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Staycation, all I ever wanted

Posted by Clark Williams-Derry (Guest Contributor) at 4:33 PM on 01 Jul 2008

Read more about: green living | travel | air travel | gas prices
Al Gore
Photo: matildaben via Flickr.

"Staycation ... a portmanteau that combines "stay" and "vacation" and refers to a holiday that takes place either at or near home."

With gas well above $4 per gallon this summer, and with airlines raising prices and canceling flights because of high fuel costs, it's not too surprising to find a word like "staycation" gaining a toehold in the North American lexicon. Google now finds nearly 200,000 web pages that use the word -- most of them added within the last few months, if my casual browsing is any indicator.

But even back when fuel wasn't so pricey, some of my favorite vacations were spent within a 50 mile radius of home. It's easy to forget how many parks, museums, nature walks, boat rides, and all-around fun can be found close to where you live -- which makes a staycation a perfect opportunity to reconnect yourself to your home town.

So I'm curious: Is anyone out there planning a staycation this year? Where are you, and what do you plan on doing?

Road Trip 2008 0L/700km

I am currently in Sechelt, BC roughly halfway through my bike trip around the Georgia Strait. Accommodation costs are killing me some nights because I am alone with no one to share room costs when there is no hostel but I'm also saving a couple hundred dollars by not driving so it all works out.

Here's my bike trip blog.


Great idea

Did you make up the word, Clark? Anyway, I hope you keep writing about this.

I became interested in "staycations" about 15 years ago when I went through a period of outdoor sports: kayaking, skiing, etc.  I loved the activities, but I hated the travel and hassle of finding places to stay. A typical ski weekend might mean 6-8 hours of driving (each way) and two nights of crowded noisy accomodations.

I went on group kayak trips in Baja, San Juan Islands and BC. Fun, memorable, etc. but what a hassle.  I realized that there were plenty of places to kayak near where I lived.  Why go far away, when I hadn't even explored the places that were nearby and convenient?

Now I think of three separate categories of trip:

  1. Destination within 30 minutes by car or bike. Easy, relaxing, don't have to plan or worry. About 90% of my trips are like this now.

  2. Destination within 1-1/2 hours. Museums, family visits, occasional outdoor trips. Can return home to sleep.  Ideal for weekend trips, so you can drive, enjoy the place for a day or two, return home.

  3. Destination within 8 hours. Our yearly trip to Ashland, Oregon. We stay for about a week, so the % of time spent driving is reasonable.

Concepts

  1. If you want to learn an outdoor sport or activity, it's much easier to learn it near home. You don't have to go to Costa Rica to learn about birdwatching. If you go to Costa Rica later, you will have gotten the basics down so you can enjoy the unique nature of the foreign location.

  2. Reduce the ratio of Travel Time to Fun Time.

  3. Plan trips with the philosophy of going to somewhere nice and staying put, as opposed to long-distance trips to multiple locations. Take day trips out from a central base. In my experience, kids and spouses tend to prefer this to the forced march approach.

  4. If you go to a foreign country, you can expiate your GHG sins by staying in one place and really getting to know the country.  I love full-time foreign language courses (hint: learn the grammar at home first).


Bart
Energy Bulletin
Great blog Kata!

Excellent low carbon vacation.

Yep Bart, the daily 30 minutes away vacation is excellent.  Biking to the trail and swimming after the workout.  After an hour you are really on vacation, from your problems.

Need a velomobile to travel to the ski trail here in winter.  With studded tires.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velomobile

http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin

Vacation?

I'm looking forward to taking a week off to pull weeds and cut brush around my prairie remnant. Who can relax when there's "work" to do?! But I guess I'm a little odd. I find the activity very satisfying and restorative... for the tiny patch of grassland as well as my mental and physical health.

So, I won't be traveling more than 500-1000 feet from my house. I'll be traveling by foot. And my primary tools will be my hands and a lopper. It's very peaceful out there.

I have my own project, but there are plenty of conservation organizations looking for help if anyone wants to get some fresh air and exercise.

I'm sad, none for me

I just started a new job, and I don't start accruing vacation days until December.

But I'm with wiscidea. There are always projects around my place I want to do. Maybe I'm just a homebody.

But if we don't travel anymore, how do we connect to the larger country, let alone the larger world? I feel like it's important to get out of our comfort zones; far too many Americans have never had the experience of being a racial/sexual/cultural/linguistic minority, and I think it's a good experience to have.

paz

This summer, we had planned to drive from Northern CA to Michigan to visit family and see America on the way. (We've left the state twice in the last ten years.)  But instead we turned our vacation into three:  1) accomplishing long-postponed projects around the house, including installing new double-paned windows in our 70-year-old home; 2) traveling to the next county to visit Real Goods (check them out at realgoods.com); and 3) a drive to Portland to see the Oregon Zoo for the first time.  Oh, and I got a bike for my birthday (my husband stole mine several years ago).


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