Tips and Ideas for Great Family Vacations
The next year we tried a longer driving trip to Texas and frankly we were not sure how the kids would do with the longer drive time, but they did pretty well overall. I would recommend doing something along these lines where you start off with shorter driving vacations when your kids are younger, then increase the distance, and just see how it works for your family. The following year our kids were ages 4 and 6 and they had done so well on the longer driving vacation that we felt comfortable taking them on their first airline flight. We flew to California and of course we visited Disneyland, which was great (you would almost have to be doing something wrong to not have a good time taking your young children to Disneyland).
From there we mixed up our vacations, sometimes driving and sometimes flying. We generally tried to go to different destinations, such as South Dakota, Florida (Disney World of course), Colorado, Wyoming, just to name a few. We stayed in the Continental Unites states until they were ages 9 and 11 when we went to Hawaii. We took them on their first international trip when they were ages 13 and 15 and they seemed to be mature enough at those ages to really appreciate the magnitude of the trip, as traveling internationally is a much bigger deal both in terms of costs and travel times.
As time has gone by and our children became teenagers and now have become adults, trying to plan family vacations naturally becomes more complicated, as the kids now have schedules, whereas when they were young we could just do what worked for my wife and I. Therefore I highly recommend starting your family vacations as early as possible.