Category Archives: Staycations At Home

Ideas for things to do in and around the house to enjoy with your family and friends, with money-saving tips. The best staycations are at your doorstep.

Planning A Car Trip for Your Summer Vacation?

family car trip
Getting There Is Half The Fun!

Our long, cold, lonely winter seems to have passed at last, and my south Minneapolis neighborhood has once again begun to be filled with the drumbeats of street repairs and home rennovation projects. So its obviously the time when Minnesotans start to dream of things to do when the temperatures finally rise and summer vacation time arrives.  If there’s a car trip in your travel plans, whether it’s up north to a lake cabin or an extended sightseeing trip, then you’ll eventually be facing the problem of how to retain your sanity once the scenery stops piquing your interest, the conversation has devolved into words of single syllables, and you’re left with choosing something to listen to that will save your sanity and your marriage.  The kids have their GameBoys, iPhones, and portable DVD players, so the hapless adults in the front seat are free to indulge themselves with audio entertainment that satisfies the intellect and soothes the soul.  If you’re like me, as the traffic cones endlessly go by, you soon pass the point where not even your favorite music from high school and college can keep your eyes from glazing over.  But there is a wonderful alternative I think you’ll enjoy, and best of all, it’s FREE!

Back when I was living in the San Francisco area, my business required driving down to Los Angeles 2 or three times a year, a trip of about 8 hours of driving in a small car packed to the gills with merchandise.  For a time, my wife worked for a company that produced books on tape, and we found they were wonderful distractions from the hours-long stretches of the I-5 in California’s Central Valley where the scenery barely changes for 300 miles.  Of course, for family trips around Minnesota with the kids – books on tape aren’t going to be a popular choice if they don’t involve witches, werewolves, or superheroes.  You’ll mostly be choosing music playlists and hoping you can get away with sprinkling a few of your old favorites in amongst the songs your kids choose.  But if you can get the youngsters in the back seat to use their headphones, there’s a head-soothing alternative for the grown-ups: Old Time Radio.

Have Gun Will TravelOld time radio programs ranged from comedies to soap operas, just as television has always done.  I’m just old enough to remember catching an occasional episode of “Gunsmoke” and “Have Gun Will Travel” on rare occasions when I was in the kitchen helping (mostly watching) Mom make Sunday dinner.   These old programs are great for car trips because they generally run about 30 minutes – which is just long enough to keep your brain cells active between pit stops, but not so long that you start to lose interest.  The comedies don’t always hold up as well as the dramas because they tend to be topical, and they’re pretty corny even for fans like me.  But the mysteries are still as enjoyable today as they ever were.

Before I delve too deeply into my personal recommendations, let me give you the good news about these old programs: They’re all available for downloading from The Internet Archive.  Just go to the Audio section and you’ll find “Radio Programs” near the bottom of the list.  The Archive includes roughly two million recordings including music, audiobooks, and podcasts.  You can download them directly to your smartphone or easily transfer them from your computer to whatever music player you use in the car.  And again, it’s all free!
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The Snow Is My Fault

I apologize to everyone in the Upper Midwest.  I got carried away last week by the warmth, the sunshine, and the sight of what was once my lawn and gleefully put away my snow shovels.  This has obviously angered the winter deities and has brought a curse upon us all.  Thank goodness I don’t own a snowblower or I’m sure it would have been much worse than the 5-10 inches they’re predicting.

One of the few benefits of working from my home is that I can go out anytime to shop, see a movie, or pop over to see friends and relatives.  At least, that’s the conventional wisdom.  In truth, I rarely go out during the day because I feel too guilty about it.  I mean, I’m a struggling entrepreneur and I should be hard at work at all times, stopping only when the coffee is no longer effective in keeping my eyes open or (Heaven forfend!) my Internet connection dies.

When the reality of this latest storm settled in on me this morning, I took a quick inventory of the kitchen and realized that I was nearly out of several essentials of life: bread, peanut butter, Diet Coke, and Twizzlers.  I could perish!  So I gave myself permission to make a supply run.  Fortunately, Roundy’s had a sale on coffee a couple of weeks ago, and I stocked up.  So I didn’t have to do a major shopping trip and ended up at the local Walgreen’s where the prices are like playing the lottery.  Will I actually get the sale price on the peanut butter?  No?  Better luck next time.  Such fun!

Among the many reasons I’m so tired of winter is that I promised myself I start to do a morning walk to try to get some exercise.  My hermit-like existence means my regular daily physical exertions largely consist of a couple of trips up and down the stairs for meals.  It’s gotten so bad that even the muscles in my gluteus maximus have atrophied to the point where I can’t even sit in front of my computer for extended periods.  So I’ve been waiting for the ice on the sidewalks to clear and the puddles to dry.  But I have a lot of repairs to do on the outside of the house and around the yard, and I can’t do it until I regain some endurance.  Maybe by July…