Tombstone Arizona…Very Very cool place.
After a great breakfast and a gallon of coffee with Cowboys we ventured off to roan Tombstone in the mist before the town opened for business.
Adam and I had a shoot out, have no idea who won.
The town was about a total of 7-10 blocks by 3 blocks and it had a ton of sites to see. Old billiard halls, restaurants, liquor stores, a mine, a cemetery, a fire house, museums and the largest rose bush in the world (said Ripley’s)
Kind of a funny name for an intersection.
After gunslinging we headed back to pack up the tent when what drives by, but a stagecoach. By about 9 am the town was coming to life with cowboy characters, sherifs and madam’s heading off to work. Im glad we saw the town before the hight of tourism for the day began. But, I bet that time of day would have been fun too.
More from the Americas
Start with shorter trips to test how your family handles travel. Keep kids involved in the planning so they feel ownership over the trip. Pack light and accept that some days will not go as planned. The messy days often become the best stories.
Priorities and planning. Most traveling families have made conscious trade-offs, spending less on things that stay home and more on experiences that go with them. Points and miles help. Slow travel in one place costs less than moving constantly. And treating travel as a line item in the budget rather than a luxury makes it real.
Western Europe is logistically easy with excellent infrastructure, English widely spoken, and enormous variety. Mexico and Costa Rica are close for American families and have strong tourist infrastructure. Japan is extraordinary and safer than almost anywhere. The best first trip is the one that actually happens.
Know your destination. Register with your embassy for longer trips. Have travel health insurance. Keep digital and physical copies of all documents. Teach kids your phone number and hotel name. Use location sharing on phones for older kids. Most international destinations popular with families are genuinely safe for prepared travelers.
Track everything for the first few trips until you understand your family’s actual spending patterns. Accommodation is usually the biggest lever. Cooking some meals saves significantly over eating every meal out. Shoulder season travel cuts costs across the board. And knowing which splurges are worth it for your family versus which ones you will not remember helps enormously.
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