Orbitz Blog

Articles Tagged ‘Amelia Island’

Beach vacations: ‘champagne tastes on a beer budget’

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Laplantes_3
By Marie LaPlante

With both of us working full time while trying to keep up with the ruminations and daily activity level of our 3-year old, we tend to look for the laziest vacations possible -– which by our definition means the beach. After 3 years of traveling with our daughter, we have it down to a science.

Now, not every family looks for the same thing in a beach vacation –- our family definitely has champagne tastes on a beer budget. We also try to avoid crowds (or, in my husband’s case, any human contact whatsoever). So we tend to travel off-season, when we can get low rates at hotels we otherwise couldn’t afford. Admittedly, this is much easier to do since we don’t yet need to work around school schedules — though I like to think my daughter will get into Harvard even if she misses a week of second grade … and our vacation savings can go right into the college fund!

So we take our summer vacation in September and our spring break in February or May -– and we’ve been able to stay at some great places:

Kiawah Island, South Carolina: our favorite thus far. Kiawah Island is right outside Charleston, which is one of the most charming cities I’ve visited. And the island has a lot to offer families -– you can rent bikes and ride right on the beach, follow dolphins in a boat down the Kiawah River, and see babyLaplantekiawah alligators and other wildlife at the Nature Center. My husband enjoyed golfing the Ocean Course and I spent some much needed time at the spa.  We went in mid-September –- it was still hot and we got a great off-season rate at The Sanctuary. And from Chicago, it was only a 1.5 hour flight –- bonus!

Amelia Island, Florida: a good alternative to your standard Florida beach –- this is outside of Jacksonville. We went in April and got off-season rates at the Ritz-Carlton, which had a great kids program, bonfires on the beach -– complete with s’mores and pirate stories — and a ‘Pirate Tuck In’ that my daughter loved.

San Juan, Puerto Rico: This was our way to test traveling internationally with our child, without leaving the states. We stayed about 45 minutes outside San Juan at El Conquistador, which is a huge hotel/villa complex on a cliff. It had stunning views, but you had to take a boat to a private island to enjoy the beach -– which would be great for older kids, but a pain with our then 1-year old. We stuck to the pool.

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Marie is a full-time working mom to Karis, her pony- and princess-loving 3-year-old.

Family time on Florida’s Amelia Island

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Ameliaisland
By Alistair Wearmouth

Following the effort of getting our one- and three-year-olds to Scotland on our last family vacation, my wife and I swore to dial back our prospective travel radius on our most recent trip this May. Wherever we decided to go, it had to be within a two-hour flight for us to contemplate taking the kids. That meant Brazil was out (besides, Grandma and Grandpa were too busy to babysit). Living in the Washington, D.C., area, we therefore trained our sights down the Atlantic seaboard, researching beach vacation options in South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

Amelia Island, a low-lying barrier island about 35 miles northeast of Jacksonville, was where we unpacked our beach toys. More specifically, we unloaded at the Amelia Island Plantation — and didn’t leave the property for five days (except one brief foraging run to a nearby grocery store; more on that later). This 1,350-acre resort offers a range of different lodging options, several challenging golf courses, a world-renowned resort tennis program, and great access to Amelia Island’s gorgeous, near-deserted beach.

Immediately, our beach vacation assumed a predictable and comforting pace: up at the crack of dawn for breakfast; head to beach for first waves; retreat from beach to heated outdoor pool for snacks and swimming; lunch and naps; back to beach and heated outdoor pool; dinner; walk back to beach; baths and bed (where the kids slept like zombies after a full day of fresh-air action). We were only gone a short time, but returned feeling as if we’d been away months.

Although we didn’t take advantage of its services for our two beachcombers, Amelia Island Plantation runs a well-recognized series of kids’ programs, including all-day camps, poolside activities, and even a themed kids-only dinner program during the summer season. The property is also threaded with shaded trails that are good for walks, lizard-spotting, and easy bike rides (you can rent kids’ bikes by the hour from the Amelia’s Wheels bike shop).

The 249-room Amelia Inn and Beach Club is located beachside with easy access to the pools, children’s play area, and beach, although families should consider renting one of the condominium-style villas scattered around the property. You may not get the ocean views of rooms in the main hotel building, but you will get loads of space plus a full kitchen where you can cook all your meals. As we’d opted not to rent a car and use the resort shuttle to get to Amelia Island from Jacksonville airport (29 miles away), I ordered a local taxi to help me do our one big grocery run. Not only did we eat better and more healthily, we saved money, avoided the stress of running the toddler-in-restaurant gauntlet, and maxed out our beach and pool time.

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Alistair Wearmouth is an editor at Away.com. With two young children now in tow, his travel perspective has shifted seismically from digging out the best backpacker hostel in Kathmandu to coping strategies for toddlers on a trans-Atlantic flight. His world travels have taken him through Europe, India, Nepal, Japan, Southeast Asia, the Canadian Rockies and beyond.