Travel

/

Home & Leisure

Taking the Kids: Spring break

By Eileen Ogintz, Tribune Content Agency on

Who says spring break is just for college kids? Certainly not the families impatiently waiting in line at Orlando theme parks, but at least it's not as hot as in midsummer!

And not the families racing down snow slopes in Colorado and Utah, or those splashing in the pools on Carnival ships. "Spring break is one of our busiest times for families, along with summer," said Carnival spokesman Vance Gulliksen. Princess, Carnival's sister brand, is beginning to unveil its reimagined youth centers, done in partnership with Discovery Communications, this spring when many families presumably will be aboard.

"Spring break searches are one of our top searches," said Lissa Poirot, editor-in-chief of Family Vacation Critic.com, which gets 750,000 visitors a month. "Families want to travel together over the course of spring break because they get limited vacation time together and want to take advantage of the kids being off from school."

Resort areas are realizing it is smart business to cater to families rather than college kids. That's why for the second year, Panama City, Fla has banned drinking on its beautiful beaches in March. "City leaders feared that a potential incident during spring could harm Panama City Beach's reputation and put that family travel segment at risk," explained spokesman David Demarest. "In the end, they thought it better to safeguard family travel and lose the college spring break business than risk losing the family travel segment that has always been essential to our area."

But unlike Christmas, spring school breaks vary depending on where you live, stretching the family spring break season throughout March, ending around Easter, which falls on April 16 this year.

For families, it can be easier to escape on vacation without the commitments of the holiday season. Parents also say that spring can be easier than summer when the kids have different job, sports, camp and summer school schedules.

 

And depending on where you go, it can be cheaper than the summer. With the strong dollar, Trivago.com reports that March is a particularly good bet to head to London or Europe. A hotel room in Barcelona can be more than $50 cheaper, $35 less in London -- and it won't be nearly so crowded at those must-see sites.

Many families opt to explore a nearby city. (Visit on a weekend and save bucks on hotels when the business travelers are gone.) That's likely why sales of CityPASS discount ticket books surge in March, especially for the warmer CityPass partner destinations like Southern California, Tampa Bay and Atlanta, a spokesman reports. If you plan to take in most of a city's major attractions, you can save significantly on admission and bypass lines with CityPASS.

How about San Francisco? Grandparents and baby boomers can lead the way as San Francisco celebrates the 50thanniversary of the colorful Summer of Love with museum shows, concerts, hotel deals and more. Nearly 100,000 young people converged on the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood in 1967 to share their love, music, psychedelic art, fashion style, and it still resonates today.

Spring can also be less crowded at the national parks. Remember that with the Every Kid in a Park program, fourth-graders and their families can visit all national parks, lands and waters for free. Order your parks pass, and start planning at their website, which notes that Amtrak is giving a 75 percent discount to all fourth-graders traveling with adults as part of the effort to reach 500,000 children this year.

...continued

swipe to next page

(c) 2017 DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

Comics

Crabgrass The Lockhorns The Other Coast Randy Enos Chip Bok Tim Campbell