This Summer, Take a Virtual Vacation


By: Carolyn Jabs

Most parents would like to show their kids the wonders of the world. Most don’t, because travel is expensive and vacation schedules are short. In many families, grandma assumes that everyone will use summertime for a family reunion. In addition, busy parents (and even kids) often need to recharge by doing nothing more challenging that lying on a beach or splashing in a hotel pool.

Still, it’s a rare parent who doesn’t fantasize about holding a child’s hand while standing on the edge of the Grand Canyon or pointing out the marvels in a place like the Smithsonian. Happily, you can take these and other dream trips simply by visiting the right websites. Obviously, a virtual vacation isn’t the same as the real thing, but if your goal is to awaken your kids to their natural and cultural heritage, these sites are a terrific start. Here are five virtual trips worth taking:

Tour the Smithsonian Museum. If you’ve actually visited the Smithsonian, you know how overwhelming “America’s attic” can be. The website can also be confounding, in part because there are so many museums. Start with the Museum of Natural History (www.mnh.si.edu/panoramas), where your tax dollars have been put to good use creating a virtual tour that makes it feel like you are wandering around the museum. When your child spots something intriguing, he or she can ask for a close-up, whether it’s of dinosaurs and fossils, sea life, mammals, plants, insects, bones, or gems. Younger children will also enjoy the live cams at the National Zoo (nationalzoo.si.edu), and older children can deepen their understanding of American history, culture, and art through exhibits at the other museums (smithsonian.org/museums).

Visit a National Park. The National Park Service website (www.nature.nps.gov/views) is rich with visuals as well as information about the ecology and history of the parks. In addition to famous parks such as the Grand Canyon and the National Mall, you and your kids can hang out in more remote spots like the Badlands of South Dakota, New Mexico’s Petroglyph Park in, and Utah’s or the Timpanogos Cave in Utah. The pages on the site load quickly, in part because they don’t include music or narration. Reading the short but intriguing captions is a good way to keep skills sharp, and kids who become immersed in the site will be rewarded by the occasional game. This website is also an excellent way to plan a visit to a park—or to remember past trips.
Hike in the Woods. UPM, a multinational forest products company, sponsors an extraordinary website that makes you feel as though you’re tromping through a forest. Once you go to upmforestlife.com, birdcalls fill the air. Is that a stream burbling in the background? A guide appears and offers to show you around, but you can also explore on your own by clicking hot spots that explain everything topics like fungi and forestry management. The narration on the site is available in German, French and Suomi (Finnish) as well as English—options that may help to slow the summer erosion of foreign language skills.

Explore the Earth. Planet in Action (www.planetinaction.com) enhances maps available at Google Earth to create vivid interactive tours of landmark sites. Check out the Places section of the website for tours of Mount St. Helens, Manhattan and Paris Disneyland. With a twitch of the mouse, you can zoom in for a closer look at points of interest. The site also includes flight simulation games for kids who find a simple tour “boooooring.”

You can also go straight to the source by downloading Google Earth (earth.google.com/intl/en/), a richer version of Google Maps that allows investigation of almost any place on the planet, sometimes in three dimensions. Start by looking for familiar landmarks in your own community. Can you find your child’s school, the playground, your own backyard? Then go wild and visit places that are totally beyond the family budget. Tokyo. A Caribbean island. The Serengeti. Magnify the map until little hot spots appear. Then click on them to learn more about local life.

Take a Moon Walk. If exploring earth seems passé, try a virtual vacation that that’s out of this world. On the toolbar at the top of Google 5, there’s a tiny image of Saturn. Clicking on it gives you the choice of studying the night sky, exploring Mars, or traveling to the moon. On the moon, Apollo astronauts offer a personal tour, explaining the craft they used in their historic flight and pointing out their famous footprints.

These virtual tours offer so many options that younger children will enjoy them more in the company of an adult guide. If possible, hook a computer to a larger monitor or the family TV, so several people can explore together. Kids over ten may prefer to do their own investigating. Point them toward one of these sites and suggest they give the rest of the family a tour of what they discover. Knowing that, after dinner, in the company of your kids, you can look forward to sharing a virtual trip to a place you’ve always wanted to visit can become its own small but memorable vacation.

Carolyn Jabs, M.A., has been writing about families and the Internet for over 15 years. She is the mother of three computer-savvy kids. Other Growing Up Online columns appear on her website (www.growing-up-online.com).