Work - Family

4 Tips for Stress-Free Holiday Travel

How to take the hassle out of your holiday vacation

By Laura Sullivan, Parenting
 
See Also
Family friendly places to travel with your family, from Maine to California - Parenting.com
How to deal with relatives, shopping, and entertaining during the most wonderful (and one of the most chaotic) time of the year - Parenting.com
How can I prevent my 5-month-old son from getting sick while we travel over the holidays? I'm concerned about the germs he might be exposed to in airports and on airplanes. - Parenting.com
How to keep your little one from becoming overwhelmed - Parenting.com
Childproof your home for the holidays, childproofing your home, how to childproof your home, common childproof dangers - Parenting.com
Traveling this season? How to protect your kids - Parenting.com
Your kid's next in line for a photo with Santa - here's how to avoid a meltdown. - Parenting.com
Taking a real vacation around the holidays can be wonderful...or a stress-fest. To make it less aack! and more aah: 

Let Them Help: "Moms take on the burden of all the planning," says Samantha Brown, host of Great Weekends on the Travel Channel. She says that as soon as kids can talk, they can tell you what they want out of a vacation. (Yes, "I want to play princess!" is a valid wish.) The older they get, the more fact-finding they can do. Ask your tweens (and younger kids, teamed up with your husband) to plan activities, pick a restaurant, decide between the scenic route and the fast way. The more involved they are, the more they'll get out of the trip. Just keep in mind that if the kids are tired, nobody's happy, so follow Brown's rule: Plan only one thing per day.

Time It Right:  Got preschoolers? Find the school calendar on your  district's website, and travel when class is in session to dodge the holiday crush. And book the first flight of the day. It's almost never delayed because the plane has been at the gate all night.

Make the Wait Great: A secret weapon for the flight or car is free  storybook podcasts from iTunes. For two kids, try a headphone-jack splitter, about $5 at electronics stores.
Though it may seem counter-intuitive, don't eat before you leave for the airport. Surveying all the  different options and then sitting down for a meal will occupy them for a good 45 minutes.

Bring a Bit of Home With You: Do you each pick one present to open on Christmas Eve? Read a special story or break out new pajamas the night before the holiday? Take your best tradition along.



PRINT
Quick Poll

Adult toys in the bedroom -- a do or a don't?

Yes, yes, yes!
Sure, in theory, but I'd be too embarrassed!
No way. We're lovers not porn-stars.


ADVERTISEMENT
Popular on Parenting.com
Popular on Parenting.com
 
Photo Galleries

20 Mom Tattoos

You asked for them! 20 more inked-up mamas, Parenting readers, and staff members and the personal stories behind their skin art

promotion
 

Blog: The Daily Fave

Shawn: "Sure, it helps to know what a mucus plug is, but mostly guys need books that offers simple, streamlined, practical info that doesn't get bogged down with a lot of 'medical diagrams' or 'compound sentences.' Well have I got the book for you, Pops." Updated frequently.

Blog: The Parenting Post

Mighty Maggie: "I have been in charge of the family finances for about a year now and I STILL DON'T KNOW WHAT I AM DOING." Updated Daily!

The Best Toys of 2009

We're giving away over $900 worth of toys! Enter BOTH giveaways once a day until December 14
Birthday Parties

31 Amazing Birthday Cake Designs

Sweet! The easiest, cutest cakes for boys and girls