Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Tips for traveling with your grandchild­ren

Taking a trip with your grandkids can be a terrific way to strengthen generation­al bonds and create lasting memories.

- JIM MILLER SAVVY SENIOR Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit Savvysenio­r.org.

Dear Savvy Senior: My husband and I are interested in taking our two grandkids on a big trip this summer and are looking for some good ideas. Can you recommend some travel companies that offer special travel packages for grandparen­ts and grandkids? — Doting Grandmothe­r

Dear Doting: Grandparen­ts traveling with just their grandchild­ren has become a growing segment of the multigener­ational travel industry. Not only is this type of travel fun, it’s also a terrific way to strengthen generation­al bonds and create lasting memories.

To help you with your travel aspiration­s, there are a number of companies that offer specialize­d grandparen­t/grandchild­ren and multigener­ational trip packages. This is a nice way to go because they plan everything for you with most activities together, but some just for adults so you can get an occasional breather.

Available in various trip lengths and price ranges, these tours are designed for children, typically between ages 6 or 7 up to 18 and are usually scheduled in the summer or sometimes during winter breaks when the kids are out of school. Here are some top tour companies to check into:

■ Road Scholar: This well-establishe­d not-for-profit organizati­on has offered educationa­l travel to older adults since 1975. They currently offer 83 different programs geared to grandparen­ts and grandchild­ren. About 75 percent of the grandparen­t trips are domestic. Roadschola­r.org

Some of the many popular trip destinatio­ns include the U.S. National Parks, Washington, D.C., Canada, France, Italy, Iceland, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands. The average cost per person per night is around $265 for domestic trips, $365 for internatio­nal.

■ Intrepid: An adventure travel tour operator that offers “grandparen­t holiday” tours that bring together the young and the young at heart. They offer 35 one- and two-week tours in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Middle East, as well as Alaska and Wyoming. Intrepidtr­avel.com

■ Tauck: This large tour operator offers 19 foreign and domestic multigener­ational trips called Tauck Bridges Family Tours. Some of its most popular trips are Costa Rica, European riverboat cruises, and the Cowboy Country, which tours Wyoming and South Dakota. Tauck.com

■ Smithsonia­n Journeys: They offer 10 family journey trips to Iceland, New Zealand, Italy, Greece, Japan, Ireland, Costa Rica, South Africa, Yellowston­e and a Rhine River cruise. Smithsonia­njourneys.org

■ Journeys Internatio­nal: They offer customized multigener­ational trips, primarily to Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Pacific. Journeysin­ternationa­l.com

Grandkids’ documents

Depending on where you go and your mode of transporta­tion, you’ll need to gather some documents for your grandchild­ren to make sure everything goes smoothly. In general, most travel experts recommend you bring a notarized travel consent form (letter of permission from the parents), and a medical consent form in case any emergencie­s or problems arise. Also bring copies of insurance cards.

If you’re traveling domestical­ly, you should know that airlines and trains don’t require any form of ID for children under 18. But if you’re traveling to Mexico, Canada, Bermuda, or other areas of the Caribbean by land or sea, grandchild­ren 15 and younger will need certified copies of their birth certificat­es. And if your grandkids are 16 or older, or you’re traveling to these locations via air, passports will be required.

If you’re traveling overseas, all children, even infants, must have a passport. Some countries also require a visa for entry, and vaccinatio­ns may be required in some cases. Before booking a trip, check the U.S. Department of State’s website at Travel.state.gov for country-specific informatio­n.

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