Family of 8 Sedona-Vegas-San Diego
Greetings!
My husband and I, along with our six children ages 1,3,5,9,11,12 will be traveling to visit family in Las Vegas and San Diego next year (2018). This will be our children's first time going west (we live in Florida) and so besides the excitement of meeting a lot of extended family for the first time, we are really wanting them to experience the incredible landscape which is unlike anything they have ever seen. The dates we are planning on are March 27-April 9th, so 13 days. This is the ROUGH itinerary/route I was thinking.
Day 1 - fly into Phoenix around 10 AM and drive straight towards our Sedona hotel, making stops at Montezuma Castle, Red Rock State Park and Chapel of Holy Cross which are all right off the interstate before Sedona. Sleep in Sedona.
Day 2 - Drive to Grand Canyon, first making a stop of Slide Rock State Park, which is on the way. Spend the rest of day at The Grand Canyon and stay overnight
**total drive time so far - about 4 hours
Day 3 - Spend the morning at the GC, grab lunch and begin our drive to the Hoover Dam. **drive time - 3.5hours. Hoover Dam visit then head to Vegas to visit family and sight see for a few days.
Day 4 - Vegas
Day 5 - Vegas
Day 6 - Leave early and drive to Death Valley **drive time - 2 hours. Spend the entire day at Death Valley then drive to Sequioa NF **drive time - 5.5hours OR Skip Death Valley and save those 2 hours of driving and go straight from Vegas to Sequioa **6hours**
Stay 2 nights at Sequioa.
Day 7 - Sequioa
Day 8 - Leave Sequioa and head to Joshua Tree National Park - **5 hours (maybe leave in the middle of the night so kids can sleep?)
OR skip Joshua Tree and Palm Springs and head straight to San Diego
Day 8/9 - Joshua Tree to Palm Springs for the night
Day 10 - Leave palm springs and either do the detour (1.5 hrs) to see Mt. Jacinto) or drive straight to San Diego . **2hrs**
Day 11 - San Diego
Day 12 - San Diego
Day 13 - departure from San Diego back to Florida
Questions
- I am not so particular about visiting certain places as I am about the topography/landscape for the children to experience. I would prefer to cut back on the driving if any of these parks (between Arizona, Nevada, and California) overlap a lot in features. I am pretty set on seeing Sequioa since there's nothing else like it, but flexible with other landscape (dessert, canyons, boulders, etc). So what do you think I can cut out to help cut down on the driving time, if anything? I am a little afraid of this being an exhausting trip and the kids getting desperate with so much driving.
-Would you skip death valley and go straight to Sequioa from Vegas.
-Would you stay 1 or 2 nights at the Sequioa forest?
-Would you stay 1 or 2 nights at The Grand Canyon?
HELP. Any guidance would be greatly appreciated!
The Kids will enjoy more time outdoors.
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Day 8 - Leave Sequioa and head to Joshua Tree National Park - **5 hours (maybe leave in the middle of the night so kids can sleep?)
This is a big No No ! Not only will the kids be restless and grumpy the following day due to the lack of a good nights sleep, they will be restless and grumpy the same time as you are feeling exhausted and in need of sleep yourselves. Just fit into your trip what you can at a relaxed pace and get off the road before dinner and relax for the evening before getting a good nights sleep. For the children to have a fun time and appreciate the landscape they need time to enjoy it and not be rushed in and out of the car, running around and being 'touchy feely' with nature is far more important to them than sitting in the car looking but not touching. Try doing less and let the Kids have time to enjoy the great outdoors. Death valley and Sequoia are both great but I think you might be better off driving through the Mojave National Preserve on a more direct route to Joshua tree and divide your time better.
Some reading to enjoy the GC.
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Originally Posted by
TableforEight
Would you recommend staying more than one night at the GC? Is there enough for the kids to actually do, since we can't traverse any major trails.
Particularly since you are homeschooling, I would recommend that you get hold of Over the Edge: Death in Grand Canyon, Elias Butler and Michael Patrick Ghiglier said to be the best book ever written about the Grand Canyon. Despite its title, it is in no way morbid. A very interesting book, and a real page turner. The three older children are old enough for it. You may want to read it as well.
Lifey