Itinerary
Download our family’s itinerary here. We chose to put the bulk of the driving at the front end of the trip, so we took a hard-and-fast approach to getting as far West as we could and then making day trips to National Parks as we slowly snaked our way back to Missouri. We also heard that Zion has a capacity limit, so we rearranged our schedule to hit Zion on a weekday. We lucked out with this approach too - our boys were super sick the first 4 days of the trip - and we didn’t miss out on too much while putting in car miles. However, if we were to do it over again, we would start in southern Colorado at Great Sand Dunes and head West from there, making a big circle to end at Rocky Mountains.
Kid Approved Roadtrip tips
Make a Visual to Help Kids Track Your Trip. Probably the best thing I did when preparing for this trip was to DIY the car tray you see above. We ordered a road map with all 10 National Parks on it, cut it to size, and enlisted the help of my son’s preschool teacher to laminate the map. My 5 year old could follow along with where we were, draw on the map with a dry erase marker, and use it as a food or activity tray when he wanted to. It helped cut down on the “Are we there yet?” questions!
Stock up on Snacks and Sandwich Makings. Prepare yourself for lots of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. It’s a lunch you can eat anywhere you are and you can eat it on your own time (better than having to find a restaurant and wait in line). Time is precious! There are plenty of times we drove through nothingness for more than an hour without seeing a single gas station or food place (hello Utah!), and a few National Parks we visited that did not have food for purchase inside the park. We stocked up on about $50 worth of granola bars, fruit cups and peanut butter crackers at Aldi before taking this trip, and that made a huge difference. We also took a cooler in the car to keep string cheese, milk, soda and apples at the ready.
Don’t Underestimate the Value of Movie Time. I bought a seat-back storage device for the kids and stocked it full of educational toys, drawing pads, interactive books, a preschool handwriting practice binder, and small cars and trucks. But at the end of the day, our saving grace to pass the time was always movie time. Thank you Disney and car DVD player.