Category Archives: Mom Talks Tech

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The Farecast Take on Airfare Seasonality

If you are the person responsible for travel planning in your household, you may have already discovered “smart” travel search websites like Farecast.com or Kayak.com. These sites are not online booking engines. Instead, they help users find the best available option for flights, car rentals and hotels by searching across many other websites (the technical term is meta-search engine). Although you may think the amount of data returned from such a search would be just too much to display comprehensibly, both sites are downright fun to use. I particularly like the prediction indicators on Farecast.

As a dedicated travel junkie, I thought I should subscribe to a newsletter from one of these websites at least for a little while to see if this new technology could really help me. I chose Farecast for no other reason than it’s a Seattle-based company & I’m a Seattlite. Well, when I received my very first email from them, I was blown away. The topic of the email was “Search for Summer Trips Today”. The email included a chart of average airfares between the U.S. and Europe from Feb 2007 to Feb 2008.

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The chart is also posted on the Farecast blog.

From experience I “knew” that flying to Europe was more expensive at peak times (July, August & Christmas) than at off-peak times; and that I could usually get pretty good prices in April/May and sept/Oct. If Farecast’s data is correct, the seasonal differences in airfares are nothing short of stunning. As John Rauser, the author of the Farecast blog posting referenced above says: “for travel to Europe in the Summer, you’re looking at paying a 150% premium, or two-and-a-half times more than in Winter”.

Since Farecast caught my attention with this newsletter, I’ve become a travel meta-search website junkie. When searching for flights, I highly recommend you start your search at one of these websites. You’ll get flight choices from booking engines and airline websites you may not have thought to check.

But, I do have a comment for the fine folks at Farecast who sent out a summer trip planning newsletter in March. I booked the flights for my family’s trip this coming June in January. I paid $200 less per person than the best flight I could find using Farecast today (April 1st). For a family of four, that’s an $800 saving. Perhaps next year you could send out your trip planning email a little earlier ?

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Teens Write about Travel Experiences

In one of my earlier posts, I mentioned some popular “family travel” websites. Top of this list was Family Travel Forum. In my review I mentioned that the company behind this website seems to be experimenting with publishing their content to non-membership based websites: TinyTravelers and KidTravels. Under the “Kid Travels” banner, FTF held a “First Teen Travel Essay Scholarship” competition – the results of which were published on November 9th.
The standard of writing in these essays is very high: FTF acknowledges that “more than 95% of the essays deserved an A, and the outpouring of personal expression was remarkable in its diversity”.

I haven’t read all of these essays, but I have read quite a few and as a parent who is determined to “have kids, keep traveling”, I was very excited by the sentiments and opinions expressed in the essays I have read. These kids (who are 13 – 18 years old) write about everything that I hope my children will learn and experience from traveling: how traveling to places near and far, with new friends or old, can help you learn more about yourself and the world in which we live.

Congratulations to all the kids who submitted essays. I’m looking forward to reading the 2008 submissions!!

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Ways to get kids excited about exploring the whole wide world…

As a family, we’ve recently been watching some of the episodes on David Attenborough’s Planet Earth DVD. In all honestly, the reason we bought this DVD was to find a family movie which wasn’t Disney, Harry Potter or Cartoon Network. What we’ve discovered is worth writing about in this blog since it was such a surprise and may have ignited the travel bug in the minds of our video-game-playing, tv-watching kids!

Even if you don’t normally enjoy nature documentaries, I suggest you give Planet Earth a try. It is simply astounding. I know I’m biased, I grew up watching the BBC in the 70s and 80s. At that time David Attenborough was making ground-breaking nature documentary programs like Life on Earth and The Living Planet. But Planet Earth is just spectacular. There are 11 episodes, each about 1hr long, each focusing on a specific geographical region (e.g. Jungles) or habitat (e.g. Shallow Seas). The standard of cinematography is exceptional but even with that, the creators frequently use super-slow-motion and motion-controlled time-lapse techniques which (we found) really catch the interest of the kids in the room – which creates helpful talking points about the episode in question. I particularly enjoyed the music and of course, the narration by Attenborough is informative and delivered in a familiar, authoritive-but-friendly style.

So, here’s the surprise. After we got over the initial “no, I don’t want to watch a nature movie” reaction, our kids actually asked to watch the next episode! Hey, who knows, maybe we’re benefiting from the success of March of the Penguins – although Happy Feet is more likely. Anyway, we chose Shallow Seas. For anyone who enjoys to scuba-dive, this is a stunning show. You get to see reefs in Western Australia; learn why you might be better off to skip the Great Barrier Reef and head to Indonesia instead; learn about the ocean food chain from algae to humpback whales and see why you might want to check out the coastline of South Africa for sheer abundance, variety of life and activity in the waters. By the end of this episode, our kids – one of whom is absolutely not a travel-junkie – were comfortably talking about visting kelp forests in California and the coral reefs in Australia and Indonesia. Hey, it’s unlikely this enthusiasm will last very long, but in the meantime, I’m going to enjoy the feeling that, much as they grumble and complain every time we have to pack our bags, with the right impetus, they’re wanderers-in-the-making!

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FamilyTravelForum.com

This is one of the websites recommended by Frommer’s. You need to become a member to access most of the content on this website. For me, that’s a distraction that I’d rather not have to deal with. Membership costs $3.95 (1 month) – $38 (1 year). The benefits of membership include: information for planning a trip; travel agent; deals; bulletin boards (www.familytravelboards.com); counselors; newsletter; discounts; open forum: tidbits/leaders from member articles & boards for non-members to view.

It may be that the owners of this website are changing their opinion on using membership to constrain access to their content: I found a beta site www.tinytravelers.net which seemed to include a lot of the same content, but without requiring paid membership.

In terms of the content , there are lots of articles on a wide variety of travel and family-travel related topics on this website which are organized into different categories within “Planning” and “Resources”. However, for example, the “Family Preferences/Ideas for … “, an option under “Planning” on the main page, seems at first as if it’s a useful tool for trip ideas suited to a specific age group. But, the page of “ideas” is long and unwieldy making it difficult to find what you’re looking for.

The Search box also seems useful at first. However, the search results include both Deals and Articles. The results are displayed as a long list without any organization – except that Deals are listed first. This is a nuisance if the topic you’re searching on (e.g. Spain) returns many related Deals and/or Articles.Some of the articles on this website are written by travel writers who have never traveled with kids (Airplane Survival Kit); some who have (“Daddy, When Are We Going Home?”); and some are obviously sourced through services (Packing Tips).

For me, the authentic voice of an experienced wander-parent was much more interesting than either of the other two kinds of articles. While I was poking around this website, I noticed that my browser was blocking pop-ups constantly. if I didn’t have a blocker, this would have really distracted from the usability of the website.

 Next up: www.travelwithyourkids.com

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Family Travel Websites Reviewed

I love to plan and organize family vacations, but in 2007 I was somewhat dissatisfied with some of the choices I had made for flights and accommodation. So, this year, I thought I would try something new:

  1. Start early in the planning process.
  2. Read guidebooks so that I’m better informed before I start booking the trip.
  3. Check out family travel oriented websites (which I’ve never done before).

Since we’re planning to travel (to Tuscany) in June 2008 and I’m already starting my research, I think I can check off #1.

I picked up copies of Lonely Planet – Tuscany and Frommer’s – Tuscany and Umbria. Check for #2.

Most helpfully, in the introduction to the Frommer’s book, family travel is covered in the section on “Special Needs” travel. They have a list of websites which seem to be mentioned in all of their books under Tips for Families. So I diligently opened each of the referenced websites and was unpleasantly under-whelmed at the organization and content on these sites.

Frommer’s recommends:

Beth Whitman, knowing I was considering a family travel blog, forwarded the following websites to me:

  • http://www.familytravelguides.com/
  • http://www.sixintheworld.com/ –> this is one family’s story of their Round-The-World trip. Definitely worth checking out if you’re any way interested in adventuring off-the-beaten-path with your kids, but not really a site intended for use in planning or booking family travel.

In general, on each of these websites, once I found an article on a topic which interested me, the content itself was acceptable, sometimes using articles syndicated from well-known authors. However, each of these sites except www.travelwithyourkids.com was difficult to use. The content was not well organized, making it difficult to find information. I’ll continue in my next post with a summary review of each of these family travel-planning websites …

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