family travel
Wander answers all your questions about family travel except "Are we there yet?"
Home is where we park it
When I was a child, home was a tiny town of only 300 people. I moved once just a few blocks from a little two bedroom cottage to the large five bedroom house my father built with his own hands over the course of many years. The house sat at the end of the block surrounded by fields of alfalfa. I’d run in the newly planted grass, jump over the small new pine trees, and bike down dusty dirt roads to see friends.
By Viltinga Rasytoja4 years ago in Wander
Chicago
Breaking the News Like most people around my age, I had a huge Hamilton phase in my high school era. This happened to coincide with my time as a student of theater, though the two were never mutually exclusive and both ultimately lead nowhere. Nowadays, I'm not as open about my appreciation for Hamilton (as in, I'm not shoving it down the throat of every person that has the unfortunate circumstance of sitting next to me in a cafeteria) and am not involved in any sort of theater, but I have a memory involving Hamilton that's very near and dear to my heart- and that was getting to see Hamilton live in Chicago.
By Lee Andrew Butler4 years ago in Wander
Best Place to travel in Florida
The Florida Panhandle contains Tallahassee, Destin, Panama City Beach, Destin, and Pensacola - the country's capital -. One of my favorite places in Florida is DeLand, just west of Daytona Beach. There isn’t one thing about DeLand that makes it different, but it does include a lot of things, including a fun art gallery, impressive state parks, spring jumps, and fish camps.
By Tsunami Karki5 years ago in Wander
Best place to travel In Italy
Umbria is as beautiful for tourists as it is for Tuscany, it is full of beautiful mountain villages, beautiful churches, and beautiful countryside. I think Siena is the best city to visit in Tuscany, but I have to admit that, like Florence, it does nothing to attract me, but the atmosphere is magical.
By Shreya Poudel5 years ago in Wander
Sojourn to the Land Of Temples
It was the end of September when we decided to go for a trip in the upcoming long vacation. So, I and my family sat together to chalk out our plans. My elder brother gave the best idea of spending the long vacation in south India. Accordingly the plans were set up by my father. As planned, we would be having several destinations, the main ones being Bengaluru, Mysore, Ooty, Madurai, Kanyakumari, Chennai and the temple town of Rameswaram. We would be starting from Guwahati, Assam to our first destination, Bengaluru, on the 18th of October, just after my half-yearly exams.
By Shubhro Jyoti Dey5 years ago in Wander
Journeys In Northern NH
A small town, almost a village in Northern NH near Conway, the prime time tourist location in the winter for skiing, sledding, snowshoeing and winter sports, and in the summer hiking the many trails and pine forests, sits quietly and tranquil today.
By Om Prakash John Gilmore5 years ago in Wander
I get a little lonely
My first month in the Mainz area of Germany was getting to know the area and the people. I loved the fact that everything was much closer together and that I could actually get around. I was given a directive by my first sergeant that I was to coach his son's soccer team that was in need of a coach because I was in need of something to do besides get drunk.
By Lawrence Edward Hinchee5 years ago in Wander
The Trip From Hell
The Trip was almost thirty years ago, and those of us who experienced it still call it The Trip from Hell. It was the summer of 1993, and my dear father had planned a summer trip of epic proportions. He had everything mapped out for us to hit eleven states in fourteen days. “Us” was Dad, my stepmom, my two younger stepsisters, my boyfriend, and me. Six people. In a puke-green nineteen eighty-something Buick LeSabre.
By Dawn Harper5 years ago in Wander
Mackinac Island
The weather was perfect. That doesn't happen often in the middle of June up near the border of Canada, even if the summers are theoretically milder. Humidity makes eighty degrees feel like ninety, and you can hardly sweat because the air is already so thick with moisture.
By Brittany MacKeown5 years ago in Wander
The Titanic Museum in Branson
One of the most memorable sites I visited in Branson is the Titanic Museum at 76 Country Boulevard. One of the most remarkable tributes to the people who boarded the ship on its fateful crossing of the Atlantic in April 1912. Tens of thousands of people a year visit the Titanic Museum of Branson Missouri and it is one of the city’s most famous attractions.
By John Limbo5 years ago in Wander







