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Happy Healthy Kids

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Why (and How) to Plan a National Park Trip Now

April 18, 2017 by Kelley 1 Comment

why to plan a national park tripMy husband and I recently became convinced that when it comes to family tourism, nothing beats a visit to one of America’s great national parks. A park trip combines all the things we’d ideally want children to soak up when sight-seeing: nature, adventure, history, and, perhaps best of all with young kids, space to explore without fear of someone getting left behind on the subway platform. And, oh: Compared to a big, bustling city, or, for godsakes, a theme park, the cost tends to be right, too.

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Thunder Hole, Acadia National Park

For our first big park trip, we stayed close to home, and went to the first East Coast national park ever created: Acadia National Park in Maine. None of us had been there before, which was ideal: Part of the magic of a great family trip is experiencing something amazing together for the first time—like Thunder Hole, where the Atlantic surf crashes into a cave-like break in the craggy Maine rocks to create a huge wake and roaring sound.

Our appreciation of the awesomeness of our national park system has only grown since finding out that several times a year, park admittance is free. This weekend (April 20-22, 2017), for instance, admission is free at all 412 national park sites. That includes the biggies—the 59 “main” parks (think Acadia, Grand Canyon, and Redwood National Forest) as well as national military and historic parks (like Gettysburg).There’s no doubt a park near you that you’ve been meaning to explore—or didn’t even know about. For help in finding your next destination, go to this easy “Find  Your Park” tool on the NPS site.

For bigger trips, consider planning now for a summer 2017 or spring 2018 visit. The best hotels and campsites around popular parks fill up fast. See charts of most popular destinations as well as most underrated (and, score, under-trafficked) spots, below. Get kids involved and excited about planning with a book: Younger ones will like the new Our Great Big Backyard, the surprisingly entertaining read created to commemorate the NPS anniversary by Laura Bush and daughter Jenna. Older elementary- and middle-schoolers can bookmark their bucket-list faves in National Geographic’s National Parks Guide USA.

10 Most Visited National Parks (with links)

Great Smoky Mountains (North Carolina and Tennessee)
Grand Canyon (Arizona)
Rocky Mountains (Colorado)
Yosemite (California)
Yellowstone (Idaho, Montana, Wyoming)
Zion (Utah)
Olympic (Washington)
Grand Teton (Wyoming)
Acadia (Maine)
Glacier (Montana)
Source: National Geographic

10 Most Underrated National Parks (with links)

Biscayne National Park (Florida)
Congaree (South Carolina)
Isle Royale (Michigan)
Black Canyon (Colorado)
Theodore Roosevelt (North Dakota)
Capitol Reef (Utah)
Great Basin (Nevada)
North Cascades (Washington)
Channel Islands (California)
Wrangell-St. Elias (Alaska)
Source: Travel + Leisure

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For the Love of Libraries, Big and Small

April 3, 2015 by Kelley Leave a Comment

Yesterday, while jogging in a neighborhood near ours, I saw something at the end of a driveway that just about made my day:little free library

I did an Internet search and discovered that these adorable Little Free Libraries are cropping up all over the U.S. The movement was founded five years ago by a Wisconsin man who put a little box of giveaway books outside his home to honor his late bibliophile mother. The idea is simple: Lucky neighbors give a book and take a book at their discretion. You can search for a box near you at this site.

As far as I can tell, most of these Little Free Libraries cater mainly to adults, but how great would it be to set one up with kids books outside of your home, especially during the lazy, brain-draining days of summer? I’m going to look into it, as well as our town permit laws (unbelievably, for their generosity of spirit and literature, a few Little Free Librarians have been given citations for setting up illegal detached structures on their properties.)national library week

In the meantime, don’t forget to patronize your own town library. April 12-18 is National Library Week; if you’re looking for some great kids’ titles, check out the 2015 winners of the American Library Association’s best children’s book awards in this earlier post.

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