Where are you going this year?

First my Washington DC advice:
-If you can't get timed tix, please contact your local Congress person, they can often arrange something...if not White House at least the Capitol building, and possibly a hand shake with them ( which is cool for your kids!)

-consider "Bike the Sites" http://www.bikeandroll.com/washingtondc/
We did their biking the monuments at night, it was fabulous! DC is flat as a board, so even if you are not expert bikers ( like me:rotfl2:) it's easy, and since the monuments are one of the few things "open" at night, it maximizes your time for the day things and they are just magnificent lit up at night. You get time to stop and wander around the monuments , then the guide rolls you to the next, very easy, one of our favorite experiences!

- arrive at the major line attractions early ( I mean early!) You know the attraction where you need to go see this one famous thing that will take 10 minutes, but the line will be 2 hours by 10 Am? It takes a while to wake, dress, feed and bus all those 8 th graders to places like the National Archive, while they are doing that, you get there before 9 AM and see the whole thing in 20 minutes or so. As you head out the door, those bus tours are just starting to roll up. Plan one major "line attraction" for every morning and get there before it opens. Then head to the places where you are likely to spend more time poking, like a museum.

- if you plan to do the the zoo, get up early( are you seeing a trend here? ) like WDW, ( which don't we all love or wouldn't be here;)) it's better to go early and nap mid afternoon, than wait 2 hours to look at the constitution in the Archives for 10 minutes! Back to the zoo: go early, right at opening. Start with the Asian exhibit ( the pandas are there, but so are lots of other great animals) it will be gridlocked by 11 AM, so start there and move elsewhere once people start arriving. Plan to leave right around lunch time to save your sanity.

- chunk your daily itinerary into sections...so go to a "line builder attraction" early, then see the museums and other attractions in that area, the next day hit another area, this minimizes walking!

-prioritize...like WDW you can't do it all in one visit, so pick and choose, we decided to tour the whitehouse since we could get tix, but just visited the Court and Capitol buildings. We did Air and Space and one of the Art museums (taking in the sculpture garden as part of our walk from one end to another) because that was what interested each of our kids. We did the monuments at night to maximize the day hours and forgot about the bonus of how gorgeous they'd be!

Good luck! We only spent 2 full days, so we had to power tour...you might have a more relaxed schedule...but I'm gonna go with go early and plan well!

Oh, and where are we going, you ask? Most immediately to western NY and Philadelphia to check out design colleges, ( maybe run up the Rocky steps:laughing:) then on an ABD to Ecuador and the Galapagos in August, on a cruise from Tahiti through French Polynesia in October, and next April taking the kids on the worlds largest cruise ship, Allure of the Seas! In between I'll be chill axing in my favorite place in the world...Maine!:thumbsup2
 
I've read that Iceland should have been called Greenland and vice versa. LOL
There are lots of waterfalls and thermal areas. My dh and ds are volcanoe nuts, so everyone is really excited about going.

iWent to Icecland in 1997. It was one of the most beautiful places I have ever scene. There is green there but it is like a mossy fuzzy greenery. No trees or anything.


No ABD his year just 2 Disney cruises.
 


Going on the Central Italy ABD on 6/17, followed by 5 days in Rome.

Others are the Atlantis in the Bahamas in April and Vermont in October.
 
Our trips this year are ABD to Greece on May 25, F&W in Oct, and a few long weekends at the beach.

I live in the Washington DC area and I would recommend a little known museum across the street from Union Station. It is the Postal Museum, small but interesting. It is downstairs in the main post office. If you have a car available I would also recommend the Marine Corps Museum in Quantico about 30 minutes south of Washington on 95. A tour of the Kennedy Center is also interesting as is the Building Museum and the National Geographic Museum. There is just so much to do here that there is no way to see it all in a few days. When our kids were little we used to act like tourists one weekend a month and they complained, but have fond memories of it and we still have not seen everything.

Please do see the WWII Memorial, Vietnam Memorial, and Korean War Memorial at night. They take on a whole different perspective and you feel moved a lot more than you do during the day.

I am happy to answer any questions about DC.
 
Viva Italia 7/9/12. Pompeii & the Amalfi Coast pre-ABD and 4 day layover in London on the return.
 


This year will be the first of the last 5 years that we aren't doing a tour :( We did ABDs in 2008 & 2009 and Tauck Bridges trips in 2010 and 2011. This summer, I'm sending my daughter to horseback riding camp, and in August we are going to Beaches in Turks & Caicos for a week. So with that, our vacation budget is officially shot! My daughter has been pining for that Caribbean turquoise water since we went two years ago.
She got to choose this summer's trip, but next summer it's MY TURN again! I'm dying to go back to Europe, but will take some saving to be able to swing it, so am starting now for 2013.
 
It's great to hear about everyone's trips, and I appreciate all of the D.C. tips. Turns out we didn't get the lottery for the White House tour, but will get to go to "Constituent Day" with our congressperson, and visit the floor of the House- a neat thing I've never done before. Just a week to go - we're excited!

I'd love to do the Greece trip someday. I'm also interested in a cruise that includes Greece. The pictures I've seen of the islands make it look like a very nice place to be!
 
It's great to hear about everyone's trips, and I appreciate all of the D.C. tips. Turns out we didn't get the lottery for the White House tour, but will get to go to "Constituent Day" with our congressperson, and visit the floor of the House- a neat thing I've never done before. Just a week to go - we're excited!

Have a great trip! Sorry about the White House, but honestly for as little as you get to see inside, a little walk by will be pretty darn close to the same experience! My kids were more excited by the fact that the motorcade came roaring down the street right after we left (we were walking and were held up by the police at the corner till they passed). We didn't know and they wouldn't tell who...but it was exciting!! We also saw one of our Reps on the street, and I pointed him out by name to the girls he stopped and asked where we were from; once he heard it was not in his district he said a quick hello and kept going.;) We also saw our Governor on the street (had no idea he was in town to lobby:eek:). He was surrounded by a whole bunch of staffers, so we really couldn't stop him on the street. The kids found it exciting playing "eye spy" with people they normally saw on tv!
It will be a very busy week in DC... definitely go everywhere early!:thumbsup2 Have fun!
 
Thanks to everyone for the DC suggestions. We had a great time. There was renovation and earthquake reparation all over, but it's still a beautiful city.
 
Bobo912 - Anything to look out for/avoid/plan around due to renovations? We head off tomorrow (but won't be there until Monday, will be visiting relatives before D.C.). Very excited about the trip.
 
Bobo912 - Anything to look out for/avoid/plan around due to renovations? We head off tomorrow (but won't be there until Monday, will be visiting relatives before D.C.). Very excited about the trip.

Fortunately, none of the contruction was really an impediment. There are barricades around the Washington Monument, so you can't go right up to it, but since you can't go inside now anyway there isn't really any reason to. There's lots of scaffolding and netting on the ceiling in the Main Hall at Union Station, but it appears to be business as usual there. It doesn't look as pretty, but it's still impressive. There is earthquake damage and netting on the ceiling at the National Cathdral. There's also some scaffolding and tarps draped on the Capitol. The reflecting pool is fenced off and excavated. Some of the walkways between the WWII Memorial and Lincoln Memorial are blocked off because of the Reflecting Pool renovation, but you can still get around easily. There is also another museum being built on that end of the Mall. None of the renovations caused us a problem, but the city isn't as picturesque as I remembered. I guess we'll have to go back when all the restoration is complete. :)
 
Thanks to everyone for the DC suggestions. We had a great time. There was renovation and earthquake reparation all over, but it's still a beautiful city.
Glad you had a good time! :thumbsup2 See America! ;)

Sayhello
 
Heading to London and Paris with ABD in less than a month! :scared1: SO not ready!!!

Anyone else been on that trip and have any suggestions? Sayhello has been very helpful! :hippie:
 
We're leaving in two weeks for Hilton Head. We are driving and will stop for a couple of days in DC. Surprised no one mentioned Arlington National Cemetery. The Tomb of the Unknowns is a must for us. But so is a walk through the various sections, e.g. the United States Colored Troops, the Supreme Court section, The Generals, etc.
 
We just got back from our trip to D.C. It was an amazing five days - there is so much to see and do, we were busy the whole time (and walked 'til we dropped). It was really a shame about the construction on the National Mall, and the empty reflecting pool, but the Jefferson Memorial on the tidal basin still looked stunning. We enjoyed a great morning at "Constitutent Day" with our congressman, and got one of my daughters thinking about perhaps going to college in the D.C. area. My kids loved the Spy Museum and Georgetown Cupcake. We also had a lot of great meals - there are a plethora of really good (although somewhat pricey) restaurants in D.C. We balanced out the meal costs by staying in a very value-priced hotel - it was well located, acceptable as far as quality, and a real budget helper.

Thanks to all for the tips!
 
Just back from our Iceland trip. Loved, loved loved it! DH is already planning on going back, lol! Highlight of the trip was our jeep tour that took us to the top of a glacier! Absolutely beautiful country and friendly people.

Also stopped in Boston for a few days (had to catch Icelandair there). Did a Segway tour of the city, really fun.
 
What a great thread to see where everyone is going! I have a few trips planned for this year: Seattle at the end of June, Maine (annual trip) in August, San Francisco & Sonoma in October and then Disney World in December.
I was hoping to do ABD Peru this October but it looks like we're going to pick a date for next year when the new dates come out - I'm so excited about that!

If anyone has any recommendations for Seattle I'm all ears! And also, for D.C., if anyone else is going, I used to live there and miss it so much! I would suggest Arlington National Cemetery as a PP mentioned - its absolutely beautiful.
 
What a great thread to see where everyone is going! I have a few trips planned for this year: Seattle at the end of June, Maine (annual trip) in August, San Francisco & Sonoma in October and then Disney World in December.
I was hoping to do ABD Peru this October but it looks like we're going to pick a date for next year when the new dates come out - I'm so excited about that!

If anyone has any recommendations for Seattle I'm all ears! And also, for D.C., if anyone else is going, I used to live there and miss it so much! I would suggest Arlington National Cemetery as a PP mentioned - its absolutely beautiful.
Sounds like you're taking some great trips this year!

Seattle is a great city. You're going to love it! You definitely have to check out the Pike Place Market on the waterfront. Check out the fish market, where they throw the fish. The entire waterfront area is great, with a wonderful Aquarium, and amazing restaurants.

I also highly recommend the Underground tour. The streets in old Seattle were raised, and much of the old street-level part of the town was abandoned. It's a really cool thing to see, and learn a bit about the history of Seattle.

http://www.undergroundtour.com/

And you have to go to the Space Needle. The views from the top are amazing, and if you eat at the restaurant up there, the observation deck is included (not to mention the view while you eat!). Last time I was there, the food was very good.

Sayhello
 

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