Successful Road
Trips With Special Needs Kids

Parents of special needs children
must always work harder than most parents even for the simplest things.
A road trip, which is fun for most families, is a nightmare to special
needs families. How can a special needs family enjoy a road trip without
meltdowns and upsets for all passengers? A successful road trip begins
long before the departure day. Plan, prepare, and pack carefully so
that all chances for a pleasant day are on your side.
However, to be realistic, sometimes no amount of
planning can make everything go smoothly. Parents should mentally
prepare themselves and their children that IF a hitch in their plans
prevents the trip, shortens it, or makes it almost a fiasco, there is
always a next time. Everyone must feel that they did their upmost to
make it work and that it is NO ONES fault. You are a family and family
members forgive, forget and forge ahead.
An alternative to family outings that works well
for some families is to take trips separately. Have the special needs
child go alone with a parent or both parents while the others are cared
for at home. Then on a separate occasion, perhaps when grandma babysits
the special needs child, the others have their turn.
Planning Road Trips
You will be surprised how successfully your family
can play tourist just a few hours’ drive from your home. Planning is KEY
but it needs to be done months ahead of time.
- Gather information, web
site addresses, maps, schedules, and order the free handouts most
areas have about visiting their sites.
- Download Road Trip apps
—GPS, maps, trip help…
- Check the hours of
operation of places you want to visit.
- Find out the price breaks,
family days, and special perks at the family attractions you will
visit.
- Read up on Geocaching in
your area. Or check their site
here.
Geocaching is a great, free family adventure.
- Decide where most of your
stops will be and check to make sure you know the addresses to
quickly find them.
- Decide where meals will be
eaten. If you will be picnicking, know where picnic sites are
located.
- Know the location of kid
friendly restaurants along your route… for plan B in case of rain.
Preparing for Road Trips
Involve the children in planning the trip. Besides
assuring a more patient passenger crew, your kids will learn map reading
skills, how to search the internet for spots of interest, and learn to
read for a purpose. Let them locate on a map a different route to return
by so they can use their map skills and it will be a more interesting
ride home.
Plan together the departure time and where to stop
to eat, rest, and let off steam.
Have the kids pack each a bag with their favourite
car toys or distractions. It is also a good experience to have them pack
what they might need for the trip like sweaters, change of clothes,
swimming gear, water bottles, sun screen, hand sanitizer, running shoes…
this is a valuable life skill.
It is important to make kids comfortable too. Let
them bring a pillow, a blanket or snuggy toy for quiet time and when
they are sleepy.
Parents should also pack a bag of tricks with new
gadgets, games, and even their list of car activities for when the kids
are tired of their own things. Include a first aid kit, medication,
wipes, snacks, and don’t forget all those pamphlets of the places you
want to see. Remember the cell phone charger!
When To Leave
If you have a child who is carsick (motion
sickness) talk to your family doctor or pharmacist for the latest
remedy/medication/suggestions for this unfortunate child. Follow their
instructions; bring the medication you will need for the return trip, a
change of clothes, and something this child might need if she gets
nauseated and feels she will throw up. Have this child sit where she
feels better and reassure her that you will stop anytime she wants if
she feels sick.
Leave home when your children are rested, fed, and
have had a chance to run around to use up their energy. Have each child
use the bathroom minutes before you leave. Bon voyage!
Tips for Making Road Trips Fun

Where to Stop:
- Visit a farm and pick your
own fruit or vegetables for an exercise break.
- Stop at an airport or train
terminal for a break, washrooms are clean and whose kids do not love
planes and trains!
- Have a family quest for one
of your stops. Walk about a small town, park, or rest stop to locate
and photograph a list of landmarks you have previously written down…
during that valuable preparation time.
- Picnic at a park or road
side tables.
- Stop in towns with public
playgrounds with swings, slides, and monkey bars.
- Check if
companies/manufacturers allow tours of their facilities. One of the
best stops our family had was at company making cymbals.
- Locate Farmers’ Markets and
walk about choosing fresh fruit, vegetables, fresh bread, and cheese
for a healthy snack.
What to Do In the Car:

- Use games, songs, mind
games, guessing games, storytelling, and other easy activities to
make the miles pass quickly.
- Play detective and learn
about your provinces or states by checking the license plates and
listing them where they are from. Better still add math to the mix
and make bar graphs to show your data. A map of your country to find
each place is a wonderful geography lesson.
- Have a kid friendly road
map (or each one) so they can follow along and really know
“are we there yet?”
- Have small notebooks with
unlined paper for each child to make a trip-journal. After each stop
and along the way announce “Journal writing/drawing times”. Motivate
them with the promise of photos of your day that they will add when
you return home.
- Sing your way to the next
stop. Get CD’s of scout camp songs, campfire songs, day camp songs,
and marching songs with lots of repetition so kids can join along in
minutes.
- Bring hand held video
games.
- Have a flat surface for
each child, pencils, crayons, and markers for drawing, coloring, and
filling in activity books with “pencil games”.
- Have individual magnetic
games, packs of playing cards, string for Cats Cradle or String
Loops, and fidgets for quiet time.
- Provide earphones,
favourite music, audio books … for your sensitive child if the above
activities are not suitable.
Remember road trips are for fun with your family.
If you can add a few educational aspects to them, all the better. No
amount of planning can cover all the aspects of a family trip. Sometimes
the best thing is to abandon the plan and use it another time! A
‘spur of the moment’ idea or a stop at a wonderful spot where you
spend the rest of the day can become the perfect trip!
Lorna
d’Entremont, Bio: I am a retired teacher with 30 years experience in
elementary grades. Special needs interests me as a mother and
grandmother of children with Tourette and sensory perception issues. I
have a special needs blog
http://www.kidcompanions.com/blog . My daughter and I designed and
sell an oral-motor tool for sensory seekers, Kid Companions Chewelry,
at www.kidcompanions.com Our
Kid Companions are also handy fidget tools for ADHD. My second career
and being a grandmother keep me young at heart.