Tuesday, May 24, 2011

U.S. Summer Project

Many of you have just arrived at Summer Projects all over the country. You are settling in to your rooms, running out to buy random stuff you need, and making new discoveries of great places to eat, fun places to take kids, and much more. We’d love for you to share any tips you have for your specific location.

Please find the post for your Summer Project location and add comments as they are fresh on your mind. Then we’ll save all of them for the future.

Or maybe you were on a project in the past and you have some tips to share with staff that are there RIGHT NOW. Why not take a minute to share those too!

It’s wide open for what you’d like to pass on!

International Summer Project

Many of you have been overseas for a few weeks already. You survived the long flights (some of you with many young children) and you have already discovered some great FOOD or interesting places. Maybe you realized some things you should have brought with you or things you brought that you didn’t need. We’d love to hear from you as well.

Please share your tips on packing, travel, living overseas, adapting to the culture, being involved with staff and students on the project (both you and your children if applicable).  It’s wide open for what you’d like to pass on to others!

Or maybe you were on a project in the past and you have some tips to share with staff that are there RIGHT NOW. Why not take a minute to share those too!

East Asia KM Summer Project

*Please be sensitive in the words you use and do not use city or country names.

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

East Asia GY Summer Project

*Please be sensitive in the words you use and do not use city or country names.

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

Central Asia Summer Project

*Please be sensitive in the words you use and do not use country names.

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

Lebanon Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

Sweden Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

Senegal Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

Argentina Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Travel tips
Cultural tips
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack (not to pack)
Tips about housing arrangements

Clearwater Beach Summer Project

We know that there is not a project in Clearwater this summer, but we'd like to store up some tips for the staff who will be there in future summers.


What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack
Tips about housing arrangements
What’s unique to Clearwater?

Smoky Mountain Summer Project (Gatlinburg)

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack
Tips about housing arrangements
What’s unique to your location?

New York Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack
Tips about housing arrangements
What’s unique to your location?

Daytona Beach Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack
Tips about housing arrangements
What’s unique to your location?

Charleston Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack
Tips about housing arrangements
What’s unique to your location?

Santa Cruz Summer Project

What should you share? Here are a few ideas to get you started…
Favorite Restaurants
Fun places for kids
Fun activities
Random things to pack
Tips about housing arrangements
What’s unique to your location?

Traveling with Kids (International)

Here’s your chance ladies to share some of your experience and wisdom with moms heading overseas this summer!  Hints on packing, travel, living overseas, being involved with staff and students on the project (both you and your children), etc…  It’s wide open for what you’d like to pass on to others following the Lord internationally this summer!

*These responses were taken from our previous discussion over email in May 2011. Please add your suggestions by submitting a comment.


Especially for Rene & Marnie:

I emailed Melissa Synder who took 3 kids under age 4 to Russia a few summers back. Here are her helpful, detailed suggestions:
*Pack really light, especially when it comes to clothes.  Students will help carry a lot, but it is still hard to keep up with lots of pieces of luggage.  I learned this the hard way.  An intern carried my backpack for me but then left it on the subway in London.  If possible, pack only what you all can carry yourself!
*Clothes- For your toddler, pack clothes made of thin materials that dry fast and don’t wrinkle.  (We had to hand wash and line dry all our clothes in Russia).  Consider not taking his best clothes and just leaving clothes behind.  If I did it over again, I would take only one week’s worth of clothes for the kids, wear them out and leave them behind.
*Diapers- You can buy diapers there, but I preferred to take my own.  I packed a whole bag of diapers and then used that empty bag to bring home souvenirs.
*Food- I took a lot of food because one of our sons has a nut allergy.  I took a lot of dry foods (like cereal) out of their original packaging and put them in gallon size freezer bags.  That took up less space and kept the food fresh (at least fresh enough for little ones).  I fixed food for my kids in the hotel room a lot using a chinek.   I made instant oatmeal, mashed potatoes and Lipton noodles and rices.  I took lots of nutrigrain bars, tortillas and refried beans.   In Russia, I bought fresh fruits and vegetables and packaged Dannon yogurt.  I know it’s not the perfect balanced meal, but for 6 weeks it was okay!
*Baby gear- I would highly recommend a sling or my tie.  I would choose that even over a stroller because of the flights and public transportation.  It is helpful for the times that they need to fall asleep on you or be out for long days.  Most restaurants that we went to had high chairs. 
*Sleeping- The time change is pretty difficult, especially the first few days.  We did use Benadryl to help the kids fall asleep the first day or two.  If you do this, I recommend trying out a few doses before you leave.  Some kids have the opposite reaction to Benadryl and actually become more hyper.  I know this option sounds weird, but it was helpful and harmless to our kids.  Just prepare yourself, though, that the first few days with the time difference are really hard.  It doesn’t last forever though, and they soon settle into their normal patterns.  Coming back to the US is not hard, so I wouldn’t worry too much about that.  We took our own pack n play.   It was really a pain to transport but still worth it.  If we had gone straight home from Perm instead of a week layover in London, we would have left it behind for another family.

I just thought I would add some thoughts I got from Marion Dewar:

Car seat - bring it, even if you just use for the flight. It's something familiar they can sleep in and it keeps them in their seat. *This is obviously for those 2 and up or non-lap babies.
Umbrella strollers  - they're great for bumpy sidewalks - the least amount of wheels, the easier it is to navigate
Bring a screwdriver - you never know when you need it (she used it to reverse doorknobs, so the toddler couldn't get out of the room)
Pack-n-play - she also suggests bringing it because the cribs aren't usually what you expect (the one in Argentina was shallow)
Be sure to take a medicine bag for the kids; bring it on the airplane (also w. hand sanitizer, disinfecting wipes, extra pacis, butt cream, etc)

What we are doing-
We are bringing a kids backpack for the airport so at least one of us has two hands.
We are probably bringing more clothes than we need, but it will be fall/winter in Argentina.
We also have a ton of food packed because there is not a lot of baby food.
I’m short on time so I am gonna be quick with my few tips. We have never been overseas for Summer P, but we did a staff stint in East Asia last year. I have a packing list from that I can email you(of course you don’t need everything since you’re not moving overseas). Hopefully it will give you a few new ideas though.


Brennan was between 2 1/2 and 3 1/2 when we were there. My tips on travel are for that age. If your child is newly potty trained or can’t hold it long then I suggest putting them in a pull-up for the flight. Brennan had to go one time when we could not get out of our seats and he ended up peeing all over the seat. Also pack a few extra sets of clothes for all of you so you have a fresh set if something gets spilled or worse.

Also pack lots of snacks and little toys. We tried to have a new toy for each hour of the flight (didn’t need all of them since he slept some).

I carried him on my back in a back pack for the trip to Asia and used a stroller for the return trip since I was 5 months pregnant. Both worked pretty well. The backpack was hard for such a long trip (we traveled a total of 36 hours at once), but once in Asia it kept him close from strangers who wanted to touch him. It also kept him from chasing him around the airport.

OK that’s all I can think of for now. Feel free to email me if you have any other questions.


I took Anabelle last CO summer. She was a little younger than Katelynn (11-13 months). They did not require identification. We packed all of those things listed. Depending on your carrier, some "baby" things do not count against you as baggage - they include it for free. I believe US Airways does. We didn't bring many toys - we shopped yard sales after we got there.

This site has been super helpful - just skim it to find what you need to know. It's pretty long!
http://www.flyingwithchildren1.blogspot.com/

Rene' Foth

Traveling with Kids (U.S.)

Here’s your chance ladies to share some of your experience and wisdom with moms traveling across the U.S. this summer!

*These responses were taken from our previous discussion over email in May 2011.

Load up on sleepy juice (Benadryl) but test it first to make sure it doesn't have the opposite effect! One summer, just after potty training, we ACTUALLY set up a portable potty in between the two boys. When they had to go, we would unhook, let them go and rehook--without stopping! and hopefully w/o spilling!! ...don't do that.... Another time, maybe the same time...we drove through the night...and hit two deer in the middle of a city in Kansas (not even in podunk Kansas). Guess what?! We kept on driving! (Go Suburbans! Would have been a different story in a van the way we hit them).  Then, we got so crazy we let them unhook to sleep b/c we were all so stir trip-dizzy. About that time, we passed a huge billboard in Kansas that said something like "if your kids are unhooked and you have an accident they will fly out the window like a speeding bullet". Who knows, that was probably God's sign put up just for us. It probably doesn't exist today ;)  It seemed when we stop, it always takes 20 minutes even if it's just a quick trip to the potty. 

Ok, here’s our potty plan…
Take the potty and cover the “cup part with a plastic grocery bag turned inside out.  Then turn a leftover whatever diaper inside out and put it inside the potty.  Whenever there is a “peepee event,” just take the plastic bag and fold it up over the diaper (the diaper absorbs all the liquid), tie it up and drop it at the next rest stop.  No splish splash LOL!

We are driving out with the whole kit n caboodle this summer too.  In 20090 we did it with Grace and Faith (almost 5 and almost 2) and this year we are headed out with a 6 month old.  Planning to drive 3, rest 1 hour to nurse and stretch.

Thanks for the potty advice!  We’re driving out with a 4 and 2 yr old!  I’ve got some good ideas from Brooke (Sherard) Miller who used to drive out with her family when she was little (thanks Jan!)…
1.       Give a little present for them to open each day to play with in the car
2.      Leave from the hotel super early in the morning so the kids can still get a couple hours of sleep in on the way
3.      Find hotels with pools.  End your driving for the day around 4 and let the kids get some energy out in the pool!

I remember wondering why all the East Coast folks complained about the drive to Colorado. Then we moved here. 1801 miles. Yikes.

We did the little present to unwrap idea. It's amazingly effective. Also, that was back in the bronze age before all the cars had video capabilities but we rigged our little tv/vcr combo. I always limited the movies to one a day so it would be "special." Usually we would stop for lunch, then do the movie, and hopefully at least two of the three would nod off to sleep. Sometimes we would do another after dinner too.

Blizzards at Dairy Queen were a major motivator to hang in there too.

The up side is that when you strap them in there young and drive more than half way across the country they grow up used to travelling and they get accustomed to that car seat.

For older kids the license plate game is fun. One year we found both Alaska and Hawaii

We didn't go by an exact schedule in terms of driving and breaks but we went hard and then when it was time to stop we ran them around as much as possible at a rest stop. If it was raining we looked for a mall or an indoor play place to burn some energy. We often drove later into the night because they would typically go to sleep pretty well and we could burn up the road. But at least one night we would stop earlier at a place with a pool.
Sonya
Sonya Hove

There have been lots of good suggestions for traveling to Colorado.  We’ve spent 17 summers out there and have driven for most of them.  We’ve done one kid under one, to 4 kids under seven and everything in between.  Mostly we all look back on these trips with fond memories.  Some years we went hard and fast and didn’t do a lot of stopping. Some years we bought a year museum pass at our local science or children’s museum and that gave us free access to museums across the country.  I usually researched which museums worked best and it was great that it usually worked in the Ft. Collins museum. Other years we meandered taking an extra week or more to get there, seeing some big sights like the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone and places in between.
As Alyssa said, if you are thinking of Benadryl to help them sleep, test that theory before you go.  Don’s dad (a pediatrician) suggested that with Jenny.  We didn’t realize that it causes some children to become wired until way too late.  Jenny was under one and didn’t sleep at all that first day.  We never tried it again with any of the others, we just called it a lesson well learned 

Some things didn’t vary though – early on we started giving each child a small item to open, one at the start and one after lunch – nothing big, but I did go for variety.  From around 2 on every kid had a tray that would set over their car seat, so they would work the puzzle or play with whatever they opened.   We also had a snack shoe box for every child – it really helped corral the trash and crumbs.  I would refill them each morning, but the kids decided when and what they had for snacks – I figured that if they ruined their lunch or dinner it wasn’t too bad, since it was only fast food anyway.

As often as we could we caravanned with another family.  It gave the kids someone to play with at stops and let us have some adult conversation at dinner.  Here it is important for the families to be on the same schedule, so you don’t have a million bathroom stops – we all developed large bladders on these trips.  One year, the family with us, called to tell us one of our bikes had fallen off into the road, thankfully no one was following too closely, but we did have to buy a new bike at a yard sale once we got to Fort Collins.
We also learned every car game you could come up with.  One of our favorites is a little box game called Are we there yet?  It had little cards that named items along the way you needed to find.  This is for older ones, since you needed to be able to read.  All our kids became great travelers as a result of these trips.  Today, traveling by any means isn’t a big deal for them.