Make a list of travel tips based on your tripĢ0. Draw favorite outfits you’ve worn on the tripġ9. Make a list of animals you’ve seen on your travelsġ8. Journal “How To” Instructions for someone, detailing something on your trip (example: How to annoy your sibling in the car, How to enjoy Sleeping Bear Dunes, How to catch a fish, How to make the perfect s’more, etc.)ġ7. ![]() Make a Pirate’s Treasure Map of where you are. You are creating a travel advertisement for a place you visited. Write about today-you must include those three descriptions.ġ4. ![]() Look up three Sherwin Williams paint color names. Write a review of restaurant/hotel/Airbnbġ3. Write a pretend postcard to a friend in your journalġ2. What happened today from the perspective of your stuffed animalġ0. How you made someone feel good about themselves todayĩ. Rose & Thorn (best part of the day and worst part of the day)Ĩ. What you ate today (write a menu description for it)ģ. Describe/Journal the things you brought on this tripĢ. In case they get stuck though, I taped this list of fun journal prompts in the front of their journals:ġ. before you print photos so you’re really getting a good quality photo.Īs for what to put in the journals, I try and encourage the kids to be as creative as they want-no rules! They can draw, make lists, write, cut things up, etc. These are great because you can use editing apps to adjust brightness, contrast, etc. Even better, you can use your phone or iPad to take photos and print them straight from the phone with a Portable Bluetooth Printer. I have the Polaroid one (I don’t think they make it anymore, and the ones left on Amazon are more than double what I paid for), so I linked the comparable Kodak one. The cameras are great for kids to take their own pictures. We’ve bought a couple of kid-friendly cameras over the years, and my current favorite is the Canon Ivy. I find the picture quality is better than the Instax, and I really like the Zip instant photos with the peel-off paper if you want to turn them into stickers. We even made dioramas with them when we returned home.Īnother fun addition to travel journals is photos. My friend Tisha and I collected free travel brochures everywhere we went and cut them up to document our trip. I distinctively remember a road trip we took out west when I was maybe 12 years old. They have a lot of great things the kids can cut and scrapbook. I found stacks of Michigan travel brochures on eBay for a few dollars as well as some Michigan tourism magazines that include places we’re visiting. Inside Our Pouches: colored pencils, good journal pens, kid scissors (for cutting things to scrapbook), fun travel themed stickers, double sided tape, glue stick To build some excitement for the trip, I’ll have the kids decorate the covers of their journals the night before we leave. They’re the perfect size-a little smaller than a regular school notebook, and they’re unlined so great for scrapbooking and art. They come in a 3-pack, so it worked great for my kids (I ended up buying an additional one for me). I bought these Soft Cover Spiral Notebooks. I found these wet dry pouches in the Dollar Spot at Target, but these are similar and the same size. Everything fits into a pouch (I used paint pens to write their names) to keep them organized and make them easy to transport. This year’s travel journals are similar in that they’re very open-ended-blank books and all the fun things a kid would want to write, draw, cut and paste things they see, taste, hear, experience and collect as they adventure. The open-ended scrapbook approach kept her busy for hours. ![]() This past year, Lainey really got into journaling as a creative tool-not so much deep dive writing into all her feelings (although I hope that comes) but more a creative collection of thoughts and ideas she noticed in the world: cutting out fun things she liked and gluing them in her scrapbook, making lists, collecting quotes, compiling affirmations, etc. We’ve done different kinds of journals over the years, but I’m excited for this year’s because I put a lot of thought into what I know my kids will love and set them up with creative tools to make the experience of journaling more inviting. One of my favorite things about our road trip and summer adventures is our travel journals.
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