Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi I was wondering if you could help. I've only ever been able to afford camping holidays before but I've got a tiny bit of inheritance money and I wanted to take the kids (12 and 10) somewhere special this summer for a bit of an adventure. Friends have suggested Costa Rica, Canada, Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Japan but I wasn't sure about the weather in the summer hols. We'd like somewhere warm, fun, exciting, out of Europe and I have a budget of ?4k. Any suggestions?

Thanks so much!

First off, congrats, what an excellent way to spend an unexpected windfall, you will make memories for the rest of your life :)


Some thoughts -


Canada and Japan - I've been to both (pre kids) and I imagine that might be tricky to do on ?4k (i'm assuming there's 3 or 4 of you to pay for including flights). Jetlag in Japan is a bit of a killer, but your kids should be old enough to cope... Canada is a beautiful country and you'd get great weather over our summer-time...


Costa rica - Haven't been to, but heard its amazing, not crazy pricey and some great outdoor experiences for older kids like yours (safari-type things, surfing, zip-wires)


Sri Lanka and Cambodia - In general you can get a lot more value for your ? in Asia. I haven't been to SL with kids, but know people who have and say its fab and the locals are great with kids. Cambodia I haven't been to (its on my list!), but we did take our then 2.5 and 4.5 year old to vietnam nearly 2 years ago and had an amazing trip - so easy to travel around on the train, locals amazingly helpful and friendly. see my trip report here - http://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/forum/read.php?29,1596858,1877573#msg-1877573 Another place to consider for fairly easy but still off beaten track, would be thailand...


In general, i'd advise you to consider a) the weather in each place (simple google search), b) what vaccs you'd need and be willing to take (my two are pretty much vaccinated against everything now, but i know that not everyone agrees with that, and i'd certainly not want them to have to take malaria tablets at this young age, c) the accommodation - as our family has grown we've found that airbnbs not only offer greater value (no more squeezing 4 of you in to one tiny hotel room, you can get a 2 bed flat/house usually for cheaper!), more flexibility (have breakfast when you want, stay in the house/flat all day if you want to!) and a more personalised experience (the host often lives nearby and can give you great reccs of what to do), and d) the flight/time difference - assuming you're going for 2 weeks, do you really want somewhere with an 9 hour time difference (i.e. japan), when you're going to spend at least 2 days at start/after your hols trying to vaguely get on the right time schedule / if its a long flight, can you get a night flight to/from london to try and maximise your time there...


Hope that helps, might be a bit rambly, so shout if questions! we've just got back from 3 weeks in brazil with our 4.5 and 6.5 year old and i really heartily recommend adventurous holidays with kids!

How about a cycling holiday - check out Brighton company Freedom Treks. I've done Dutch barge and bike trip with kids, and 4 day Italy trip with husband only. You can either book with them direct (lots of countries and Asia too). Or see if you can follow their ideas by booking independently. We are going to do this for a 4 night trip to Germany in May. Your kids are at a perfect age, and it is so brill having an active holiday with all the arrangements and itineraries sorted for you....

We have done quite a few adventurous trips with our kids. You need to watch the weather in the summer holidays - I am not sure it is a good time for Sri Lanka or Costa Rica, for example (we had a great holiday in both, but at Christmas). The west coast of Canada is amazing - Vancouver and Vancouver island. Bears, whales, kayaking .....and a very cool city. Africa too - safari is very expensive, and actually a bit boring for most kids for more than a day or two, but Victoria falls, South Africa etc. And the US too - California, San Francisco, Yosemite, drive down highway 1, LA, Grand Canyon.....


But don't dismiss Europe - if you travel long haul you will use up quite a bit of your budget on flights. Look at some of the family adventure holiday companies for suggestions of cool adventures you can have in Europe. Sicily, for example - volcanos, greek and roman ruins, beaches and pasta! Tour around in a car, or for a real adventure use public transport.

We went to Sri Lanka last August with our then 4 and 6 year olds and totally loved it.

It was tropical and exciting but still easy travelling and the food was amazing.

On the whole the weather was great, we saw a little rain but the majority of the time it was hot and sunny.


However even booking the flights 9 months in advance we paid over ?3k for the four of us to fly direct (might be cheaper if you are happy to stop over en route) which eats a lot of your budget.

I completely disagree. We've been to Egypt five times in July and August, including Abu Simbel, and although it was very hot, because of the extremely low humidity, we have always found it very bearable. I find 45 degrees in Egypt far more pleasant than 30 degrees in somewhere such as Greece or Thailand where humidity is much higher.
  • 1 month later...

Hello again,

Thanks for all your posts and PMs. We have now decided on Cambodia in October.

Has anyone been? Could you recommend a good itinerary for children? We'd like to go to Phnom Penh, Angkor (Siem Reap) and end up at a lovely beach. If there are any other ideas and suggestions I'd be really grateful.

Also any tips on visas, flights, travel vaccinations would be great.

Thanks so much!

We've done Cambodia with kids (they were 6 and 8 at the time). Angkor Wat is fab obviously, and do see Phare, in Phnom Penh, which is a Cirque de Soleil type thing. The Killing Fields is sobering but worth seeing, and we also took a boat to Battambang, where not much goes on. Lovely, lovely place to spend time with children.


I'll link to our travel blog here in case it's helpful.


https://packingitallin.wordpress.com/category/phnom-penh/

  • 1 year later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Where did I say he did a good job? Yup and Corbyn was very close to Len McCluskey and funded by Unite wasn't he...they're all as bad as each other... Labour have to purge their party of the far-left - they're a disaster. Allan Johnson summed it up so well on election night in 2019....  
    • Thank you for the detailed advise @trinidad It is definitely damage we are concerned about. I don’t think Evri would agree to pay the bill to fix our gate or letter box if they were to be damaged as a result of their delivery drivers helper. Our doorbell can be heard from outside when rung so we don’t quite believe the aggressive simultaneous door/letter box banging is necessary. It can be quite a shock it is done very aggressively.  I’ll definitely action the steps you’ve kindly provided along with a phone call tomorrow. I do sympathise with the role drivers have and how busy they are, which is why we tried communicating directly with her but sadly we haven’t succeeded 
    • What outcome would you like? Disciplinary action? Not to have the driver back? Retraining? I know there is alot of pressure on drivers to deliver within a set day. if he slams the gate, is it evidence he is causing damage, or is the noise a irritant to yourself? You could put a sign up or buy a signing asking to close the gate gentle???? can you hear the door bell from the door? he might be ringing, not hearing and therefore knocking. In trhe notes section of the be livery page, there is a note section, although there is not 100 per cent these notes would be read as these drivers are constantly rushing.  I did a google search for you, i found this and you can try the envri website Contact Us | Evri   To complain to Evri, you can follow these steps: Contact Customer Service: Call Evri's customer service at 0330 808 5456 for assistance with your complaint.    1 Write a Letter: Address your complaint to Capitol House, 1 Capitol Close, Morley, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS27 0WH.    1 Use the Official Website: Visit the Evri complaints page on their official website for detailed instructions on how to submit a complaint.    2 Email or Call for Specific Issues: For issues like missing or damaged parcels, you can email or call 0800 988 8888, which is free to call.    1 These methods will help you effectively communicate your concerns to Evri.   My driver is called anthony, he is brilliant to be honest. I cant fault him.
    • When I have more time and energy, I will look up the actual number of votes cast for each party in that election, rather than the number of seats won. I'm interested to see that you apparently  think that  Boris Johnson did a good job of "leading the country through Covid." Is your memory really that short? I won't stoop to calling Johnson and his cronies names in the way that you seem to think is appropriate for left wing politicians. At least the left wing politicians have some semblance of morals and a concern for people who aren't in some over privileged inner circle and/or raking in money for themselves on the back of an epidemic. I'm not going to open a can of worms on here  by commenting on the disgraceful so called "purge". 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...