The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

Holiday ideas that will keep Christmas Day harmonious

Amanda Hyde picks 10 multi-gen trips to propose at lunch and make everybody happy

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Brexit’s legacy, the Rwanda policy, Premier League penalties, the kids’ table manners – all topics that will ignite quicker than a brandy-doused Christmas pud should you introduce them to the festive dinner table. Far better to stick to safer territory with a chat about the family holidays you can take together this year.

Enthusiasm for multi-generation holidays rocketed post-Covid, and now the trend is fast becoming the norm. “We are seeing even more growth on the horizon,” says Jacqueline Dobson, president of Barrhead Travel. “Already, we have noticed around a 27 per cent increase in multi-generation­al and multi-family bookings for travel in 2024 compared with 2023. Villas and cruises are among the most popular, but bucket-list experience­s are also in high demand.”

One group in particular seems motivated to make these bookings and, often, pay for the trips, too: the grandannex­e, parents. “Previously, multi-gen holidays were more typically led by parents who wanted their children to spend quality time with the grandparen­ts (not to mention take advantage of childcare on tap), so to see bookings and enquiries come in from the grandparen­ts is quite a step-change,” says Rebecca Lowe of Original Travel.

Tempted to give your own multi-gen holiday a try? We have come up with the 10 best trips for every kind of family. Find one that works for you and suggest it to the rest of the gang over the turkey and pigs in blankets. Just a few words of caution: if you’re going to suggest that somebody else pays, it might be best to wait until after the postprandi­al snooze. Disney for everyone

California, US

Theresa and Alan Wilson of Bon Voyage are grandparen­ts themselves and love the original Disneyland in Anaheim,

California. “It’s an entry-level themepark experience,” says Theresa. “The two parks are easy to navigate, with multiple on-site hotel options, and the set-up is particular­ly good for younger kids.” Once older guests have had enough of the rides, it’s a 50-minute drive to Santa Monica for beach time, as well as the chance to explore the planepacke­d Museum of Flying or cook cinnamon rolls and macarons at The Gourmandis­e School.

Bon Voyage (0800 316 3012; bon-voyage. co.uk) offers an eight-day holiday with time in both destinatio­ns from £2,200pp, including flights, breakfast and car hire. Disney ticket packages are also available on request

Two villas, one holiday

Puglia, Italy

Personal space can be a problem if you’re sharing a house with extended family. Book a place with a separate so you can all retreat for some much-needed me time. New for 2024, Simpson Travel’s five-bedroom Trullo Ashi is lost in the olive groves of Puglia (where the pasta, sandy coves and trulli towns should have universal appeal). Its main villa has a saltwater pool for kids and a pizza oven for family meals – but the real selling point is the one-bedroom trullo in the gardens, where grandparen­ts can hide away in luxury. Trullo Ashi (020 8003 6557; simpsontra­vel.com) sleeps nine from £2,400 per week, excluding flights Scandinavi­an adventure

Lofoten Islands, Norway Milestone birthdays are often the reason behind multi-gen holidays and, for those, you need something extra-special. Adventurou­s families will love Black Tomato’s trip to the remote Norwegian Lofoten Islands, an Arctic archipelag­o once inhabited by fishermen tracing the cod migration but now popular with hikers and wildlife watchers. It offers the chance to kayak, surf, hike or explore by RIB (rigid inflatable boat) as well as a spectacula­r add-on as the pièce de résistance: a trip to an uninhabite­d island for a beach barbecue. Black Tomato’ (020 7426 9888; black tomato.com) offers a 10-night trip from £9,990pp B&B, excluding flights

Thai TLC

Phuket, Thailand

For a serene break on a beautiful stretch of sand, five-star Aleenta Phuket has family retreats specifical­ly designed to foster quality time, as well as sprawling, four-bedroom beachfront villas to house everybody. Teens can join in with yoga and beach gym sessions and you can make family memories by planting a tree together or learning to cook Thai food. Meanwhile, for little ones, the Explorer’s Club has classes in

everything from batik painting to origami towel folding.

Rooms at Aleenta Phuket (00 66 76580333; aleenta.com) cost from £285 per night B&B, with family retreats costing from £222 per adult/£112 per child extra per night. Thai Airways (thaiairway­s.com) flies direct to Bangkok from London Heathrow from £828 return

Splashy staycation

Cotswolds

Planning on packing the extended family? Flight and accommodat­ion logistics can be tough once you start to involve siblings, aunts and uncles too. For big family holidays, it’s easier to stay in the UK. New to the books of Luxury Cotswold Rentals is Latimer Farm Oddington, a 19th-century estate 20 minutes’ drive from Stow-on-the-Wold that’s been given a serious sprucing. Its seven acres of grounds feature a pool, gym, cinema room and tennis court with football goals.

Latimer Farm Oddington (020 7993 6545; luxurycots­woldrental­s.co.uk) is spread across four buildings; sleeps 20 from £15,000 per week

Easy rider

Loire Valley, France

A biking holiday with kids and grandparen­ts might sound like madness, but Cycling for Softies has come up trumps with its The Loire in Luxury self-guided itinerary. This easy, seven-day jaunt has plenty to please every age group; from around eight-plus. On the cards are trips to the fairytale Château d’Ussé (thought to have inspired Sleeping Beauty), as well as Château de Saché, where Balzac penned some of his most famous works. It’s topped off by wine tastings for the grown-ups, cave houses for the kids to explore and nights at Domaine la Tortinière complete with a pool, boating lake and family suites that sleep up to six. The seven-day Loire itinerary (020 3925 6021; cycling-for-softies.co.uk) costs from £2,295pp B&B, including flights Private safari

Zambia

The increasing number of extended families booking safaris has led to camps building villas where kids, parents and grandparen­ts can stay together. On Expert Africa’s Greater Bushbaby Safari through the South Luangwa National Park and Great Rift Valley in Zambia, families can head out by boat to see hippos or drive through a wilderness busy with elephants before returning to a thatched four-bedroom house with a private swimming pool, safari guides and chef.

The eight-night Expert Africa Greater Bushbaby Safari (0203 405 6666; expertafri­ca.com) costs from £7,840pp all-inclusive, excluding flights

The classic all-inclusive

Corfu, Greece

An all-inclusive is a good solution for families for whom splitting the bill can fast become a minefield. The muchloved Ikos chain has some of the best options in Greece, with its newest outpost Ikos Odisia about to enter a second season amid Corfu’s fragrant pine forest. Ten pools and a private beach means ample opportunit­y for families to do their own thing during the day and meet up at one of six restaurant­s later, with pedalos, kayaks, tennis and a spa to keep everyone busy. Meanwhile, there is a kids’ club for little ones aged from four months and a football academy for older children.

Tui (020 38 303 111; tui.co.uk) offers a week at Ikos Odisia from £2,455pp including flights

Drift along the Danube

Vienna to Nuremberg

River cruising company Uniworld’s family-friendly Generation­s programme includes activities such as dessert-making with the onboard pastry chef, tours of the ship with the Captain and specially-created shore excursions – from a geocache treasure hunt around the German city of Passau to a trip to the headquarte­rs of renowned coloured pencil makers, Faber-Castell. Meanwhile, the company has kept some of its traditiona­l grandparen­t-pleasers including private art gallery viewings and city walking tours.

An eight-day Authentic Danube cruise (0808 168 9231; uniworld.com) costs from £3,099pp all-inclusive with flights Trick the teens into having fun Patagonia, Argentina

Keeping older kids happy on a trip with granny and grandpa can be a thankless task. Trade a traditiona­l hotel stay for a more experienti­al trip that’s guaranteed to inspire joy in even the most jaded teen. Harriet Pike, head of Swoop Patagonia, is “seeing more groups of children, parents, and grandparen­ts on our voyages than ever before”. For an unforgetta­ble adventure, she recommends the company’s Peninsula Valdés SelfDrive Safari spotting elephant seals, sea lions, Magellanic penguins and southern right whales on a Unesco-protected stretch of Argentinia­n coast.

The five-day Peninsula Valdés SelfDrive Safari (0117 369 0196; swooppatag­onia.com) costs from £1,446pp all-inclusive, including car hire; excludes flights

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? iRecipe for success: a picnic on the beach is more fun for children than a formal meal jGo all-inclusive at Ikos Odisia resort, in Corfu, and avoid disputes about who pays for meals
iRecipe for success: a picnic on the beach is more fun for children than a formal meal jGo all-inclusive at Ikos Odisia resort, in Corfu, and avoid disputes about who pays for meals
 ?? ?? g Calm before the storm? Add sparkle (and avoid conversati­onal flash points) by focusing on the multi-gen holidays you can take this year
g Calm before the storm? Add sparkle (and avoid conversati­onal flash points) by focusing on the multi-gen holidays you can take this year
 ?? ?? iTea time: take a spin in a cup on a family trip to Disneyland in Anaheim, California
iTea time: take a spin in a cup on a family trip to Disneyland in Anaheim, California

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