Archive for the ‘Road Trip to Costa Rica’ Category

The Napoleon Hill Guide to Great Traveling – Flagstaff to Tucson

Pool Time in Tucson, AZ

“Remember that happiness is a way of travel – not a destination.”

Roy Goodman

(This post belongs to a series that begins at 4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica)

Exhausted from the long day (read the previous post), the kids and daddy collapse into bed.

I’m burning the midnight oil on my computer, and watching with amusement the series of musical beds-Daddy with me; me with the two girls; daddy with the boys; daddy with the girls; whatever works to accommodate a family of six in two double beds.

There’s not a lot of sleep to be had anyway, with trains lumbering down the tracks that seem to pass right through the hotel lobby, accompanied by a long, loud whistle- blown to wake you up,  just in case you happened to still be sleeping as it passed.

The next morning Flagstaff is a cozy 38 degrees Fahrenheit, not exactly the warmer weather we were searching for when we headed south.

Packing up after our quick continental breakfast, and back on the road, we settle into one of our favorite driving past times – watching the scenery as we listen to and discuss our ‘input’.

My husband has a phrase he uses consistently -

Input Determines Output

Whatever you put into:

  • your life
  • your mind
  • your thoughts
  • your heart

will determine what you get out of:

  • your character
  • your circumstances
  • your life
  • your destiny.

We’ve developed a daily habit of listening to or reading ‘good input’.

Today’s selection includes The Science of Personal Achievement by Napoleon Hill (the author of the best-selling Think and Grow Rich).

Filled with inspirational and practical advice for living an extraordinary life, there are principles that can be applied to creating great travel experiences.

#1- A Definite Chief Aim

Maybe that aim is to learn a language, explore a city, take a food tour, or just ‘be’ in a place.

Knowing what you want to do helps you decide where to go.

#2- The Habit of Saving

Travel doesn’t have to be expensive. If you’re willing to live simply, and save the difference, your money can go a long way to providing the experiences you want to have.

Greg in Zions

#3- Initiative

Take action. Get out of your comfort zone. Buy those tickets. Say hello to a stranger. Smile.

Do something to move toward living your dream and pushing your limits.

#4- Imagination

“If we use our imaginations, our possibilities become limitless.”

Where to go, how to go, when to go. Don’t make plans based on what seems possible. Imagine the ideal, the impossible, then find a way to make it real.

#5- Enthusiasm

Nothing great was ever accomplished without enthusiasm.

What’s the point of travel, if it doesn’t spark excitement?

Aa with BIG smoothie

We stop in Phoenix for Mexican food from Bajio and smoothies from Keva Juice. A little picnic is held on the typical Arizona rocks in the parking lot’s planter boxes.

The drive from Phoenix to Tucson is just under three hours, but the kids are overly anxious to get out of the car by the time we get there, which equals slightly flustered parents.

It takes some time to find a hotel we want to stay in. Internet is a big consideration, so I can update posts, but besides that we also want a pool for the kids.

Motel 6 and Howard Johnson only offer dial-up (really? dial-up?). The La Quinta Inn on Starr Pass Road offers high speed internet, a pool AND a hot tub. We have a winner!

Our room even has a ‘backyard’ with only a gate separating us from the swimming pool.

We spend the evening relaxing in the hot tub and swimming in the pool, before heading across the street to The Waffle House, which is reminiscent of something from a Rocky movie- but the food was great.

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(This post belongs to a series that begins at 4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica)

All photos by Rachel Denning and may be used with permission.

How Children Make You a Better Traveler – Zions, Lake Powell and Grand Canyon

“Nothing is worth more than this day.”
~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

(This post belongs to a series that begins at 4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica) View the photo gallery here.

The orange sand is soft and smooth between my toes. The kids splash in the chilly water that’s tempered by the warmth of the sun shining down on us.

We’re at Zion’s National Park, near the Arizona/Utah border, but we’re not hiking Angels Landing nor exploring the Narrows. Those seem a little much for our young bunch.

Are our children holding us back from enjoying travel and seeing the sights?

Not at all. Instead we’re catching frogs, jumping off rocks and laying in the sand not far from the road by the Court of the Patriarchs, at the mouth of the park.

We’re enjoying the moment, not a care in the world.

They delight in the simple pleasures.

That’s how children view the world. It’s a great way to approach travel.

There’s no expectations, no agenda’s, just pure and uncomplicated fun with our kids.

Traveling doesn’t have to mean seeing the sights. Sometimes the best experiences come when they happen spontaneously, in unexpected places, and by simply enjoying what’s here and now.

Tummy’s growl, contentment turns to discontent and soon we’re on our way again. The sun still streams through the window, we pass towering crags and cliffs, dive through tunnels and meander our way toward Arizona.

They find excitement in the ordinary.

Skimming the south western edge of Lake Powell on our way to Page, Arizona, we decide to stop.

Exploring slick rock, red sand and desert flowers and creatures, in a comfortable 61 degrees F, the deep blue water beckons to my husband.

He discreetly changes into his swimsuit, scouts out the area for the best entry and exit, then inches to the edge of a cliff, and leaps into the air until gravity takes over and plunges him down, down into the frigid water.

The kids watch with delight and holler and wave at him in the water below and as he scales the sides of the cliff back to where we’re waiting at the top.

Daddy is a big kid who always has a way to make the ordinary exciting.

They can’t do it all in one day.

It’s been a carefree day, but now the sun dips in the horizon, we’ve no place yet to stay, and little ones are hungry and tired. Their patience with car time is wearing thin.

We set out in search of food and lodging – the destination is Tusayan, a town within the Grand Canyon National Park boundaries.

As we drive past the southern rim of the majestic Grand Canyon, we pause for a few quick snapshots.

The sun is setting, a cold north wind blows fiercely, it’s 41 degrees Fahrenheit and our little kids can’t think of anything but eating. Our glimpse of the Grand Canyon is too brief, but we don’t have to see it all today.

Tomorrow’s a new day, fresh with more adventures waiting.

We’ll come back the next day, after a night in Tusayan.

But there are only 8 hotels in Tusayan, and we discover too late that reservations are recommended. No vacancies means our only option is to press through to Flagstaff for the night.

They enjoy the journey.

Our little children have really reached their limits now. We make a quick stop at Wendy’s for some grub, which brings short term pacification.

We arrive late in Flagstaff, frazzled, ready to drop and a little disappointed. We probably won’t be backtracking to the Grand Canyon tomorrow, so our short sighting is all we’ll get this trip.

This day was a little longer than we’d ideally like to have. The old adage ‘stop while you’re ahead’ is especially  applicable when traveling with kids.

“Hurrying” to get to the next place does not equal a better experience. It’s better to get to our destination before everyone’s burnt out.

Travel is all about enjoying the journey, not just arriving at the destination.

(This post belongs to a series that begins at 4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica) View the photo gallery here.

All photos by Rachel Denning and may be used with permission.

Video; Leaving for Road Trip to Costa Rica

In April of 2007 our family sold the last of our belongings and packed up our SUV with our four children to begin a road trip from Utah to Costa Rica.

Watch the video as we embark on this life changing journey.

If you can’t see/view this video, watch it here.

3 Easy Ways to Turn Your Dreams into Reality – Our Family Travel Adventure Begins!

“I have learned, that if one advances confidently
in the direction of his dreams,
and endeavors to live the life he has imagined,
he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.”

Henry David Thoreau

(This post belongs to a series that begins at 4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica)

Have you had one of those moments? You know (maybe you do), a moment that’s surreal, when you realize that something that was only a dream, something that you believed to be impossible, has actually become a reality?

For months we dreamed, planned, organized, and prepared. Now we’re doing it.

How did we get from where we were to where we want to be?

1. Dream It!

“Whatever your dreams may be,
begin taking them very, very seriously.”

We would never be here starting this big adventure if we had never dared to dream.

There’s a touch of melancholy as we depart Salt Lake and drive south on Interstate-15, leaving family, friends, and the area where we had spent most of our lives growing up – graduating from high school and college, meeting, dating, marrying and giving birth to four children.

But besides the melancholy, mostly we feel excitement- we’re moving to Costa Rica! We’re actually making it happen.

2. Plan It!

Your current safe boundaries were once unknown frontiers.

~Anonymous

As the saying goes, wishing won’t make it so.

Once you’ve dreamed that big dream, then you’ve got to plan as if it’s going to happen.

Apply for those passports, start liquidating possessions, research those flights and learn more about the country.

The home has been liquidated, the belongings sold or stored, and our little family of four children (ages 3 mos – 4 years) are packed snugly in our SUV headed south for the border.

We were tackling something that we feel passionate about, pursuing a dream, attempting to live on purpose and with enthusiasm.

We’re following our hearts. It’s a risk, frightening, and uncomfortable- but that’s where living begins, right?

What lies ahead of us? What boundaries will we cross, what frontiers will we expand?

3. Do It!

“Don’t wait. The time will never be just right.”

~Napoleon Hill

Our expectations are high, our enthusiasm elevated – even when our kids say, “We’ve been driving forever?, and “Will we get to Costa Rica today?”

Not quite. but the dual DVD player helps out a little.

Instead we make it to St. George, Utah, a painted desert town about five hours south of Salt Lake.

The town has closed up by the time we arrive and check in to a motel. The kids are ravenous which equals whiny. Living your dreams doesn’t mean lying on a bed of roses. There’s still those daily challenges, especially with little kids.

We set out on foot in search of food, but the neighboring Chinese restaurant, which displays a 9:30 closing time, decides they’re closed at 9:15 as we try to go in. Maybe they’re intimidated by our party of six.

Instead we order pizza and soak in the hot tub until it arrives. It distracts hungry tummies until food arrives. It’s not a bad way to end the first day of our adventure.

(This post belongs to a series that begins at 4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica)

 

4 Incredibly Simple Steps to Doing the Impossible – Family Road Trip to Costa Rica

“You’ll never know what’s possible until you try the impossible.”

Anthony Robbins

Impulsive. That’s one word that’s been used to describe us. Other related words include spontaneous, adventurous, unpredictable and just plain crazy.

Staying in the basement of my mother-in-law’s, we just sold (and moved from) our third house in 12 months.

Along with our homes, we sold most of our possessions- couches, bedroom sets, home decor, dishes- nearly everything we owned.

Now we attempt to pack everything we have left into our SUV in preparation for the road trip of a life time- Salt Lake City, Utah to San Jose, Costa Rica, where we plan to make our home.

Three months (and two moves) ago I gave birth to our fourth child.

Now not only are we venturing a nearly 5,000 mile road trip through the U.S., Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica, but we are going to do it with four children ages four, three, nearly two and 3 months old.

No wonder they call us crazy.

1. Start With a Dream

The best changes often start as a single, simple thought.
Think big, and discover the ways to make your dreams real.

~Anonymous

I guess the dream started when we were first married. It was something like this…

Sometime during my husband’s career, we’d taken a position abroad, to experience the culture and language of another place, and expose our children to more than their ‘little corner of the world.’

But then somehow the dream started to grow…it took on a life of it’s own.

A trip here, a trip there (taken by my husband while I stayed home with new babies). I was determined that ‘next’ time I would go too.

Then before the birth of our fourth child, we took a second honeymoon to Cancun. The sun, the waves, the all-inclusive resort- it was fabulous.

But it was the Sunday excursion to a local church that was life changing.

As I sat in a meeting conducted in a language I barely knew, surrounded by a culture unfamiliar to me, having an amazing experience,  it was then that I knew this was an adventure our family needed to have.

2. Immediately begin plans and making arrangements.

“Believe and act as if it were impossible to fail.”
Charles F. Kettering

We started acting as if this was really going to happen. We told friends and family, started making decisions that would move us toward that goal, and created a momentum that couldn’t be stopped.

Eventually our dreaming led to a decision to move to Costa Rica. We sold our home, our furniture and all ‘un-essential’ belongings.

It’s really quite liberating, to free yourself from the ‘burden of possession.’ To no longer feel the need to hold onto all those things ‘just in case.’

But then the question still remained of how to get there with our remaining things, and how to get a vehicle when we arrived.

3. Consider that you can do the ‘Impossible’

“It always seems impossible until its done.”
Nelson Mandela

Because vehicles cost 50-75% more in Costa Rica (due to import taxes), we tentatively toyed with the idea that my husband drive our SUV to Costa Rica with our belongings in it.

Would it even be possible? Would he be robbed, plundered, murdered? Was there even a road that went all the way from Utah to Costa Rica? It seemed like such a frightening thing to consider. (Such was our limited reality).

But then an even more frightening though crossed our mind…what if we all drive down together? My husband, me, our four small children.

4. Break out of the comfort zone!

“Always do what you are afraid to do.”

~Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ten hours a day, 5,000 miles (if that’s even how far it was), with little children ages four, three, not yet two and 3 months old, through ‘dangerous’ (??) territory, not even knowing if the roads were passable.

Where would we stay? Where would we eat? How would we find our way? What about potty breaks?

What were we thinking?

But the more we considered the possibility, the more we discussed it, explored it, the more plausible it became.

If others had done it (we found some evidence online, granted, not with little children), why couldn’t we?

If we never made the attempt, we’d never know if it was possible.

So now here we are, our passport applications are in, our house and belongings are sold, our vehicle is nearly packed, our families are worried…

Ready to embark on the adventure of a lifetime.

Have you attempted something that you originally considered impossible? What was the outcome? Please comment below.

What our readers have to say…

I read your blog and almost cried. I am going to start traveling this summer and recently I have had a lot of fears come up about all the 'what ifs' - money, my age, etc. I was feeling particularly vulnerable this morning when the link from your web site came across my e-mail. When I watched your video and read a few sections in your blog I am convinced that this was a sign, you are a Godsend, and I am really excited. Thank you,thank you, thank you. Keep up your amazing work and life.
The desire of my heart is to be doing what you are doing. So I guess you could say I am living vicariously through you.
I love your appreciation and genuine interest in other cultures. I am always looking forward to reading your next post.
[I read] because you're an EXPERT in the area I'm most interested in. Living the dream.
I read to see it is possible. However, my husband is still convinced we can't do it, that you must be special... So I continue to read and follow, hoping for something to click for our family to also travel the world.
I enjoy reading your blog because you share the spirit of adventure that not too many people are brave enough to follow... I like to see how resilient you and your family are during the lows that would send most people packing home. My family and I get out a lot and explore but like to live vicariously through your experiences. Thanks and we will keep following along.
 

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