SandraC said:Please give me suggestions!!!!! THANKS!
How do you find the drive home? I would like it's a little sad and boring? S
striker3636 said:We have done the drive with our kids, now 4 and 7 twice from Waterloo, Ont through Windsor to the I75. We leave at night, around 7:30 and go until mid afternoon the next day. This gets us pretty far into Georgia and then we stop at a hotel with a pool to stretch out and such for the night. My dh can drive for long periods so the 18 hour stretch doesn't bug him. The kids sleep a fair bit of it (hopefully 9pm to 6ish). We always have a stop for breakie etc around 7, then keep going. We take off day 2 by 7 so we are at WDW early in the afternoon. In the past we have taken down our camper and used the afternoon on arrival day to set up at Fort Wilderness, then explore and catch the campfire and outdoor movie.
The ride down has always gone smoothly for us. I have a ton of things for the kids to do, always new activity books, toys, colouring etc etc. (yeah, dollar store!) I also have a goodie bag of new things I can dip into when the DVD player loses its novelty. We are all so excited to go that the drive down is good. We have had bad storms both times the way home, so my advice from experience is make sure you have given yourself a bit of extra drive time figured in (both ways), so that if you have to stop for a while due to fatigue or weather you can. Nothing worse than having to push on because you have to be at work in a few hours!!!
I also second Dave Hunter's book, Along the I75! It is great to not only pass the time and know where you are/are going, but also to look ahead for gas stations, restaurants, 24hr Walmarts, etc etc. We like to stop at the Flying J chain of gas stations, the prices are competitive, and they always have decent coffee (nothing like Timmies, I'm afraid) that is fresh even at 3am.
If you let us know your kids ages, I can give you some more specific keep-busy suggestions that have worked for us if you are interested.
F4disneyfan said:For our family driving is the only way to go. WE love the drive even the 3 kids love it. They always have lots of stuff to do in the car they play games and colour and read and look at the scenery listen to music. There really isn't anything bad about the drive that I can think of. The wife went and bought a new tent trailer this June so we are hauling that down with us in 07 we will be at FW for a week then over to SSR for a week I hate camping but I will do it at Disney to humour the family.
Bea said:One of the things I do for the kids is I made them each pocket organizers that are strapped on the backs of the seats in front of them. Used colourful felt in different sizes for the pockets. When they wake up that first morning I have put things in each pocket (alot of dollar store stuff). It is stuff they haven't seen before. Pens/pencils would be disney themed, writing paper, books, travel games. Also in the pockets (this is the really important part) I have "snacks". The kids are responsible for their own snacks that day so they can eat them all at once or slowly through out the day. It is up to them. This is key to not hearing "I am hungry"
The snacks cannot be anything that can melts; maybe pretzels, licorice, bubble gum. The next day I put more things in their pockets but mostly just restock on the munchies.
The way back is alittle quieter in the car, and yeah, alittle depressing cuz you are going home, but the upside is the way back always seems faster than the way there. Driving doesn't have to be a negative, it is all in the presentation...![]()
Happy planning!!![]()
digskat said:You'll have to let us know how the hauling of the Trailer goes we'd like to haul our trailer some time to FW. BYW camping in a trailer is no comparison to tenting, I do not tent! I lovemy trailer though!![]()
striker3636 said:digskat: Hauling our trailer was fine, other than we tended to drive a bit slower than we might normally so the drive was slightly longer. We had great weather on the drive down, but on the drive back we hit some stormy weather both drives. The first drive we hit a storm in Ohio, and were very glad we had a big heavy Suburban at the time. It was pretty tough going by the time we got to Windsor. If we had tried it with our 4Runner, we would have been staying the night in Ohio. The second trip we hit a nasty snow storm coming through the TN mountains driving a Ford F350, diesel. That was scary! There were some lanes closed due to construction and there was nowhere to pull to the side if you were having trouble. I remember vividly one mighty hill and feeling the trailer slip behind us, having the snow clear for a few brief seconds, and looking over down the side of the mountain, not that far away with nothing in between to stop us in a slide....Lessons learned: make sure you have lots of extra drive time factored in for bad weather, and make sure your tow vehicle is more than what you need to pull your trailer (you don't want to be hauling with a borderline overweight tow vehicle and encounter trouble in the mountains!).