“Over the river the and through the woods, to Grandmother’s house we go. The self-driving car knows the way to carry us through the white and drifted snow.”
OK, so self-driving cars are still a few years away, and their ability to work on snow has yet to be proven, but there are some tech tools to make long road trips a bit less painful for families this time of year.
Grandma may have once lived two farms over, but now she’s more likely to be in Florida. Costs for flying a family of any size that far pretty much means a road trip down Interstate-95.
On my family’s road trips as a kid, my mother was sure reading would cause car sickness so we were not allowed to read in the car. As an adult, I found out I could tolerate it better than expected. I found a few tips on avoiding car sickness while reading.
Reading in the car is a good way for kids to pass the time, and it promotes literacy too. And parts of the trip that have sporadic cell coverage are a good time to promote reading.
The books can even be on their phones by using the Kindle app, and there are free e-books from the public library. If your child wants to read classics that are now in the public domain, they are totally free from the Gutenberg Project.
Watching movies in cars used to require a portable DVD viewer, and while they are still available even more affordably than ever, kids are also amazingly comfortable watching video on the tiny screens of the phone they might already have.
Streaming video from Youtube, Netflix, iTunes, Google Play or Amazon might be a bit difficult on a road trip where cell coverage might be spotty. Usually coverage along interstates is fairly good. Away from the interstate is where you might run into problems.
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