouvait avoir les cours sur CD ROM, mais obligation d'envoyer les devoirs par courrier, + manuels à acheter (équivalent à une dizaine de kg apparemment !)... As-tu contacté directement le CNED pour avoir ces infos ? Notre fille va faire son année de 5eme pendant le voyage, et elle aura aussi son ordi portable (netbook) pour pouvoir travailler... As-tu pour ta part déjà contacté l'inspection ? Les inscriptions au CNED se font à partir de mai c'est ça ? J'ai lu qu'il faut environ 4h/jour sur 6 jours/semaine d'heures de travail (au collège) ? As-tu d'autres échos ?
Rove c'est intéressant de savoir qu'il faut envoyer le courrier à l'inspection vers le mois d'avril, je n'arrivais pas à avoir d'infos précises à ce sujet !
Merci d'avance pour vos expériences et infos !
C'est génial, je suis super contente de tomber sur ce post, car il y a beaucoup de messages ds VF sur ce sujet, mais pas forcément récents, et c'est cool d'avoir des infos et expériences récentes sur le CNED !
Alors c'est marrant, nous aussi nous partons en famille avec notre fille de 11 ans en aout 2010, direction l'Asie du Sud Est (rien de défini pour l'instant mais nous aimerions aller en Thailande, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodge, Malaisie, Japon...)!
Dalmace, c'est très intéressant tout ce que tu dis là pour tes 2 filles : pas de manuel, cours sur CD ROM et envoi des devoirs par mail (ça me paraissait incroyable que cela ne soit pas possible, et envoyer des devoirs dans des délais quand on est à l'autre bout du monde, je pense que c'est pas simple...et que ça doit etre un sacré budget !). Tout ce que j'ai lu jusqu'a présent + sur le site du CNED disait que l'on pouvait avoir les cours sur CD ROM, mais obligation d'envoyer les devoirs par courrier, + manuels à acheter (équivalent à une dizaine de kg apparemment !)... As-tu contacté directement le CNED pour avoir ces infos ? Notre fille va faire son année de 5eme pendant le voyage, et elle aura aussi son ordi portable (netbook) pour pouvoir travailler... As-tu pour ta part déjà contacté l'inspection ? Les inscriptions au CNED se font à partir de mai c'est ça ? J'ai lu qu'il faut environ 4h/jour sur 6 jours/semaine d'heures de travail (au collège) ? As-tu d'autres échos ?
Rove c'est intéressant de savoir qu'il faut envoyer le courrier à l'inspection vers le mois d'avril, je n'arrivais pas à avoir d'infos précises à ce sujet !
Merci d'avance pour vos expériences et infos !
Bonjour,
Pour nous le choix du CNED (bien que je sois enseignante) est celui d'une certaine paix de l'esprit, pas de cours ni de programme à organiser. Pour le parcours, on part dans l'autre sens : France - Autriche-Hongrie - Roumanie - Turquie - Syrie - Arménie - Géorgie - Aezrbaïdjan - Turkménistant - Ouzbékistan - Kazakhstan - Kirghizstan - Chine - Népal - Inde - (avion) - Singapour - Malaisie - Thaïlande - Laos - Cambodge - Vietnam - Chine - (peut-être Japon) -Mongolie - Russie - Finlande - Allemagne - France
Pour nous le choix du CNED (bien que je sois enseignante) est celui d'une certaine paix de l'esprit, pas de cours ni de programme à organiser. Pour le parcours, on part dans l'autre sens : France - Autriche-Hongrie - Roumanie - Turquie - Syrie - Arménie - Géorgie - Aezrbaïdjan - Turkménistant - Ouzbékistan - Kazakhstan - Kirghizstan - Chine - Népal - Inde - (avion) - Singapour - Malaisie - Thaïlande - Laos - Cambodge - Vietnam - Chine - (peut-être Japon) -Mongolie - Russie - Finlande - Allemagne - France
En balade en Asie avec nos 4 enfants pendant 1 an : www.heureuxquicommenous.fr
wahou ! joli programme Dalmace 😉!
alors pour ce qui est du temps de travail par le cned, ca depends vraiment de chacun, de son rythme d apprentissage et tout, mais pour avoir fait ma terminale par le cned et sans etre une tete de classe, voici comment j ai fais :
septembre à novembre, inscrite au lycée, à rien faire (sans commentaires 😛 ) et apres :
reprise en main en decembre, inscription au cned, reception des cours en janvier, boulot 5 jours par semaine de 9H à 13 H puis de 15 H30 à 18H parfois un peu plus, en bossant que le matin pendant les vacances et j ai eu mon bac, sachant que mai etait consacré aux revisions.
donc avec un peu d organisation le programme peut largement etre bouclé sur une année, meme en voyage ! 😉 parce que l avantage est qu on avance a son rythme, si on comprends un truc en 2 heures, hop on passe à la suite on attends pas, et quand on bosse, on avance, pas besoin d y revenir ou de faire des devoirs !
"ils ne savaient pas que c etait impossible, alors ils l ont fait."
rolala je ne sais pas si vous êtes déjà allés en Thaïlande, laos, Vietnam mais nous on "connais" avec les enfants et on y retourne car on sait que ça va être génial ! Pour le reste : découverte.
avec une grande de 11 ans : à mon avis ça va être formidable (pas de problème de lait ou de couches !!!!!!).
à bientôt
ouahou ! génial votre périple.
Et tout ça par vos propres moyens de transport ? train ? rando ?
avez-vous déjà expérimenté ce genre d'aventure avec vos enfants ?
pour la mongolie et la russie quels moyens de transport vous avez prévu (je m'interroge beaucoup, et je ne sais plus par quel bout m'y prendre pour avoir un semblant d'organisation!!)
Bonjour,
Effectivement comme on trouvait beaucoup d'infos contradictoires et négatives sur le CNED, on les a appelé directement et nous avons également exploré leur site longuement. Je confirme donc qu'au niveau collège et lycée il y a peu voire pas du tout de manuel selon les options, sur le site du CNED on peut trouver la liste, si vous ne trouvez dites le moi j'essayerai de retrouver le lien. Les cours du CNED sont bien faits et englobent bien tout le programme. Pour le niveau primaire, je ne sais pas mais pour les niveaux collège et lycée qui nous concernent, le CNED me semble plus facile qu'organiser moi-même les cours dans toutes les matières et options.
Pour le temps de travail, le contrat avec les filles est : pas de vacances scolaires, pas de we et démarrage des apprentissages en août (par nos propres moyens puisque les cours du CNED démarrent mi-septembre) pour prendre de l'avance. Ensuite le temps de travail sera fonction des activités/lieux/avancement du programme. Au mieux ce sera 2h par jour et bien sûr pas tous les jours, on s'adaptera au fur et à mesure.
Pour l'itinéraire, ça c'est l'itinéraire idéal, là aussi on verra au fur et à mesure. Les transports se feront à pieds, bus, trains, et une seule fois l'avion pour sortir d'Inde. En Russie, on veut prendre le transsibérien par petits tronçons, en Mongolie on va tenter les bus très très locaux c'est faisable mais il faut y croire ! Sinon en fonction de nos finances, on prendra une voiture de location (avec chauffeur obligatoirement). Rove et Loula, comment prévoyez-vous les déplacements et l'hébergement ? Et pour le paludisme ?
Effectivement comme on trouvait beaucoup d'infos contradictoires et négatives sur le CNED, on les a appelé directement et nous avons également exploré leur site longuement. Je confirme donc qu'au niveau collège et lycée il y a peu voire pas du tout de manuel selon les options, sur le site du CNED on peut trouver la liste, si vous ne trouvez dites le moi j'essayerai de retrouver le lien. Les cours du CNED sont bien faits et englobent bien tout le programme. Pour le niveau primaire, je ne sais pas mais pour les niveaux collège et lycée qui nous concernent, le CNED me semble plus facile qu'organiser moi-même les cours dans toutes les matières et options.
Pour le temps de travail, le contrat avec les filles est : pas de vacances scolaires, pas de we et démarrage des apprentissages en août (par nos propres moyens puisque les cours du CNED démarrent mi-septembre) pour prendre de l'avance. Ensuite le temps de travail sera fonction des activités/lieux/avancement du programme. Au mieux ce sera 2h par jour et bien sûr pas tous les jours, on s'adaptera au fur et à mesure.
Pour l'itinéraire, ça c'est l'itinéraire idéal, là aussi on verra au fur et à mesure. Les transports se feront à pieds, bus, trains, et une seule fois l'avion pour sortir d'Inde. En Russie, on veut prendre le transsibérien par petits tronçons, en Mongolie on va tenter les bus très très locaux c'est faisable mais il faut y croire ! Sinon en fonction de nos finances, on prendra une voiture de location (avec chauffeur obligatoirement). Rove et Loula, comment prévoyez-vous les déplacements et l'hébergement ? Et pour le paludisme ?
En balade en Asie avec nos 4 enfants pendant 1 an : www.heureuxquicommenous.fr
Pour le début du voyage, on compte prendre l'avion paris-moscou et ensuite on est en train de chercher quelqu'un à moscou qui nous prendrait nos billets pour le transsibérien. On a un budget serré et le prix des billets à partir d'ici est très élevé. A partir de la Chine et jusqu'à la fin on fera comme on pourra avec un maximum de trajets en train plus pratique et moins cahotique avec les petits.
En Thailande on louera une voiture pendant plusieurs jours sinon (train, bus de nuit, minivan)
Pour le palu, on va surement prendre du lariam 'une prise par semaine)pour les zones sensibles(nord de la thailande, laos, birmanie) d'autant qu'on y sera pour la saison des pluies.
J'ai rendez-vous au dispensaire où je vais rencontrer un médecin spécialisé dans les voyages.
On a déjà pris du lariam il y a 3 ans sur une longue durée et on n'a pas eu de soucis. La malarone ne nous avait pas trop réussi du fait d'une prise par jour donc contraignant, surtout pour les enfants.
C'est une dépense non négligeable à raison de 50 euros environ la boite de 8 cachets.
On est pas trop fan des médocs en plus....
Sinon pour le transsiberien vous achèterez vos billets dans les gares au coup par coup?
pas de livres scolaires au cned au college ? je ne suis pas sure regarde la liste des livres demandés là http://www.campus-electronique.tm.fr/college/index.asp?college/ListeLivres/CollegeListesLivres.htm
et cela fais du poids crois moi
nous on a decoupe les livres et on jettait (ou brulais ) au fur et mesure pour s'alleger
ce sont les support de cours (explication ) qui peuvent etre sur CD rom
et cela fais du poids crois moi
nous on a decoupe les livres et on jettait (ou brulais ) au fur et mesure pour s'alleger
ce sont les support de cours (explication ) qui peuvent etre sur CD rom
Bonjour,
J'ai effectivement consulté le même lien lors de notre préparation sur ce sujet et je confirme : peu de manuel. Par exemple, en 6e, il y a le manuel de français et de langue : donc deux manuels + les livres à lire en français (3 livres pour une année dont on peut se débarasser au fur et à mesure), tout le reste est sur CD-Rom : je pense que c'est toujours mieux qu'un fichier à trimbaler par matière, car si on prend l'option de le faire soi-même, au niveau collège/lycée, il faut bien avoir un support en manuel ou en fichier par matière. Ce n'est donc plus deux manuels mais dix qu'il faut avoir. Enfin, nous c'est comme cela que nous avons raisonné, je fais des cours toute l'année et franchement je n'avais pas envie pendant un an de voyage de devoir me coltiner les préparations de cours des enfants, donc c'est pour cela que le CNED nous apparaît comme simple pour nous. Après, je n'ai pas d'actions au CNED 😕 et pour d'autres sujets, ils ne sont pas forcément sérieux, donc je ne vais pas me transformer en chevalier blanc du CNED !
J'ai effectivement consulté le même lien lors de notre préparation sur ce sujet et je confirme : peu de manuel. Par exemple, en 6e, il y a le manuel de français et de langue : donc deux manuels + les livres à lire en français (3 livres pour une année dont on peut se débarasser au fur et à mesure), tout le reste est sur CD-Rom : je pense que c'est toujours mieux qu'un fichier à trimbaler par matière, car si on prend l'option de le faire soi-même, au niveau collège/lycée, il faut bien avoir un support en manuel ou en fichier par matière. Ce n'est donc plus deux manuels mais dix qu'il faut avoir. Enfin, nous c'est comme cela que nous avons raisonné, je fais des cours toute l'année et franchement je n'avais pas envie pendant un an de voyage de devoir me coltiner les préparations de cours des enfants, donc c'est pour cela que le CNED nous apparaît comme simple pour nous. Après, je n'ai pas d'actions au CNED 😕 et pour d'autres sujets, ils ne sont pas forcément sérieux, donc je ne vais pas me transformer en chevalier blanc du CNED !
En balade en Asie avec nos 4 enfants pendant 1 an : www.heureuxquicommenous.fr
effectivement en 6eme peu de manuel
mon experience etait sur 4eme / 3 eme et là il y avait plus de livres
bien que j'ai vu qu'il n'y a plus de livres de math
je defend aussi le cned meme si c'est un peu rigide et par toujours adapté pour l'itinerance (les delais d'acheminement des corrigées etait monstrueusement longs par exemple et pas de possibilité d'envoi ou de correction en ligne) malgre cela reste un bon outil et c'est deja du boulot d'aider les enfants si en plus il fallait preparer et imaginer les cours : au secours !!
mes filles utilisent encore actuellement le cned via l'academie en ligne (gratuit merci la grippe !! ) quand elle n'ont pas compris en classe ou pour reviser
je defend aussi le cned meme si c'est un peu rigide et par toujours adapté pour l'itinerance (les delais d'acheminement des corrigées etait monstrueusement longs par exemple et pas de possibilité d'envoi ou de correction en ligne) malgre cela reste un bon outil et c'est deja du boulot d'aider les enfants si en plus il fallait preparer et imaginer les cours : au secours !!
mes filles utilisent encore actuellement le cned via l'academie en ligne (gratuit merci la grippe !! ) quand elle n'ont pas compris en classe ou pour reviser
Salut 🙂 !
C'est chouette d'avoir autant de réponses et aussi rapides !
Vous avez raison, en 6ème y a quasiment pas de manuels, mais en 5ème y en a 4, + les livres de poche à lire...on va faire comme toi marie31 d'ailleurs, les découper et s'alléger au fur et à mesure !
Rove : oui nous aussi on adore la Thailande !!! on y est allés plusieurs fois déjà, en fait on part 1 mois en voyage chaque année depuis plusieurs années, et on a complètement flashé sur l'Asie (on connait pour l'instant le Laos, l'Inde et l'Indonésie en + de la Thailande), c'est pour ça qu'on a décidé de faire ce voyage d'1 an ! C'est vrai qu'avec une grande fille c'est vraiment excellent et facile de voyager 😉 !
dalmace : merci pour les infos ! du coup, je suis soulagée de savoir qu'on pourra envoyer les devoirs par mail ! Faut que j'appelle le CNED aussi, parce que notre fille est en classe bilangue anglais-chinois cette année, et on sait pas trop comment on va gérer ça pendant le voyage, because il y a du chinois en LV1 au CNED en 6ème uniquement, puis 5ème rien, et après tu retrouves le chinois en LV2 en 4ème et 3ème ! Bref, faut qu'on trouves une solution...Sans doute on devra faire appel à quelqu'un qui puisse lui faire des cours aussi (au moins un peu), parce qu'on parle pas chinois nous ! (j'apprends le japonais, c'est malin 😉 !)
Pour les déplacements : on va faire Paris-Bangkok, puis on filera en train sur Chiang Mai où on va s'installer un peu, en faire notre point de chute en quelque sorte, parce qu'on aime beaucoup beaucoup cette ville, on a des amis thai là-bas et on veut y passer un peu de temps, et de là, l'idée est d'aller au Laos, Vietnam etc, par le train, bus, comme toi, bref tous les transports locaux, comme on fait lors de chacun de nos voyages ! On aimerait énormément aller au Japon aussi, voire en Chine, on a des amis là-bas (à Tokyo et Pékin), et si nos finances sont ok (budget très serré nous aussi !), on ira par avion
Pour l'hébergement : on prévoit jamais rien, on voit sur place ce qui nous plait quand on arrive quelque part !
et pour le paludisme, ben comme Rove, on est pas fan de médocs, jusqu'a présent on a toujours voyagé sans, et ça sera pareil cette fois aussi !
C'est chouette d'avoir autant de réponses et aussi rapides !
Vous avez raison, en 6ème y a quasiment pas de manuels, mais en 5ème y en a 4, + les livres de poche à lire...on va faire comme toi marie31 d'ailleurs, les découper et s'alléger au fur et à mesure !
Rove : oui nous aussi on adore la Thailande !!! on y est allés plusieurs fois déjà, en fait on part 1 mois en voyage chaque année depuis plusieurs années, et on a complètement flashé sur l'Asie (on connait pour l'instant le Laos, l'Inde et l'Indonésie en + de la Thailande), c'est pour ça qu'on a décidé de faire ce voyage d'1 an ! C'est vrai qu'avec une grande fille c'est vraiment excellent et facile de voyager 😉 !
dalmace : merci pour les infos ! du coup, je suis soulagée de savoir qu'on pourra envoyer les devoirs par mail ! Faut que j'appelle le CNED aussi, parce que notre fille est en classe bilangue anglais-chinois cette année, et on sait pas trop comment on va gérer ça pendant le voyage, because il y a du chinois en LV1 au CNED en 6ème uniquement, puis 5ème rien, et après tu retrouves le chinois en LV2 en 4ème et 3ème ! Bref, faut qu'on trouves une solution...Sans doute on devra faire appel à quelqu'un qui puisse lui faire des cours aussi (au moins un peu), parce qu'on parle pas chinois nous ! (j'apprends le japonais, c'est malin 😉 !)
Pour les déplacements : on va faire Paris-Bangkok, puis on filera en train sur Chiang Mai où on va s'installer un peu, en faire notre point de chute en quelque sorte, parce qu'on aime beaucoup beaucoup cette ville, on a des amis thai là-bas et on veut y passer un peu de temps, et de là, l'idée est d'aller au Laos, Vietnam etc, par le train, bus, comme toi, bref tous les transports locaux, comme on fait lors de chacun de nos voyages ! On aimerait énormément aller au Japon aussi, voire en Chine, on a des amis là-bas (à Tokyo et Pékin), et si nos finances sont ok (budget très serré nous aussi !), on ira par avion
Pour l'hébergement : on prévoit jamais rien, on voit sur place ce qui nous plait quand on arrive quelque part !
et pour le paludisme, ben comme Rove, on est pas fan de médocs, jusqu'a présent on a toujours voyagé sans, et ça sera pareil cette fois aussi !
"Nous on pars en juillet : paris, moscou, lac baîkal, oulan bator, pekin, "
Nous avons fait ce trajet Moscou-Oulan Bator dans l'autre sens cette année en transsibérien/transmongolien avec pause à Irkousk et au lac Baikal.
N'hésitez pas à nous poser des questions.cf notre site alecoledesdesandes.com rubrique "à l'école de l'Himalaya 2009"
Nous avons fait ce trajet Moscou-Oulan Bator dans l'autre sens cette année en transsibérien/transmongolien avec pause à Irkousk et au lac Baikal.
N'hésitez pas à nous poser des questions.cf notre site alecoledesdesandes.com rubrique "à l'école de l'Himalaya 2009"
www.ceciletoulonneau.com
Bonsoir,
C'est vraiment sympa de pouvoir échanger avec des familles qui ont la même destination que nous. Nous aussi, on va opérer des actions sacrilèges sur les bouquins, par contre nous sommes une famille de grands lecteurs et ça je me demande comment on va faire car les 3 livres pour l'année de 6e à lire pour notre deuxième, correspondent plutôt à sa consommation pour 15 jours ! Elle commence les cours d'initiation chinois par le CNED et moi je me suis remise au russe. Là où nous allons avoir plus de travail ce sera pour la plus grande qui sera en seconde pendant le voyage. Là ca va être du sport pour tenir le rythme de l'année ! Pour les bagages, vous optez pour quoi : sac à dos ou sac à roulettes ? A quel moment serez-vous en Asie du Sud-Est, pour nous ce sera à partir de janvier 2011.
C'est vraiment sympa de pouvoir échanger avec des familles qui ont la même destination que nous. Nous aussi, on va opérer des actions sacrilèges sur les bouquins, par contre nous sommes une famille de grands lecteurs et ça je me demande comment on va faire car les 3 livres pour l'année de 6e à lire pour notre deuxième, correspondent plutôt à sa consommation pour 15 jours ! Elle commence les cours d'initiation chinois par le CNED et moi je me suis remise au russe. Là où nous allons avoir plus de travail ce sera pour la plus grande qui sera en seconde pendant le voyage. Là ca va être du sport pour tenir le rythme de l'année ! Pour les bagages, vous optez pour quoi : sac à dos ou sac à roulettes ? A quel moment serez-vous en Asie du Sud-Est, pour nous ce sera à partir de janvier 2011.
En balade en Asie avec nos 4 enfants pendant 1 an : www.heureuxquicommenous.fr
pour les livres à lire ce fut aussi pour nous un probleme 4 gros lecteurs /5
* j'avais cherché des librairies francaises (tokyo , santiago du chili , phnom-penh, dunedin ..) * il y a aussi les alliances francaises qui peuvent quelquefois preter des livres (wellington en NZ) * il y a des opportunitées avec d'autres voyageurs (plus difficile pour les livres enfants ) ou des dans des guesthouses
il y a maintenant le livre electronique mais je ne sais qu'en penser ?
* j'avais cherché des librairies francaises (tokyo , santiago du chili , phnom-penh, dunedin ..) * il y a aussi les alliances francaises qui peuvent quelquefois preter des livres (wellington en NZ) * il y a des opportunitées avec d'autres voyageurs (plus difficile pour les livres enfants ) ou des dans des guesthouses
il y a maintenant le livre electronique mais je ne sais qu'en penser ?
Le livre électronique, on y a pensé mais on aura déjà pas mal de matos électroniques, et puis j'ai du mal à lire longtemps sur un écran, donc je ne sais pas trop quoi en penser. C'est certain que c'est sûrement pratique, vous avez testé ?
Je me demandais si les enfants lisaient autant qu'à la maison, dans un voyage au long cours ?
En balade en Asie avec nos 4 enfants pendant 1 an : www.heureuxquicommenous.fr
non je ne l'ai pas teste on s'interroge pour notre fille ainé qui doit partir 1 an à l'etranger (echange scolaire ) et elle peut "tomber" en plein milieu de la campagne japonaise ou neo zelandaise ...
en voyage pour la lecture cela depend des moments et des pays : pas toujours facile de lire sous la tente avec une frontale quand il fait nuit à 5 h (japon) , grosse demande de lecture quand on roule des heures dans la pampa argentine ....
on avait essaye de trouver des livres qui contente un max de personnes : adulte et les 2 plus grandes (13/15 ) :recit aventures , policiers ...
mon mari est fan de la collection pleaide : gros livres mais papier ultra fin l'inconveniant c'est que c'est tout du meme auteur (il faut mieux l'apprecier !!)
par contre ce que les filles ont apprecié c'est le dvd portable (nous n'avions pas d'ordinateur) et il etait sympa de se faire une petite soirée famille autour d'un film (on peut les louer )
en voyage pour la lecture cela depend des moments et des pays : pas toujours facile de lire sous la tente avec une frontale quand il fait nuit à 5 h (japon) , grosse demande de lecture quand on roule des heures dans la pampa argentine ....
on avait essaye de trouver des livres qui contente un max de personnes : adulte et les 2 plus grandes (13/15 ) :recit aventures , policiers ...
mon mari est fan de la collection pleaide : gros livres mais papier ultra fin l'inconveniant c'est que c'est tout du meme auteur (il faut mieux l'apprecier !!)
par contre ce que les filles ont apprecié c'est le dvd portable (nous n'avions pas d'ordinateur) et il etait sympa de se faire une petite soirée famille autour d'un film (on peut les louer )
salut,
nous on a toujours pris des valises souples de décathlon, qui font aussi sac à dos et à roulettes parce que la première fois on avait pris un sac à dos et
entre la chaleur, le mal de dos et le reste...c'était pas super.
hello !
pour nous c'est sac a dos, toujours !
pour les bouquins, ouaip, pas facile 😕, je pense qu'on va prendre un bon lot de romans pour notre fille qui lit bcp aussi, et puis on les laissera au fur et à mesure dans les guest house ou on passera, en se disant que ça servira pour d'autres petits français ! Parce que c'est vrai qu'en général on trouve plutot des bouquins anglais dans les guest house ou les librairies (remarque ça peut etre un bon truc pour se mettre à lire en anglais 😉 !)
Dalmace c'est chouette que ta fille fasse aussi du chinois, et toi du russe, génial (j'en ai fait 1 an mais j'ai tout oublié ) !
pour nous c'est sac a dos, toujours !
pour les bouquins, ouaip, pas facile 😕, je pense qu'on va prendre un bon lot de romans pour notre fille qui lit bcp aussi, et puis on les laissera au fur et à mesure dans les guest house ou on passera, en se disant que ça servira pour d'autres petits français ! Parce que c'est vrai qu'en général on trouve plutot des bouquins anglais dans les guest house ou les librairies (remarque ça peut etre un bon truc pour se mettre à lire en anglais 😉 !)
Dalmace c'est chouette que ta fille fasse aussi du chinois, et toi du russe, génial (j'en ai fait 1 an mais j'ai tout oublié ) !
Ah oui !!! Nous en voyage on lit beaucoup ; plus qu'à la maison, même !
Notre technique : faire le plein dès qu'on trouvait des boutiques avec des bouquins en Français (j'ai même trouvé des Nicolas Bouvier au fin fond de Sumatra !) et échanger dès qu'on rencontrait des familles ! Car même ceux qui font des voyages plus courts ont souvent des livres pour leurs enfants, alors nous, on leur sautait dessus ! 😛
Notre technique : faire le plein dès qu'on trouvait des boutiques avec des bouquins en Français (j'ai même trouvé des Nicolas Bouvier au fin fond de Sumatra !) et échanger dès qu'on rencontrait des familles ! Car même ceux qui font des voyages plus courts ont souvent des livres pour leurs enfants, alors nous, on leur sautait dessus ! 😛
Cécile
"Il n'y a pas de honte à préférer le bonheur" A.Camus
http://cecileetsestroisbambinsenvoyage.over-blog.com
Je confirme, l'emprunt de livres aux bibliothèques des Alliances Françaises dans les capitales est simple. Nous avons pu à chaque fois négocier d'emmener les livres plusieurs semaines en dehors de la capitale en attendant d'y revenir.
www.ceciletoulonneau.com
Log in first, then come back to this page.
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More discussions
5 days in Armenia with an 8-month-old baby
Hi everyone,
I wanted to share our experience after a 5-day trip to Armenia with my wife and our 8-month-old baby.
It’s a destination that’s still relatively unknown, but it’s really worth the trip, especially if you enjoy cultural, spiritual, historical, and human-centered travel.
We were looking for a change of scenery but not too complicated with a baby—and easy to organize (even though our travel agency helped us a lot, thanks to them! 😊). In the end, Armenia was a wonderful surprise. It’s not a "postcard-perfect" destination. It’s a raw, mountainous, ancient country with real depth.
And most importantly: Armenians *love* children.
That’s probably what surprised us the most. In restaurants, waitresses, owners, or even other customers would naturally come over to play with our baby, hold them for a few minutes, smile at them, or keep them entertained while we ate. It wasn’t intrusive. It was very natural, very family-oriented. You can tell that children have a real place in society. For parents traveling with a baby, it’s honestly a pleasure.
Day 1 — Yerevan
We started with Yerevan, a pleasant capital that’s quite easy to explore with a child.
The city isn’t huge. You can stroll around Republic Square, visit cafés, discover markets, and walk at a relaxed pace.
With a baby, it’s pretty practical: you can easily take breaks, return to the hotel, or go back out in the evening. The vibe is laid-back, family-friendly, and we felt safe.
In the evening, Yerevan is very lively. The restaurants are welcoming, and almost everywhere, our baby drew smiles.
Day 2 — Etchmiadzin and Khor Virap
On the second day, we headed to Etchmiadzin, the spiritual heart of Armenia. It’s an important place for understanding the country and its Christian identity.
Then, we visited Khor Virap, facing Mount Ararat.
It’s probably one of the most striking places on the trip. The monastery, the plain, the distant Ararat—everything is visually and symbolically powerful.
With a baby, you just need to plan a relaxed pace, avoid rushing, and take your time.
Day 3 — Garni and Geghard
The third day was one of our favorites.
We visited the Temple of Garni, very different from the monasteries, with a stunning setting in the mountains.
Then we went to Geghard, a monastery partially carved into the rock.
The atmosphere is incredible. It’s quiet, mineral, almost timeless. Even if you’re not very religious, you feel something.
With a child, the visit goes well, but again, it’s best not to overload the day. The key is to keep a flexible pace.
Day 4 — Noravank
On the fourth day, we headed to Noravank.
The road itself is an experience: dry landscapes, mountains, red rocks, valleys. The monastery is surrounded by impressive cliffs.
It’s one of the most beautiful sites we saw in Armenia.
You really get the sense that Armenian monasteries were built in impossible places—between sky, stone, and mountain.
Along the way, you can also pass through the Areni region, known for its wine. With a baby, we mostly prioritized simple breaks, relaxed meals, and uncompressed travel times.
Day 5 — Lake Sevan and return to Yerevan
For the last day, we went to Lake Sevan.
The lake is vast, bright, and surrounded by mountains. The Sevanavank Monastery, up high, offers a beautiful view.
It’s a gentler stop, perfect for ending the trip.
Then we returned to Yerevan for a final dinner. Once again, the welcome in restaurants stood out. In Armenia, traveling with a baby isn’t seen as a hassle. On the contrary, people spontaneously come up to the child.
Our overall impression
In 5 days, you obviously don’t see all of Armenia. To reach Tatev, Dilijan, Haghpat, or Sanahin, you’d need more like 7 to 10 days.
But for a first visit, 5 days are enough to feel the essence: Yerevan, the major monasteries, Mount Ararat, the landscapes, the Christian history, and the Armenian hospitality.
What we loved most:
- the kindness of people toward our baby; - the very family-friendly atmosphere; - the monasteries in incredible landscapes; - the view of Mount Ararat from Khor Virap; - the atmosphere of Geghard; - the cliffs of Noravank; - the food; - the feeling of safety; - the fact that the country is still relatively untouched by mass tourism.
What to know when traveling with a baby:
- distances can be longer than expected; - some roads are mountainous; - avoid overloading the day; - it’s better to have a driver or a car; - plan for breaks, water, diapers, baby meals; - a stroller isn’t always practical on ancient sites; - a baby carrier can be very useful.
Recommended 5-day itinerary
For a first trip, I’d suggest:
Day 1: Yerevan Day 2: Etchmiadzin + Khor Virap Day 3: Garni + Geghard Day 4: Noravank + Areni Day 5: Sevan + return to Yerevan
It’s balanced, not too tiring, and gives a great first impression of the country.
Conclusion
Armenia is a wonderful destination with a baby, as long as you travel slowly and don’t try to see everything.
What touched us most, beyond the landscapes and monasteries, was the attitude toward children. There, you feel that babies are welcomed with real tenderness. In restaurants, people naturally helped us, played with our child, and gave us a few minutes to breathe.
That’s rare, and it makes a big difference in the travel experience.
Armenia isn’t a destination you consume quickly. It’s a country that you *feel*.
For those who love cultural, spiritual, historical, family, and human-centered travel, I highly recommend it.
Hi everyone,
I wanted to share our experience after a 5-day trip to Armenia with my wife and our 8-month-old baby.
It’s a destination that’s still relatively unknown, but it’s really worth the trip, especially if you enjoy cultural, spiritual, historical, and human-centered travel.
We were looking for a change of scenery but not too complicated with a baby—and easy to organize (even though our travel agency helped us a lot, thanks to them! 😊). In the end, Armenia was a wonderful surprise. It’s not a "postcard-perfect" destination. It’s a raw, mountainous, ancient country with real depth.
And most importantly: Armenians *love* children.
That’s probably what surprised us the most. In restaurants, waitresses, owners, or even other customers would naturally come over to play with our baby, hold them for a few minutes, smile at them, or keep them entertained while we ate. It wasn’t intrusive. It was very natural, very family-oriented. You can tell that children have a real place in society. For parents traveling with a baby, it’s honestly a pleasure.
Day 1 — Yerevan
We started with Yerevan, a pleasant capital that’s quite easy to explore with a child.
The city isn’t huge. You can stroll around Republic Square, visit cafés, discover markets, and walk at a relaxed pace.
With a baby, it’s pretty practical: you can easily take breaks, return to the hotel, or go back out in the evening. The vibe is laid-back, family-friendly, and we felt safe.
In the evening, Yerevan is very lively. The restaurants are welcoming, and almost everywhere, our baby drew smiles.
Day 2 — Etchmiadzin and Khor Virap
On the second day, we headed to Etchmiadzin, the spiritual heart of Armenia. It’s an important place for understanding the country and its Christian identity.
Then, we visited Khor Virap, facing Mount Ararat.
It’s probably one of the most striking places on the trip. The monastery, the plain, the distant Ararat—everything is visually and symbolically powerful.
With a baby, you just need to plan a relaxed pace, avoid rushing, and take your time.
Day 3 — Garni and Geghard
The third day was one of our favorites.
We visited the Temple of Garni, very different from the monasteries, with a stunning setting in the mountains.
Then we went to Geghard, a monastery partially carved into the rock.
The atmosphere is incredible. It’s quiet, mineral, almost timeless. Even if you’re not very religious, you feel something.
With a child, the visit goes well, but again, it’s best not to overload the day. The key is to keep a flexible pace.
Day 4 — Noravank
On the fourth day, we headed to Noravank.
The road itself is an experience: dry landscapes, mountains, red rocks, valleys. The monastery is surrounded by impressive cliffs.
It’s one of the most beautiful sites we saw in Armenia.
You really get the sense that Armenian monasteries were built in impossible places—between sky, stone, and mountain.
Along the way, you can also pass through the Areni region, known for its wine. With a baby, we mostly prioritized simple breaks, relaxed meals, and uncompressed travel times.
Day 5 — Lake Sevan and return to Yerevan
For the last day, we went to Lake Sevan.
The lake is vast, bright, and surrounded by mountains. The Sevanavank Monastery, up high, offers a beautiful view.
It’s a gentler stop, perfect for ending the trip.
Then we returned to Yerevan for a final dinner. Once again, the welcome in restaurants stood out. In Armenia, traveling with a baby isn’t seen as a hassle. On the contrary, people spontaneously come up to the child.
Our overall impression
In 5 days, you obviously don’t see all of Armenia. To reach Tatev, Dilijan, Haghpat, or Sanahin, you’d need more like 7 to 10 days.
But for a first visit, 5 days are enough to feel the essence: Yerevan, the major monasteries, Mount Ararat, the landscapes, the Christian history, and the Armenian hospitality.
What we loved most:
- the kindness of people toward our baby; - the very family-friendly atmosphere; - the monasteries in incredible landscapes; - the view of Mount Ararat from Khor Virap; - the atmosphere of Geghard; - the cliffs of Noravank; - the food; - the feeling of safety; - the fact that the country is still relatively untouched by mass tourism.
What to know when traveling with a baby:
- distances can be longer than expected; - some roads are mountainous; - avoid overloading the day; - it’s better to have a driver or a car; - plan for breaks, water, diapers, baby meals; - a stroller isn’t always practical on ancient sites; - a baby carrier can be very useful.
Recommended 5-day itinerary
For a first trip, I’d suggest:
Day 1: Yerevan Day 2: Etchmiadzin + Khor Virap Day 3: Garni + Geghard Day 4: Noravank + Areni Day 5: Sevan + return to Yerevan
It’s balanced, not too tiring, and gives a great first impression of the country.
Conclusion
Armenia is a wonderful destination with a baby, as long as you travel slowly and don’t try to see everything.
What touched us most, beyond the landscapes and monasteries, was the attitude toward children. There, you feel that babies are welcomed with real tenderness. In restaurants, people naturally helped us, played with our child, and gave us a few minutes to breathe.
That’s rare, and it makes a big difference in the travel experience.
Armenia isn’t a destination you consume quickly. It’s a country that you *feel*.
For those who love cultural, spiritual, historical, family, and human-centered travel, I highly recommend it.
Hi everyone,
I’ve read the forum a lot and found a wealth of information. I’ve tried to compile all of it into our itinerary and would love your feedback to finalize the bookings (we’re planning this *very* last-minute).
Here’s what we’re thinking of doing: 22 July: arrival in Johannesburg Night of 22–23: Johannesburg Nights of 23–26: Marloth Park (with Kruger visits on the 24th, 25th, and a crossing visit on the 26th) Nights of 26–28: Graskop (visiting the canyon and Panorama Road on the 27th and 28th) Nights of 28–30: Hoedspruit (visiting the central area of Kruger on the 29th?) Nights of 30 July–1 August: Balule Park (private reserve with safari) Nights of 1–5 August: flight from Hoedspruit to Cape Town, then 2 days in Cape Town, 1 day on the peninsula, and 2 days for wine (just the route) or something else based on your advice (we don’t know where to stay—whether to stay all 5 nights in Cape Town and where in the city, or do 2 nights in Cape Town and 3 nights nearby—but where?) Night of 5–6 August: Kelders for penguins and whales Nights of 6–8 August: Tsitsikamma (what is there to do/see?) Nights of 8–10 August: Addo Park on the 9th 10 August: flight from Port Elizabeth to Johannesburg and back home
What do you think? Is there a lot of driving time?
We’d really appreciate your comments and suggestions. Thanks!
Nadia
I’ve read the forum a lot and found a wealth of information. I’ve tried to compile all of it into our itinerary and would love your feedback to finalize the bookings (we’re planning this *very* last-minute).
Here’s what we’re thinking of doing: 22 July: arrival in Johannesburg Night of 22–23: Johannesburg Nights of 23–26: Marloth Park (with Kruger visits on the 24th, 25th, and a crossing visit on the 26th) Nights of 26–28: Graskop (visiting the canyon and Panorama Road on the 27th and 28th) Nights of 28–30: Hoedspruit (visiting the central area of Kruger on the 29th?) Nights of 30 July–1 August: Balule Park (private reserve with safari) Nights of 1–5 August: flight from Hoedspruit to Cape Town, then 2 days in Cape Town, 1 day on the peninsula, and 2 days for wine (just the route) or something else based on your advice (we don’t know where to stay—whether to stay all 5 nights in Cape Town and where in the city, or do 2 nights in Cape Town and 3 nights nearby—but where?) Night of 5–6 August: Kelders for penguins and whales Nights of 6–8 August: Tsitsikamma (what is there to do/see?) Nights of 8–10 August: Addo Park on the 9th 10 August: flight from Port Elizabeth to Johannesburg and back home
What do you think? Is there a lot of driving time?
We’d really appreciate your comments and suggestions. Thanks!
Nadia
Hi everyone,
We're heading to Colombia soon for two weeks as a family with our two 10-year-old boys. I'm a bit behind on planning our itinerary and could really use your advice!
We arrive in Cartagena, where we'll spend 3 nights.
Next, we're heading to the Tayrona area for 3 nights. Could you recommend a nice hotel with a pool, ideally family-friendly? Unfortunately, Senda Watapuy and Senda Koguiwa are already fully booked for our dates.
After that, we were thinking of spending a few days in Minca. Is that a good idea in late July/early August? How many nights would you recommend?
Finally, we're looking for a last stop before returning to France. We've heard about Mompox, but we're hesitant because it seems like a big detour. We love nature, animals, beautiful landscapes, beaches, and authentic places. Do you think Mompox is worth the detour with two kids, or would you recommend another destination (Palomino, Barú, La Guajira...) instead?
We don’t want to take any domestic flights.
Thanks in advance for all your tips and experiences!
Hi there,
This summer, we’ve decided to do a 3-week road trip starting from Nice and heading down to Ksamil in Albania.
We’re leaving from Nice, and our route is already pretty much set: Nice - Verona (Italy) - Rijeka (Croatia) - Zadar - Split - Budva (Montenegro) - Shkodër (Albania) - Ksamil, then back through Italy via Bari.
The itinerary is packed! 🙂
Do you have any suggestions for things to see—visits, beaches, viewpoints, villages, or excursions—to make the most of our journey?
Thanks everyone!
This summer, we’ve decided to do a 3-week road trip starting from Nice and heading down to Ksamil in Albania.
We’re leaving from Nice, and our route is already pretty much set: Nice - Verona (Italy) - Rijeka (Croatia) - Zadar - Split - Budva (Montenegro) - Shkodër (Albania) - Ksamil, then back through Italy via Bari.
The itinerary is packed! 🙂
Do you have any suggestions for things to see—visits, beaches, viewpoints, villages, or excursions—to make the most of our journey?
Thanks everyone!
Hi there, we're planning our vacation in Indonesia. We're a family with two kids aged 11 and 14. We leave on July 26th and return on August 17th, 2026.
We initially planned to visit Bali, Komodo, and Flores, but after looking into it more, we came across Sumatra, which is less touristy... a real plus for us. However, skipping Bali might be a shame.
I was wondering if spending 12 days in Sumatra and finishing with about 7 days in Bali is a doable plan.
Thanks for your feedback!
We initially planned to visit Bali, Komodo, and Flores, but after looking into it more, we came across Sumatra, which is less touristy... a real plus for us. However, skipping Bali might be a shame.
I was wondering if spending 12 days in Sumatra and finishing with about 7 days in Bali is a doable plan.
Thanks for your feedback!
Hi,
I’m traveling with my 5-year-old son this summer to Northern Thailand, Northern Vietnam, Yunnan, and Indonesia. I plan to equip him with a GPS tracker, but the SIM cards come with a contract. Do you know what the options are in Asia?
Thanks,
Nora
Hi there,
We’d like to spend 2 days in Lyon in May with our 8- and 12-year-old kids, exploring the city on foot.
We’ll arrive on day 1 around 11 AM and leave on day 2 around 6 PM.
I’ve mapped out two routes and was wondering if they’re doable in our 2 days, and if you have any tips or info on visit prices.
We’re not sure where to stay yet, but we’d like to optimize by booking accommodation (hotel or Airbnb) between the two routes, maybe?
Thanks for your help!
I’ve mapped out two routes and was wondering if they’re doable in our 2 days, and if you have any tips or info on visit prices.
We’re not sure where to stay yet, but we’d like to optimize by booking accommodation (hotel or Airbnb) between the two routes, maybe?
Thanks for your help!
Hi there!
I’m planning a trip with my wife and our three kids (ages 9, 6, and 3) from April 16 to May 6.
I’ve started sketching out the itinerary, trying to alternate between visits, hikes, safaris, and downtime. I want to keep the pace relaxed given the kids’ ages.
Could you let me know what you think of this route? I removed Nuwara Eliya, which I had originally planned before Ella, to cut down on stops. I was also wondering if I should break up the Arugam Bay to Colombo leg with an overnight in Galle, since it’s a long drive.
Thanks in advance for your feedback!
Day 1 – 04/16: Wilpattu Arrival at the airport (08:00) + transfer to Wilpattu (180 km, 4–5 h) + afternoon safari Overnight: Wilpattu Day 2 – 04/17: Wilpattu Morning & afternoon safari Overnight: Wilpattu Day 3 – 04/18: Trincomalee Transfer Wilpattu → Trincomalee (200 km, 4–5 h) + beach relaxation Overnight: Trincomalee Day 4 – 04/19: Trincomalee Nilaveli Beach Overnight: Trincomalee Day 5 – 04/20: Trincomalee Pigeon Island snorkeling Overnight: Trincomalee Day 6 – 04/21: Trincomalee Fort Frederick & relaxation Overnight: Trincomalee Day 7 – 04/22: Sigiriya Transfer Trincomalee → Sigiriya (120 km, ~3 h) + visit to Dambulla Overnight: Sigiriya Day 8 – 04/23: Sigiriya Sigiriya Rock Overnight: Sigiriya Day 9 – 04/24: Sigiriya Minneriya safari Overnight: Sigiriya Day 10 – 04/25: Sigiriya Polonnaruwa & village tour Overnight: Sigiriya Day 11 – 04/26: Ella Transfer Sigiriya → Ella (230 km, 5–6 h) + rest Overnight: Ella Day 12 – 04/27: Ella Little Adam’s Peak & Nine Arches Bridge Overnight: Ella Day 13 – 04/28: Ella Ella Rock Overnight: Ella Day 14 – 04/29: Ella Tea Factory & relaxation Overnight: Ella Day 15 – 04/30: Yala Transfer Ella → Yala (110 km, 2–3 h) + afternoon safari Overnight: Yala Day 16 – 05/01: Arugam Bay Transfer Yala → Arugam Bay (80 km, 2.5–3 h) + beach time Overnight: Arugam Bay Day 17 – 05/02: Arugam Bay Surfing & relaxation Overnight: Arugam Bay Day 18 – 05/03: Arugam Bay Local exploration Overnight: Arugam Bay Day 19 – 05/04: Colombo Transfer Arugam Bay → Colombo (320 km, 7–8 h) + rest Overnight: Colombo Day 20 – 05/05: Colombo City tour & shopping Overnight: Colombo Day 21 – 05/06: Colombo Morning return flight from Colombo
Day 1 – 04/16: Wilpattu Arrival at the airport (08:00) + transfer to Wilpattu (180 km, 4–5 h) + afternoon safari Overnight: Wilpattu Day 2 – 04/17: Wilpattu Morning & afternoon safari Overnight: Wilpattu Day 3 – 04/18: Trincomalee Transfer Wilpattu → Trincomalee (200 km, 4–5 h) + beach relaxation Overnight: Trincomalee Day 4 – 04/19: Trincomalee Nilaveli Beach Overnight: Trincomalee Day 5 – 04/20: Trincomalee Pigeon Island snorkeling Overnight: Trincomalee Day 6 – 04/21: Trincomalee Fort Frederick & relaxation Overnight: Trincomalee Day 7 – 04/22: Sigiriya Transfer Trincomalee → Sigiriya (120 km, ~3 h) + visit to Dambulla Overnight: Sigiriya Day 8 – 04/23: Sigiriya Sigiriya Rock Overnight: Sigiriya Day 9 – 04/24: Sigiriya Minneriya safari Overnight: Sigiriya Day 10 – 04/25: Sigiriya Polonnaruwa & village tour Overnight: Sigiriya Day 11 – 04/26: Ella Transfer Sigiriya → Ella (230 km, 5–6 h) + rest Overnight: Ella Day 12 – 04/27: Ella Little Adam’s Peak & Nine Arches Bridge Overnight: Ella Day 13 – 04/28: Ella Ella Rock Overnight: Ella Day 14 – 04/29: Ella Tea Factory & relaxation Overnight: Ella Day 15 – 04/30: Yala Transfer Ella → Yala (110 km, 2–3 h) + afternoon safari Overnight: Yala Day 16 – 05/01: Arugam Bay Transfer Yala → Arugam Bay (80 km, 2.5–3 h) + beach time Overnight: Arugam Bay Day 17 – 05/02: Arugam Bay Surfing & relaxation Overnight: Arugam Bay Day 18 – 05/03: Arugam Bay Local exploration Overnight: Arugam Bay Day 19 – 05/04: Colombo Transfer Arugam Bay → Colombo (320 km, 7–8 h) + rest Overnight: Colombo Day 20 – 05/05: Colombo City tour & shopping Overnight: Colombo Day 21 – 05/06: Colombo Morning return flight from Colombo
Hi everyone,
We’re heading to Sri Lanka for three weeks in July with two kids (ages 6 and 13). We’ve drafted a rough itinerary but would love to hear from those who’ve already been there 😊 Of course, we want to see everything, but we have to make choices—even though three weeks on the ground lets us do quite a bit. We originally planned a schedule that felt too packed, so we had to cut one stop. We decided to skip Tangalle, even though we were really tempted. The monsoon won’t let us swim there, and the weather in the south is too uncertain, so we preferred to keep our stops on the east coast. Plus, we don’t think it’s reasonable to cut nights from other places. We’ve added a stop in Batticaloa, which we think will be a nice break between Arugam Bay and Sigiriya. What do you think? We’re also debating between Batticaloa and Passikudah. Does the itinerary seem logical to you?
Here it is:
Sri Lanka Itinerary Day 1 Arrival around 1 PM at the airport Night in Negombo Day 2 Drive from Negombo to Galle Visit Galle and surrounding areas Night in Galle Day 3 Visit Galle and surrounding areas Night in Galle Day 4 Visit Galle and surrounding areas Drive from Galle to Udawalawe Night in Udawalawe Day 5 Visit Udawalawe National Park Night in Udawalawe Day 6 Drive from Udawalawe to Ella Night in Ella Day 7 Ella Rock + Nine Arch Bridge Night in Ella Day 8 Visit Haputale Lipton’s Seat and Dambatenne Tea Factory Train ride back from Haputale to Ella Night in Ella Day 9 Little Adam’s Peak + drive from Ella to Arugam Bay Night in Arugam Bay Day 10 Visit Arugam Bay and surrounding areas Night in Arugam Bay Day 11 Visit Arugam Bay and surrounding areas Night in Arugam Bay Day 12 Drive from Arugam Bay to Batticaloa Night in Batticaloa Day 13 Visit Batticaloa Night in Batticaloa Day 14 Drive from Batticaloa to Sigiriya Night in Sigiriya Day 15 Lion Rock and Pidurangala Night in Sigiriya Day 16 Visit Dambulla Drive from Sigiriya to Trincomalee Night in Trincomalee Day 17 Visit Trincomalee and surrounding areas Night in Trincomalee Day 18 Visit Trincomalee and surrounding areas Night in Trincomalee Day 19 Drive from Trincomalee to Anuradhapura Night in Anuradhapura Day 20 Visit Anuradhapura Night in Anuradhapura Day 21 Visit Mihintale Drive from Anuradhapura to Negombo Night in Negombo Day 22 Day in Negombo and return flight
We’d love to hear your thoughts and tips! Thanks in advance!
We’re heading to Sri Lanka for three weeks in July with two kids (ages 6 and 13). We’ve drafted a rough itinerary but would love to hear from those who’ve already been there 😊 Of course, we want to see everything, but we have to make choices—even though three weeks on the ground lets us do quite a bit. We originally planned a schedule that felt too packed, so we had to cut one stop. We decided to skip Tangalle, even though we were really tempted. The monsoon won’t let us swim there, and the weather in the south is too uncertain, so we preferred to keep our stops on the east coast. Plus, we don’t think it’s reasonable to cut nights from other places. We’ve added a stop in Batticaloa, which we think will be a nice break between Arugam Bay and Sigiriya. What do you think? We’re also debating between Batticaloa and Passikudah. Does the itinerary seem logical to you?
Here it is:
Sri Lanka Itinerary Day 1 Arrival around 1 PM at the airport Night in Negombo Day 2 Drive from Negombo to Galle Visit Galle and surrounding areas Night in Galle Day 3 Visit Galle and surrounding areas Night in Galle Day 4 Visit Galle and surrounding areas Drive from Galle to Udawalawe Night in Udawalawe Day 5 Visit Udawalawe National Park Night in Udawalawe Day 6 Drive from Udawalawe to Ella Night in Ella Day 7 Ella Rock + Nine Arch Bridge Night in Ella Day 8 Visit Haputale Lipton’s Seat and Dambatenne Tea Factory Train ride back from Haputale to Ella Night in Ella Day 9 Little Adam’s Peak + drive from Ella to Arugam Bay Night in Arugam Bay Day 10 Visit Arugam Bay and surrounding areas Night in Arugam Bay Day 11 Visit Arugam Bay and surrounding areas Night in Arugam Bay Day 12 Drive from Arugam Bay to Batticaloa Night in Batticaloa Day 13 Visit Batticaloa Night in Batticaloa Day 14 Drive from Batticaloa to Sigiriya Night in Sigiriya Day 15 Lion Rock and Pidurangala Night in Sigiriya Day 16 Visit Dambulla Drive from Sigiriya to Trincomalee Night in Trincomalee Day 17 Visit Trincomalee and surrounding areas Night in Trincomalee Day 18 Visit Trincomalee and surrounding areas Night in Trincomalee Day 19 Drive from Trincomalee to Anuradhapura Night in Anuradhapura Day 20 Visit Anuradhapura Night in Anuradhapura Day 21 Visit Mihintale Drive from Anuradhapura to Negombo Night in Negombo Day 22 Day in Negombo and return flight
We’d love to hear your thoughts and tips! Thanks in advance!
We’re planning a 4-month trip in spring 2027. We’re looking for a third destination that optimizes transport costs. Ideally, somewhere very different from the other two (Polynesia and Indonesia). Thanks
Hi everyone!
We’re so excited to be heading to Italy for the first time this April with our two kids for a week. We’ve booked our round-trip flight, and we’ll be arriving and departing from Pisa.
Our rough plan so far includes visiting Pisa, taking the train to Florence, and exploring the Cinque Terre. Last night, a friend also suggested adding Siena to the list.
Our kids are 12 and 9 and are used to walking, but we’re not looking to rush around too much. We’d love any advice, especially about accommodation. Should we stay in Pisa and take day trips by train, or split our nights between a couple of different places?
We’re just starting our research, so any tips would be amazing! 😉
Thanks in advance!
Hi everyone.
A few days ago, I asked my 14-year-old son to pick a destination for a trip, and he chose Germany. So, we’re heading to Berlin for four days in February. The catch is that I don’t know this city (or this country) at all—I hadn’t even considered visiting just a month ago .
Could you please share some suggestions to make this first mother-son trip abroad a success? 🙂
Thanks for your tips and great deals.
Nanyne
Hi everyone,
Next summer, we (2 adults and a 12-year-old child) have decided to visit Japan.
Admittedly, it’s still early to plan everything, but my wife will soon need to request her vacation time—either in August or July... and we’re hesitating.
I know summer isn’t the ideal time to visit Japan, but we don’t really have a choice... It’s either July or August. On one hand, I’d love to experience the O-Bon festivities from August 14th to 16th, and I’ve drafted an initial itinerary that would let us experience the Gujo Hachiman Bon Odori, possibly visit the Okunoin Cemetery in Koyasan, and be in Kyoto on the 16th for the Gozan Okuribi fires. But on the other hand, I’m worried it’ll be *packed*, especially in Kyoto, and less enjoyable than in July. So, have any of you experienced these celebrations? Are they worth it? Too crowded? Do you know of other celebrations or festivals in July? Thanks for your input!
Next summer, we (2 adults and a 12-year-old child) have decided to visit Japan.
Admittedly, it’s still early to plan everything, but my wife will soon need to request her vacation time—either in August or July... and we’re hesitating.
I know summer isn’t the ideal time to visit Japan, but we don’t really have a choice... It’s either July or August. On one hand, I’d love to experience the O-Bon festivities from August 14th to 16th, and I’ve drafted an initial itinerary that would let us experience the Gujo Hachiman Bon Odori, possibly visit the Okunoin Cemetery in Koyasan, and be in Kyoto on the 16th for the Gozan Okuribi fires. But on the other hand, I’m worried it’ll be *packed*, especially in Kyoto, and less enjoyable than in July. So, have any of you experienced these celebrations? Are they worth it? Too crowded? Do you know of other celebrations or festivals in July? Thanks for your input!
Hello,
I’m reaching out because I’ve already read tons of info from other forums (thanks a million, by the way!) and blogs, but now I’m overwhelmed with details and have so many questions. I’m really hoping you can help us figure this out! Here’s the plan: We’re leaving France for Senegal in our camper van (with two kids, aged 4 and 7), then shipping the van to South Africa before heading to Namibia. We’re planning to leave this summer and should arrive in South Africa in early September. The goal is to reach Réunion by early December, which gives us 3 months to explore Southern Africa. Originally, we wanted to pick up the van in Cape Town, head up to Namibia, and visit the main parks and iconic spots, then go north to Botswana (Etosha Park) and Zimbabwe (Victoria Falls) before heading back down to South Africa to enjoy the milder temperatures while exploring the country. But now we’re wondering how to get back to South Africa. We’ve come up with three options: - Head back down through Botswana: I’ve read everywhere that Botswana isn’t recommended for kids under 6 (most parks) because it can be potentially dangerous—few enclosures for animals (even though we have a camper van with "secure" beds), and the agencies we’ve contacted don’t recommend it. Plus, southern Botswana is tough to navigate in a camper van. - Return from central Botswana (Maun) to Windhoek and drive back to Cape Town via Namibia. - Cross Zimbabwe and potentially Mozambique to head down to Kruger Park and Johannesburg.
Anyone familiar with this region have any recommendations?
Also, is it necessary to book accommodations in advance? Is that only required in certain countries (maybe Botswana/Zimbabwe)? We’d like a mix of camping and lodges.
All advice is welcome!
I’m reaching out because I’ve already read tons of info from other forums (thanks a million, by the way!) and blogs, but now I’m overwhelmed with details and have so many questions. I’m really hoping you can help us figure this out! Here’s the plan: We’re leaving France for Senegal in our camper van (with two kids, aged 4 and 7), then shipping the van to South Africa before heading to Namibia. We’re planning to leave this summer and should arrive in South Africa in early September. The goal is to reach Réunion by early December, which gives us 3 months to explore Southern Africa. Originally, we wanted to pick up the van in Cape Town, head up to Namibia, and visit the main parks and iconic spots, then go north to Botswana (Etosha Park) and Zimbabwe (Victoria Falls) before heading back down to South Africa to enjoy the milder temperatures while exploring the country. But now we’re wondering how to get back to South Africa. We’ve come up with three options: - Head back down through Botswana: I’ve read everywhere that Botswana isn’t recommended for kids under 6 (most parks) because it can be potentially dangerous—few enclosures for animals (even though we have a camper van with "secure" beds), and the agencies we’ve contacted don’t recommend it. Plus, southern Botswana is tough to navigate in a camper van. - Return from central Botswana (Maun) to Windhoek and drive back to Cape Town via Namibia. - Cross Zimbabwe and potentially Mozambique to head down to Kruger Park and Johannesburg.
Anyone familiar with this region have any recommendations?
Also, is it necessary to book accommodations in advance? Is that only required in certain countries (maybe Botswana/Zimbabwe)? We’d like a mix of camping and lodges.
All advice is welcome!
Hi there,
We’re planning a two-week trip to Colombia with our two kids at the end of July – early August, with a round-trip flight to Cartagena.
What itinerary would you recommend, knowing we’d prefer to avoid domestic flights?
We were thinking of Cartagena, Tayrona Park, Mompox, and maybe an island.
Do you think it’s a shame to skip big cities like Bogotá or Medellín?
Thanks so much in advance for your help!
Good morning! We're heading to Cape Verde for 2 weeks at the end of April—São Vicente, Boa Vista, and Santiago. We’re a family of 5: 3 kids (4, 6, and 12) and 2 adults.
My questions revolve around beaches (a spot with interesting snorkeling and safe swimming for the kids), accommodation (kid-friendly, parks nearby, pool, beach, or nature—more like guesthouses or family-run pensions), hikes (accessible for kids), and whether renting a car makes sense depending on the island, even though local buses are an adventure in themselves.
**Santiago:** - Beach & snorkeling: Tarrafal, Quebra Canela in Praia, Ribeira da Barca (okay for kids?), Águas Belas? - Any nice places to stay? - Hikes: Malagueta?, Baobab Boa Entrada, Pico António (accessible? elevation gain, time to climb, difficulty, interest for kids?)
**Boa Vista:** - Beach + snorkeling: Santa Mónica, Praia de Chaves, Gatas, ... Estoril Beach in Sal Rei maybe? - Can we swim at Turtle Bay to see the turtles even though it’s not nesting season? - Any nice places to stay? - Hikes: Viana Desert? Can we explore it solo by renting a 4x4 and easily find the points of interest? - Is it worth renting a 4x4 for our stay in Boa Vista?
**São Vicente:** - Beach + snorkeling: Laginha, Porto Grande, Praia Grande, Baía das Gatas, São Pedro...? (safe, good snorkeling?) - Any nice places to stay? - Hikes: cliffs?, Monte Verde?
Thanks for your feedback, great tips—especially for accommodation where we’re totally in the dark! And your thoughts on whether renting a car is a good idea and which beaches are safest for kids.
See you soon! Christophe
My questions revolve around beaches (a spot with interesting snorkeling and safe swimming for the kids), accommodation (kid-friendly, parks nearby, pool, beach, or nature—more like guesthouses or family-run pensions), hikes (accessible for kids), and whether renting a car makes sense depending on the island, even though local buses are an adventure in themselves.
**Santiago:** - Beach & snorkeling: Tarrafal, Quebra Canela in Praia, Ribeira da Barca (okay for kids?), Águas Belas? - Any nice places to stay? - Hikes: Malagueta?, Baobab Boa Entrada, Pico António (accessible? elevation gain, time to climb, difficulty, interest for kids?)
**Boa Vista:** - Beach + snorkeling: Santa Mónica, Praia de Chaves, Gatas, ... Estoril Beach in Sal Rei maybe? - Can we swim at Turtle Bay to see the turtles even though it’s not nesting season? - Any nice places to stay? - Hikes: Viana Desert? Can we explore it solo by renting a 4x4 and easily find the points of interest? - Is it worth renting a 4x4 for our stay in Boa Vista?
**São Vicente:** - Beach + snorkeling: Laginha, Porto Grande, Praia Grande, Baía das Gatas, São Pedro...? (safe, good snorkeling?) - Any nice places to stay? - Hikes: cliffs?, Monte Verde?
Thanks for your feedback, great tips—especially for accommodation where we’re totally in the dark! And your thoughts on whether renting a car is a good idea and which beaches are safest for kids.
See you soon! Christophe
Hi,
We’d like to visit the Alpes de Haute-Provence for 2 weeks with our 2 (adult) kids.
Any ideas for things to see and do?
Where should we choose our accommodation (house only) to be centrally located for sightseeing? We’re looking for villages with restaurants and bakeries.
Thanks in advance for your tips!
Best regards
Hi there, we’re heading to Tuscany in the second half of August with two kids (8 and 6 years old).
We’ve zeroed in on the area around Siena and Florence for now.
I’m looking for recommendations on places to stay and things to see that are great for families.
Also, just to add, we’ll be traveling by train and plan to rent a car once we’re there—any tips on car rental companies?
Thanks!
Thanks!
Hello everyone,
We’ve decided to head to Quebec next year—it’s been a dream for the whole family (after watching so many travel shows and the like...). There’ll be five of us: 2 adults, 2 teens (16 and 13), and a child (8 years old). We’re all pretty good walkers, though maybe the teens a little less so—it’s just that age, you know? 😊 That said, they’ve got no problem doing 15 km hikes, just not every single day.
We’re planning to go from July 23 to August 14, arriving and departing from Montreal, so almost 3 weeks. I’ve started looking into logistics and accommodation prices, but before I dive into bookings, I’d love some advice on the itinerary. I’ve read a few threads here and there. Our idea is to visit between 3 and 5 different places over the 3 weeks, so that means the same number of accommodations. The goal is to optimize travel as much as possible—I’ve realized that getting around can take a long time. I think the first two days will be in Montreal to adjust to the time difference, and the last two in Quebec City, though that’s not set in stone.
Anyway, I’m not really sure about the route. I’ve got time to plan everything, but I know the longer we wait, the more expensive and scarce accommodations will get. Same goes for budget—we’ve set aside a mid-range budget, flights included: 3k per person (1k for the flight). So if you’ve got any great tips or advice, we’re all ears!
I was thinking of going up the St. Lawrence River, but I’m not sure how long that takes or where to stop. Maybe there are other places worth visiting farther away...
Anyway, thanks for reading this far! If you’ve got any questions, don’t hesitate.
Thanks, everyone.
We’re planning to go from July 23 to August 14, arriving and departing from Montreal, so almost 3 weeks. I’ve started looking into logistics and accommodation prices, but before I dive into bookings, I’d love some advice on the itinerary. I’ve read a few threads here and there. Our idea is to visit between 3 and 5 different places over the 3 weeks, so that means the same number of accommodations. The goal is to optimize travel as much as possible—I’ve realized that getting around can take a long time. I think the first two days will be in Montreal to adjust to the time difference, and the last two in Quebec City, though that’s not set in stone.
Anyway, I’m not really sure about the route. I’ve got time to plan everything, but I know the longer we wait, the more expensive and scarce accommodations will get. Same goes for budget—we’ve set aside a mid-range budget, flights included: 3k per person (1k for the flight). So if you’ve got any great tips or advice, we’re all ears!
I was thinking of going up the St. Lawrence River, but I’m not sure how long that takes or where to stop. Maybe there are other places worth visiting farther away...
Anyway, thanks for reading this far! If you’ve got any questions, don’t hesitate.
Thanks, everyone.
Hi there
I hope you're starting this new year with your head full of travel memories or plans!!
I’d love to spend a week in July on a Greek island with my 8-year-old son. I’m totally in love with Amorgos, but not all the beaches are accessible for him. I’ve been to Santorini and Naxos before and don’t want to go back. Would you have an island to recommend that’s not too crowded 😕, with a few accessible beaches and where we won’t have to fight to get around or park?
Have a great day Christelle
I hope you're starting this new year with your head full of travel memories or plans!!
I’d love to spend a week in July on a Greek island with my 8-year-old son. I’m totally in love with Amorgos, but not all the beaches are accessible for him. I’ve been to Santorini and Naxos before and don’t want to go back. Would you have an island to recommend that’s not too crowded 😕, with a few accessible beaches and where we won’t have to fight to get around or park?
Have a great day Christelle
Hello,
A few months ago, I posted a message in the Southern Africa section about a family trip in July/August. In the end, since I had too much trouble deciding on the destination and procrastinated too much with the planning 😎, I changed my mind and we’re going for a completely different trip—to Madagascar, a country we already know a bit since we’ve traveled there several times for 4 to 6 months each time, though our last visit was back in 2012!
The tickets are booked: 19 days on the ground (excluding arrival and departure days in Tana), spanning July and August.
We’re not looking to rack up landscapes (and kilometers). The kids really want to see lots of animals, while we mostly want to show them what daily life is like in Malagasy villages. So ideally, we’d like a trip split into two parts: - For 8/10 days, a hiking portion. The idea isn’t to do a tough trek in very remote areas but rather to walk from one village to another. Let’s say 3-4 hours a day. And when we arrive in each village, we’d have time to explore a bit, chat with the locals, let our kids play with the village children, etc. Stay with locals when possible. Move to a new village every day or every 2-3 days. - A few days visiting 1 or 2 national parks (with lemurs if possible to keep everyone happy!) - With the inevitable travel days, we’ll quickly hit 19 days.
Does this kind of trip sound doable (and fun) to you? Do you know of any villages that would fit our hiking plans?
I don’t have a preferred region yet, except that very dry landscapes appeal to me less. My real love from past trips was the highlands and their bright green rice paddies against red earth, but I’m a bit worried about the cold at this time of year.
After my initial research (thanks to this forum), I get the impression that the Ambalavao/Ambohimahamasina area might meet our criteria. I saw there are "accueil paysan" (farm stays) in that area, which could match what we’re looking for and would let us visit Andringitra National Park and Ranomafana on the way there or back.
But I’m open to all your more original ideas!
For logistical questions (transport, guides, accommodations, etc.), I’ll tackle those later—it’ll depend on the area we choose.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions
A few months ago, I posted a message in the Southern Africa section about a family trip in July/August. In the end, since I had too much trouble deciding on the destination and procrastinated too much with the planning 😎, I changed my mind and we’re going for a completely different trip—to Madagascar, a country we already know a bit since we’ve traveled there several times for 4 to 6 months each time, though our last visit was back in 2012!
The tickets are booked: 19 days on the ground (excluding arrival and departure days in Tana), spanning July and August.
We’re not looking to rack up landscapes (and kilometers). The kids really want to see lots of animals, while we mostly want to show them what daily life is like in Malagasy villages. So ideally, we’d like a trip split into two parts: - For 8/10 days, a hiking portion. The idea isn’t to do a tough trek in very remote areas but rather to walk from one village to another. Let’s say 3-4 hours a day. And when we arrive in each village, we’d have time to explore a bit, chat with the locals, let our kids play with the village children, etc. Stay with locals when possible. Move to a new village every day or every 2-3 days. - A few days visiting 1 or 2 national parks (with lemurs if possible to keep everyone happy!) - With the inevitable travel days, we’ll quickly hit 19 days.
Does this kind of trip sound doable (and fun) to you? Do you know of any villages that would fit our hiking plans?
I don’t have a preferred region yet, except that very dry landscapes appeal to me less. My real love from past trips was the highlands and their bright green rice paddies against red earth, but I’m a bit worried about the cold at this time of year.
After my initial research (thanks to this forum), I get the impression that the Ambalavao/Ambohimahamasina area might meet our criteria. I saw there are "accueil paysan" (farm stays) in that area, which could match what we’re looking for and would let us visit Andringitra National Park and Ranomafana on the way there or back.
But I’m open to all your more original ideas!
For logistical questions (transport, guides, accommodations, etc.), I’ll tackle those later—it’ll depend on the area we choose.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions
Dear Travelers,
We’re a family with young kids (6 years old, 3 years old, and a newborn) and we’d like to spend about ten days in Aquitaine (in Gironde or Les Landes). We’d love to be near pretty villages to visit and, if possible, close to the sea. We’re planning to stay at a campsite with a pool so the kids can play. Could you recommend any places/villages/campsites for us? We don’t know the region at all.
Thanks so much!
Camille
We’re a family with young kids (6 years old, 3 years old, and a newborn) and we’d like to spend about ten days in Aquitaine (in Gironde or Les Landes). We’d love to be near pretty villages to visit and, if possible, close to the sea. We’re planning to stay at a campsite with a pool so the kids can play. Could you recommend any places/villages/campsites for us? We don’t know the region at all.
Thanks so much!
Camille
Hi there,
We’re a family of five (our kids are 6, 15, and 19) and we’d love to go somewhere warm with our feet in the water during the first two weeks of August 2026. We’d also like to do some cultural visits and a bit of hiking. We were thinking of Guadeloupe—I know it’s not the ideal time of year, but we don’t have much flexibility. Is it really a bad idea, or can we still enjoy it despite the weather?
Another option for us would be Madeira, which seems more reliable weather-wise, but it sounds like the beaches are less accessible and not as nice.
We haven’t really looked elsewhere because everything else (except the Canary Islands, Balearics, or Corsica) seems way too expensive. But if you’ve got any recommendations, don’t hesitate—we’re just starting to look into it.
Thanks so much,
Pierre
We’re a family of five (our kids are 6, 15, and 19) and we’d love to go somewhere warm with our feet in the water during the first two weeks of August 2026. We’d also like to do some cultural visits and a bit of hiking. We were thinking of Guadeloupe—I know it’s not the ideal time of year, but we don’t have much flexibility. Is it really a bad idea, or can we still enjoy it despite the weather?
Another option for us would be Madeira, which seems more reliable weather-wise, but it sounds like the beaches are less accessible and not as nice.
We haven’t really looked elsewhere because everything else (except the Canary Islands, Balearics, or Corsica) seems way too expensive. But if you’ve got any recommendations, don’t hesitate—we’re just starting to look into it.
Thanks so much,
Pierre
Hi,
This summer, we’re spending a month in Malaysia. There are 3 adults and two kids in our group. I’ve just finished planning our itinerary and I’d love to get your thoughts on whether it feels "coherent."
Thanks in advance for your feedback!
Christelle
07/07 Depart France 10:30 AM
08/07 Arrive KL 7:50 PM
09/07 KL
10/07 KL / Batu Caves
11/07 KL
12/07 KL → Kuching (flight)
13/07 Kuching
14/07 Bako National Park
15/07 Bako → Kuching
16/07 Semenggoh Reserve
17/07 Kuching → Mulu (flight)
18/07 Mulu National Park
19/07 Mulu → Kota Kinabalu (flight)
20/07 Kota Kinabalu → Sandakan (flight)
21/07 Kinabatangan
22/07 Kinabatangan → Sandakan / Sandakan → KL (flight)
23/07 Malacca
24/07 Malacca → Chin Swee Caves Temple
25/07 Chin Swee Caves Temple → Kuala Tahan / Taman Negara Park
26/07 Taman Negara Park
27/07 Kuala Tahan → Kuala Besut
28/07 Perhentian Islands
29/07 Perhentian Islands
30/07 Perhentian Islands
31/07 Perhentian → George Town
01/08 George Town / Penang
02/08 George Town / Penang
03/08 Ipoh
04/08 Cameron Highlands
05/08 Return to KL
06/08 Return to France
Hi everyone,
I’m planning a 3-week trip to Malaysia this July with my 6-year-old son.
I’d thought we’d go this year, but we ended up returning to Samui instead.
I’ve decided to limit it to 4 stops to avoid moving around too often and to fully enjoy each place without rushing. The travel times between each spot aren’t too long, except for the one between Sandakan and Langkawi.
* 05: Arrival in KL in the afternoon. 06: Day in KL. I’ve been there a few times and know the city a bit.
* 07: Head to Kota Kinabalu 08 – 09: In KK
* 10: Flight from Sandakan to Sepilok 11: In Sepilok
* 12: Flight to Kinabatangan 13 – 14: In Kinabatangan
* 15: Head to Langkawi 15 – 21: In Langkawi
* 22: Return to KL 23 – 24: In KL
* 25: Return flight
Any thoughts on this itinerary? I have a rough idea of what we’ll do at each stop after checking online and with ChatGPT.
Thanks! 🙂
I’ve decided to limit it to 4 stops to avoid moving around too often and to fully enjoy each place without rushing. The travel times between each spot aren’t too long, except for the one between Sandakan and Langkawi.
* 05: Arrival in KL in the afternoon. 06: Day in KL. I’ve been there a few times and know the city a bit.
* 07: Head to Kota Kinabalu 08 – 09: In KK
* 10: Flight from Sandakan to Sepilok 11: In Sepilok
* 12: Flight to Kinabatangan 13 – 14: In Kinabatangan
* 15: Head to Langkawi 15 – 21: In Langkawi
* 22: Return to KL 23 – 24: In KL
* 25: Return flight
Any thoughts on this itinerary? I have a rough idea of what we’ll do at each stop after checking online and with ChatGPT.
Thanks! 🙂
Hi there,
We’re heading out at the end of February for a road trip with our two kids, ages 3 and 7. Our itinerary includes Ait Ben Haddou, Tizi-n-Tichka, Sourate, Tinghir, Zagora, Ouarzazate, Ouzoud, and Essaouira. I’d love recommendations for accommodations, restaurants, and typical/spectacular spots to visit. We’d like to spend a night in the Zagora desert. We’re looking for authenticity and a friendly vibe—not tourist traps—for our trip. We’ll be there during Ramadan—any tips? Thanks in advance!
Your fellow globetrotter’s perspective is invaluable.
We’re heading out at the end of February for a road trip with our two kids, ages 3 and 7. Our itinerary includes Ait Ben Haddou, Tizi-n-Tichka, Sourate, Tinghir, Zagora, Ouarzazate, Ouzoud, and Essaouira. I’d love recommendations for accommodations, restaurants, and typical/spectacular spots to visit. We’d like to spend a night in the Zagora desert. We’re looking for authenticity and a friendly vibe—not tourist traps—for our trip. We’ll be there during Ramadan—any tips? Thanks in advance!
Your fellow globetrotter’s perspective is invaluable.
Hi there!
After our Central Asia trip this summer, we’ll be setting foot in Africa for the first time next February with our three kids (ages 5, 13, and 17).
I’ve fine-tuned a little itinerary with ChatGPT based on our interests and expectations, and here’s what came out:
Tuesday, February 24 — Dakar
Landing at 1:00 AM
Early afternoon: visit Gorée Island
Back to Dakar, light dinner
7:00 PM: boarding the ferry “Aline Sitoé Diatta”
Overnight on board (cabin)
Wednesday, February 25 — Ziguinchor
Arrival between 9:00–11:00 AM
Staying with a local host
Stroll: Saint-Maur market, river port
Overnight in Ziguinchor
Thursday, February 26 – Saturday, February 28 — Casamance (Cap Skirring & Oussouye)
February 26: Ziguinchor → Carabane road trip, explore the island, overnight on the island
February 27: Cap Skirring, beach time
February 28: Cap Skirring, relaxation, stroll, beach
Sunday, March 1 – Tuesday, March 3 — Oussouye
Head to Oussouye (~1 hour)
Discover Diola villages, rice fields, market, handicrafts
Overnights: Oussouye (3 nights)
Wednesday, March 4 – Friday, March 6 — Sine-Saloum
Drive to Toubacouta via the Trans-Gambian Highway (Gambia)
Stay with a local host / camp on the bolongs
Activities: pirogue ride in the delta, Serer villages, biking, handicraft discovery
Overnights: Sine-Saloum (3 nights)
Saturday, March 7 – Sunday, March 8 — Petite Côte
Drive to Somone / Ngaparou (~3 hours)
Stay with a local host
Activities: beach, safari at Bandia Reserve, kayaking on the lagoon, craft market
Overnights: Petite Côte (2 nights, including Sunday, March 8, to enjoy the full day before the nighttime departure)
Monday, March 9 — Departure
Transfer to Blaise Diagne International Airport (~45 minutes)
Flight leaves at 2:00 AM
I’ve got a few questions:
- Is an afternoon on Gorée Island worth it? I really want to go, but the ferry departure days are a bit limiting. - How easy is it to get around between these different stops? Can we find a taxi that fits all five of us? - Do you have any accommodation recommendations? I’d love to stay with locals as much as possible—we’re not looking for luxury, just a bed and a shower. - February 28 is my birthday, and I’d love to do something “special”: any ideas for a nice place to stay, a great restaurant, or an out-of-the-ordinary activity? We’ll be around Cap Skirring. - Does this itinerary seem coherent? I really want to visit Casamance, and we’d prefer to stay no more than 3 nights in the same place.
Don’t hesitate to share your tips! Thanks so much!
After our Central Asia trip this summer, we’ll be setting foot in Africa for the first time next February with our three kids (ages 5, 13, and 17).
I’ve fine-tuned a little itinerary with ChatGPT based on our interests and expectations, and here’s what came out:
Tuesday, February 24 — Dakar
Landing at 1:00 AM
Early afternoon: visit Gorée Island
Back to Dakar, light dinner
7:00 PM: boarding the ferry “Aline Sitoé Diatta”
Overnight on board (cabin)
Wednesday, February 25 — Ziguinchor
Arrival between 9:00–11:00 AM
Staying with a local host
Stroll: Saint-Maur market, river port
Overnight in Ziguinchor
Thursday, February 26 – Saturday, February 28 — Casamance (Cap Skirring & Oussouye)
February 26: Ziguinchor → Carabane road trip, explore the island, overnight on the island
February 27: Cap Skirring, beach time
February 28: Cap Skirring, relaxation, stroll, beach
Sunday, March 1 – Tuesday, March 3 — Oussouye
Head to Oussouye (~1 hour)
Discover Diola villages, rice fields, market, handicrafts
Overnights: Oussouye (3 nights)
Wednesday, March 4 – Friday, March 6 — Sine-Saloum
Drive to Toubacouta via the Trans-Gambian Highway (Gambia)
Stay with a local host / camp on the bolongs
Activities: pirogue ride in the delta, Serer villages, biking, handicraft discovery
Overnights: Sine-Saloum (3 nights)
Saturday, March 7 – Sunday, March 8 — Petite Côte
Drive to Somone / Ngaparou (~3 hours)
Stay with a local host
Activities: beach, safari at Bandia Reserve, kayaking on the lagoon, craft market
Overnights: Petite Côte (2 nights, including Sunday, March 8, to enjoy the full day before the nighttime departure)
Monday, March 9 — Departure
Transfer to Blaise Diagne International Airport (~45 minutes)
Flight leaves at 2:00 AM
I’ve got a few questions:
- Is an afternoon on Gorée Island worth it? I really want to go, but the ferry departure days are a bit limiting. - How easy is it to get around between these different stops? Can we find a taxi that fits all five of us? - Do you have any accommodation recommendations? I’d love to stay with locals as much as possible—we’re not looking for luxury, just a bed and a shower. - February 28 is my birthday, and I’d love to do something “special”: any ideas for a nice place to stay, a great restaurant, or an out-of-the-ordinary activity? We’ll be around Cap Skirring. - Does this itinerary seem coherent? I really want to visit Casamance, and we’d prefer to stay no more than 3 nights in the same place.
Don’t hesitate to share your tips! Thanks so much!
Hello,
I’d like to go to Morocco with my 10-year-old daughter for three weeks in February.
Do you think, as women traveling alone, we’ll feel comfortable? Sorry if my question seems odd, but when I mentioned my plans, I got some hesitant reactions.
I’ve never been to North Africa. I’ve traveled several times to the Sultanate of Oman, where I felt very at ease as long as we respected the basic cultural norms. For those who know Morocco, do you think it’s different? Would it be appropriate for me to cover my head?
I was thinking of arriving in Agadir and spending a few days in Taghazout and the surrounding area. After that, if you have any tips, I’m all ears. We’re looking to discover Moroccan cultures, see artisans at work, or even try our hand at a local craft—we’d love that. Simply meeting families, seeing landscapes, animals, and soaking in the culture gently, opening ourselves to something new—that’s what motivates us. And if there are opportunities to listen to local music, even better.
We’ll be traveling by public transport. Thanks in advance for your ideas. Happy travels to everyone.
I was thinking of arriving in Agadir and spending a few days in Taghazout and the surrounding area. After that, if you have any tips, I’m all ears. We’re looking to discover Moroccan cultures, see artisans at work, or even try our hand at a local craft—we’d love that. Simply meeting families, seeing landscapes, animals, and soaking in the culture gently, opening ourselves to something new—that’s what motivates us. And if there are opportunities to listen to local music, even better.
We’ll be traveling by public transport. Thanks in advance for your ideas. Happy travels to everyone.
we’re taking our grandkids in early 2026 (14 and 10 years old) without their parents. Do we really need to have birth certificates and other forms translated by a sworn translator?
Hi there, I’m really sorry if this question has already been asked several times—I’ve been scouring blogs, forums, and various sites for a while now, but I still have some more specific questions for our trip...
First off, we’re a family of four with two kids aged 10 and 14. We’ve already been to Thailand and Laos five times with them (each trip lasting a month or six weeks), and we’re huge Thailand lovers, but this year we’d like to discover Indonesia, which we don’t know at all (for a duration of 4 or 5 weeks between late June and late July). We travel pretty "roots" style with a budget of 100 € per day and avoid touristy areas as much as possible. We get around using local transport, rent scooters, and take our time (for a one-month trip, we usually visit 4 destinations to really soak it in). So here are my upcoming questions:
For a first visit, I wanted to focus on a single island—Lombok—by taking a flight from Paris to Denpasar and then a boat to Lombok. Do you think the following route would work? - Kuta Lombok - Gili Gede - Gili Meno - Tetebatu
I saw there’s a local boat to Lombok—has anyone here taken it before? For those who’ve been there during this period, do you know if Gili Meno and Gili Gede get crowded, or should we focus more on the coasts? To get between these spots, are there buses, or do we need to take private taxis? As for accommodations, we’re used to booking triple rooms for all four of us in Thailand. For those who travel with kids, do you know if that’s doable in Indonesia, or should we book two double rooms instead?
Last (slightly silly) question: We want to go to Indonesia because our son dreams of seeing beautiful marine life while snorkeling—I think Lombok is a good choice for that. But my daughter is a huge fan of those "knick-knack" markets full of Chinese trinkets that you find all over Thailand. Do you know if Lombok has any day or night markets where we could go?
Thank you so much for your help! !
First off, we’re a family of four with two kids aged 10 and 14. We’ve already been to Thailand and Laos five times with them (each trip lasting a month or six weeks), and we’re huge Thailand lovers, but this year we’d like to discover Indonesia, which we don’t know at all (for a duration of 4 or 5 weeks between late June and late July). We travel pretty "roots" style with a budget of 100 € per day and avoid touristy areas as much as possible. We get around using local transport, rent scooters, and take our time (for a one-month trip, we usually visit 4 destinations to really soak it in). So here are my upcoming questions:
For a first visit, I wanted to focus on a single island—Lombok—by taking a flight from Paris to Denpasar and then a boat to Lombok. Do you think the following route would work? - Kuta Lombok - Gili Gede - Gili Meno - Tetebatu
I saw there’s a local boat to Lombok—has anyone here taken it before? For those who’ve been there during this period, do you know if Gili Meno and Gili Gede get crowded, or should we focus more on the coasts? To get between these spots, are there buses, or do we need to take private taxis? As for accommodations, we’re used to booking triple rooms for all four of us in Thailand. For those who travel with kids, do you know if that’s doable in Indonesia, or should we book two double rooms instead?
Last (slightly silly) question: We want to go to Indonesia because our son dreams of seeing beautiful marine life while snorkeling—I think Lombok is a good choice for that. But my daughter is a huge fan of those "knick-knack" markets full of Chinese trinkets that you find all over Thailand. Do you know if Lombok has any day or night markets where we could go?
Thank you so much for your help! !