Kid’s Roadtrip Activity Binders

road trip thumbnailSo I mentioned a little while back that we’re driving from Louisiana to Utah in a few weeks. This is brand new territory for me. I came later in my parents’ lives, way after their cross-country road trip days, so we never really did road trips growing up. When my husband and I were newlyweds, we didn’t really have a reliable enough car for much road-tripping, and then, up until this summer, we’ve always been able to find reasonable airfare within 4-5 hours of us.

Until now.

I’ve been checking airfare since the beginning of the year, but the same flights we took last year would cost us 3-4 times as much this summer. Throw in a car rental and we could seriously take a fully-loaded tropical vacation.

So. We’re driving. And I’ve been trying to figure out how we can keep everybody occupied and happy for 27 hours each way in the car (that doesn’t involve 27 hours of fighting or 27 hours of crying or 27 hours of video games, although, to be completely honest, 27 hours of video games sounds better than 27 hours of fighting.)

So I’ve put together a binder of simple activities to keep my kids at least semi-aware of their surroundings.

road trip survival kit for kids from Our Best Bites

 

None of them are exactly earth-shattering (although one of my favorite and last memories of my mom is a rather epic round of the license plate game that took months before we finally tracked down Hawaii), but I’ve put them all in one place and used cute fonts. So, you know, the essentials. This is the map I used (it can either be just a reference–I’m having my kids color each state we visit); be sure to check out the whole site–it’s full of ADORABLE printables and activities. Everything else can be found here in this pdf:

Kid’s Road Trip Survival Guide from Our Best Bites

You’re going to need …

  • 1 3-Ring Binder per child
  • Sheet protectors
  • Pencil Pouch
  • Various drawing/writing tools (I used pens, washable markers, and colored pencils)
  • Scissors
  • Glue Sticks
  • Postcard stamps (optional—if you want to send postcards to friends or yourself)
  • Money for postcards
  • Pencil sharpener for colored pencils
  • Paper, cardstock, and/or lined paper
  • Stickers for the road trip scavenger hunt
  • Map of the United States
  • Kid’s Road Trip Survival Guide from Our Best Bites

Find a sturdy pencil pouch that has three holes and will fit into a 3-ring binder:

kid road trip survival kit-4Kid Road Trip Binders

Fill it with a glue stick or two, scissors, postcard stamps, money for postcards, markers (I was able to raid my kids’ school supplies, used and unused),

kid road trip survival kit-7

colored pencils,

kid road trip survival kit-6

pens,

kid road trip survival kit-3

and stickers for the scavenger hunt.

kid road trip survival kit-8

Place the filled pencil bag at the front of the binder.

kid road trip survival kit-10

Place the scavenger hunt, license plate game, map, postcard passport, art gallery, and vacation journal pages in sheet protectors (I put the scavenger hunt on the front and the license plate game on the back of one sheet protector, then put the map opposite the license plate game so my kids could see where different states are on the map.)

kid road trip survival kit-11 kid road trip survival kit-12

After the postcard passport, put several pieces of cardstock so kids can glue the postcards onto it. The Art Gallery goes next, followed by several sheets of plain white paper, then the vacation journal followed by lined paper.

I’ve gotten some awesome tips on road trips so far, but now that I’ve shared these binders, I’m basically begging for your very best tips to keep all of us sane! We’re going to need them!

 

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Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite Recipes, Savoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting Magazine, Better Homes & Gardens, Fine Cooking, The Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. I just drove from Denver to Ohio with my 6- and 4-year-olds and I thought I would share a couple things that really kept them busy. They both liked making necklaces from beads and it kept them busy for quite a while. I just got some of that stretchy string and beads and put them in a container and they strung the beads while we drove. I also read about taking cookie sheets, which are magnetic, so I took them and it worked really well. They fit in the pocket on the back of the front seats and were great for coloring on and I put magnets on the backs of puzzles and on the bottom of game pieces so they could do puzzles in the car or play games. And, finally, I borrowed books on CD from the library and let them listen through headphones while we drove. I was surprised by how painless it was – when I was a kid we drove from Florida to Ohio at least once a year and I don’t remember ever having ANYTHING to do in the car besides look out the window, so this was a huge improvement. Also… snacks. Lots of snacks. We had cheese, yogurt tubes, grapes, and drinks in a small cooler in the backseat, as well as granola bars some candy (in case of emergencies) in the glove box.

    Good luck on your road trip – it probably won’t be as bad as you think!!!

  2. I drove from DFW to Yuma, AZ one year with all three of my boys (5,4 and 2 at the time)by myself. We bought a portable dvd player and used a portable speaker that they held back with them. I loaded up on stuff at the dollar store. Cookie sheets and magnet letters and shapes, small pads of paper, coloring books, stickers, colored pencils (won’t melt, less likely to color anything in the car), those little cling pads that you lift up and then write again, small army men, little dinasours. The cookie sheets at the dollar store aren’t as big as regular ones, so that worked great for the magnets and a play base for the small figures. We used solo cups as snack cups, they fit in their cup holders (no plastic bags flying everywhere), my oldest helped distribute. I’d give him a bag of crackers or pretzels, and he’d give them to his brothers. We stuck to water in the car, I hate stickiness! I had everything in bags up front with me in the passenger seat, one bag for food, one for toys, etc. I would just feel around for the right thing and hand it back. Every once in a while when we stopped for gas I’d get them some gummy bears or something. They are boys, so of course peeing on the side of the road is entertainment! The movies helped too, driving through Texas is just about the most boring thing you can do! I made sure they could run around at some point in the day (park or rest stop). It wasn’t as bad as I had expected it to be!

  3. 250 miles, 1000 miles, and 1200 miles to visit family – our kids spent a LOT of time sitting in a van growing up!

    My goal was always to get them to entertain themselves. To that end I kept a box of “car-only” toys under the seat: auto bingo, several magnetic games (all enclosed – no pieces to lose), wikki-sticks, pipe-cleaners. AAA stores and Cracker Barrels are good sources for these old fashioned types of games.

    We also brought a good supply of audio stories like “Jungle Jam” and “Adventures in Odyssey”, plus music that both kids and parents would enjoy.

    Each child (we only have two) was allowed one toy bag: a knapsack filled with their own choices of what to bring.

    A good run at rest stops every couple of hours, plus an enforced nap/quiet time in the afternoon, and the promise of a hotel with a swimming pool in the evening kept us all sane.

    One more word of advice: if the kids are quietly occupied, or even contentedly day-dreaming, don’t interrupt by asking them how they’re doing. You’ll just mess with their groove and make them irritated.

    1. I forgot to mention that a grid page in a plastic sheet holder and an erasable marker will allow for games like dot-to-dot, battleship, and hang-man.

  4. Perfect post for me as we are traveling across the nation in a couple of weeks (31 hour drive with 2 kids and dog). This will be the longest we’ve ever gone so I’m looking for as many activities as possible. I love the folders. It will help reduce the clutter in the car which drives me nuts more than anyone else.

  5. We have 7 children and drove from Washington state to Utah every summer. Our kids loved The cooperation store. I would have fun things in the store like treats, sun glasses, coloring books, etc. that were tagged with a price in cooperationdollars (or cents). Every hour that each one had good behavior, they earned like 25 cents, and I wrote out a check to them. I just used checks from a closed account. They were all good travelers, and our trips are happy memories.

  6. I have a 2 1/2 yr and we frequent road trips to TX and beyond! We live in Baton rouge and we feel your pain!! One thing my daughter loves is bubbles. In the summer toys section at target (by the bubbles) I got her some of those mini no spill bubble blowers she can do all herself. Bc we know that’s imperative to a two year old. The bubbles are so small that I have noticed no mess. But to be honest. Even if it made a little mess I would be totally fine with it. I can clean a window after all- better than I can deal with screaming for 27 hours – my five yr old loves these as well. You’ll be so glad!! We also love to laminate dry erase activity pages and get those cute crayola dry erase crayons.

  7. Hi Kate –
    We’ve gone all over with my two kids – one summer we traveled over 2,000 miles so needless to say my kids are pretty good road trippers! Funny enough, I’m actually launching a packing checklist next week with a whole section just on getting ready for a road trip with your kids. If you are interested in having me send it to you, just shoot me an email at [email protected] and I’d be happy to get that to you!

    tonya

  8. We take lots of road trips and have played the license plate game with our kids (now 21 and 24 yo) every summer for the past 18 years! Lol! I photocopy a USA/Canada map that does not have the states labeled so that the kids had to correctly locate the state then fill it in with labels or by coloring. My husband and I find ourselves still watching for license plates!

  9. One road trip with our nephews we gave each child a roll of quarters at the beginning of the journey. We informed them that the money was theirs to spend once we arrived at our destination if they were polite, patient, and obedient during the drive. However, if I had to ask them to do something (or not do something) more than once, they would lose a quarter. Once the first quarter was lost, they knew we meant business and the ride was super pleasant. (I also made sure we had plenty of notebooks, games, snacks, audiobooks, etc. to set them up for success.) Good luck with your trip!

  10. We drive 12 hours every year to visit Oregon from Utah. Some of the best things I have done are:
    Seatbelt pillow. I followed this tutorial and loved it: http://www.superjenn.com/countdown-to-disney-seatbelt-pillows-for-the-trek/
    Books on tape. They are a lot better than movies because no one gets car sick, they last longer, they engage the kids imaginations, and kiddos can color and other stuff while it’s going.
    Magnetic Mr. Potato Head: I made a magnetic Mr. potato head from coloring pages. Then put it in a thrifted tin to keep it all together. It’s a favorite. Let me know if you want me to email you a copy.
    This year I am going to try the Lego travel kit and the marshmallow construction kit. Thank you Pinterest!
    Good luck Driving!

  11. we love road trips and always plan to stop every 2-3 hours for at least 10 minutes. It gives everyone time to stretch, we run/walk around a bit wherever there is space and go to the bathroom. we take a longer break for lunch and dinner and that helps to keep the peace too along with all of the other fabulous tips. The breaks are what makes it better for us and we only do one movie and keep the video games to a min. too, just like at home. If we need to drive longer one day we might let them keep it longer.
    Another thing that I don’t think anyone has mentioned is origami. It is easy and entertaining to make toys out of paper or one of our favorites is paper boxes to store little things in or decorate. Have fun and enjoy, getting there can really be half the fun if you make it that way.

  12. Most of the time with our long drives we’ve had the in-the-car DVD players that the kids could watch movies on, and that pretty much worked for them (we’ve never tried going more than about 13 hrs away, although one of those trips ended up being 18+ hours because of some really bad traffic). Sometimes we split it into 2 days, but the last time in Feb we drove straight through both ways, so it was a full day of driving. We’ve done the dollar store toys every hour or so, and that works really well. AND have TONS of snacks in a bag up front that you can pass out throughout the day – helps to not have to stop and get stuff at gas stations other than gas. We packed sandwiches or Uncrustables and granola bars for lunch, and things like oatmeal squares and nutrigrain bars and such for breakfast, so all we had to get on the road for fast food was dinner, and they were easy to eat in the car without too much mess. We stopped at rest stops to run for a few minutes every 2-3 hours or at bathroom breaks.

    My kids are obsessed with electronics though, and this last trip mommy and daddy were lazy, so we let them do video games and movies the whole way. The two older kids have Kindles, so we loaded up new free games for them, and then tried to put some movies on, but there wasn’t any space. So my husband found an external drive where we could load all the movies, and it acts like a network in the car, so the kids could connect and stream movies from the external drive and have plenty to choose from – worked FABULOUSLY! The 2 year old loves Mickey Mouse clubhouse, so I would just put on episodes of Mickey on my iPad and that kept her happy. My kids do NOT sleep in cars – ever. Just bad luck for me I suppose. Even when we get them up really, really early. My hubs and I downloaded the audio book for Ender’s Game, and listened to that in the front (the older kids had volume-limiting headphones for their Kindles), and about the last 3rd of the day my 10yr old decided he liked what we were listening to (much to my surprise) so he put his Kindle down and just listened to the audio book – now every time we get in the car he asks if we can turn it on again!

    When I was little, we lived in CA and would drive to UT to visit the grandparents every few months, so my mom had sewn up little covers that went over the back of the front seats, and on the back had a bunch of pockets (like those shoe things that hang over your door) and she would put crayons and books and stickers and such in those, so we could easily reach them from the back seats. As we got older, and there were more kids, then my parents just started driving at night (we had a van by then) so that we’d sleep through most of it, and would be only an hour or two away by the time we woke up in the morning. I have LOTS of memories of waking up in Las Vegas with all the lights and signs when we’d stop for gas. 😉

  13. I also put together car bags for my kids for Christmas a couple years ago. I bought some cheap cookie sheets and then made up some magnetic stuff like Star Wars guys/ships, pictures of the kids, letters, etc. I also made them each a fun I Spy bag and stocked their car bags with some books, a pad of paper, and crayons. I made up an I Spy game with pictures of things we usually see on I-15. I also made a laminated checkers board with magnetic playing pieces that my boys like playing. I’m excited to check out your ideas. I love the binder idea because I feel like that’s something we struggle with in the car–keeping everything together and tidy!

  14. We always played a game called “My Father Own’s a Grocery Store” that my kids like, too. It works better for kids who can read. Whoever starts says, “My father owns a grocery store and in it he sells ‘a’.” Then everyone has to try and guess what that person thought of that starts with “a.” It could be anything in a grocery store: avocado, apple, apricot, etc. Whoever guesses it gets to go next and uses the next letter in the alphabet. As kids we would change it up sometimes and play where we’d have to think of a different kind of animal meat–we are weird! I think that mostly came about because we could never think of things in a grocery store that start with letters like “Q” and “X.” So for “q” it would always be something like “quail meat.” Anyway, like I said, we are weird, but we got a lot of good laughs with stuff like “armadillo meat.”

    One thing I do with my kids is make them wait for things like snacks or a movie. We live in St. George and travel to Idaho and Salt Lake quite a bit (not exactly a 27 hour trip, but anyway…). We actually rarely do movies in the car because my kids are pretty good at entertaining themselves. But when we have we give them a certain point (usually the light house in Cedar City) that they watch for. When we reach that point they can have a snack or watch a movie. It works well because then they have something to look forward to and don’t use up the special stuff right when we get in the car.

  15. We took a road trip a few years ago when my twins were three. I bought cheap plastic serving trays at target and covered the bottom with glossy contact paper. They used dry erase crayons to color on them and it gave them a hard surface for other activities. I had a cardboard file box filled with gallon bags of activities (we were gone for 6 weeks, although not all time was travel time). Each bag had 2 of the same activity, note pads and stickers, color wonder books and markers, travel aquadoodles, giant pipe cleaners and foil for building blocks, play dough inside balloons. Probably the biggest hit was finger paint sealed in zip locks. I taped the bags to the trays and they pushed the paint around and mixed all the colors. I also used the iPhone app for roadside america. We planned some stops ahead of time, but if we needed a car break, I would put in our location and it would bring up unusual points of interest in the area. Yes, we stopped to see the largest ball of postal string! But there was also really great stuff like a huge dungeons and dragons themed playground in Illinois. If you don’t have an iphone, you can find things ahead of time on the website. We are about to go on another trip this summer. Now that they are older, I’m going to add these binders to my box.

  16. My daughter was lucky enough to have a best friend growing up who was an only child. So our daughter got invited to go on family vacation with them a number of years. One year, their destination was about 12 hrs away. I thiink they were preteens so you will have to modify these ideas to fit younger kiddos. But since the other family was footing the bill for the trip, I sent along “goodie bags” where the girls would open one item /hour in the car. The bags were identical and they would have to agree which gift to open. Everything was wrapped in something simple like newspaper or tissue. Some items were craft items that could keep them busy through the trip, sometimes it was a pack of gum or other treat or food or a little game of some kind. The favorite was a giant jawbreaker candy that gave them both chuckles for many hours. Good luck on your long trip–you are building family memories that I hope you kids will remember for all the right reasons!

  17. Great idea! I gave all the kids in our lives these for either Christmas or birthdays one year. They all loved them and still use them today! Good luck with your road trip!

  18. Other ideas:

    Stop at rest areas and use the playground, or find a small town park right off the highway so the kiddos can burn off some energy.

    Books – either the kind they can read themselves, or a book you can read to them (or have on tape) to pass the time. My kids are big now and read on their own, but books like Harry Potter or Boxcar Children or whatnot are good to just listen to (if you don’t mind reading aloud, that is).

    Someone else mentioned snacks. We did homemade munch-mix, dried fruit, 100-calorie packs for snacks so we wouldn’t have to buy any and brought a small cooler filled with juice boxes or waters. The cooler even doubled as a tabletop between the boys for dice or cards or little pokemon guys.

    Let the kids pack their own, small, toy bag. We gave the boys a cinch bag and they could bring whatever fit inside – stuffed animals, matchbox cars, transformers, etc. Each kid was responsible for their stuff and all items must be in the bag when we stop for the evening and when we are ready to leave the hotel in the morning. Lost items are the owner’s fault.

    Outside the car games – like the license plate or I-spy or the alphabet game are great. You really burn up the miles playing them and they are always different each time so they never get boring.

    Best of luck – and have fun – on your road trip!!

  19. My kids WON’T sleep in the car, so we usually don’t get up early. We just have crabby kids if we do that. We do let them watch movies, but usually they get bored anyway. I try and pack things they don’t get often, color by number pages, giant coloring books, those little magic pen books (like little activity books, but you have to have the special orange pen?). I do remember taking a trip down the coast of Oregon with my family when I was nine. My parents took my backpack and filled it with presents! Every few hours I would get to open something new. Most of it was really cheap dollar store stuff, but I also got a new book, and a new My Little Pony. It gave me something to do, and I had something to look forward to. I haven’t done it with my boys, because our road trips are usually only about six hours and they are fine for that long. Have fun!

  20. Dollar store toys in a bag. Grab one out each hour! Start driving at three in the morning. That way you’ve had 5 hours of sleep and aren’t a zombi. The kids will sleep for the first 4-5 hours of traveling and then there’s a breakfast break after the first long stretch. Then you can go for 5 more hours until lunch. I wouldn’t let them turn on a movie until after lunch at 1. Then they could have an hour and then a break for an hour and so on. We did this all the time on our trips from OKC to Utah and it worked like a charm on the 18 hour straight through drive!

  21. I’ve road-tripped alone with three kids before and we actually had a surprisingly good time! My kids are all too young for this (don’t ask what possessed me to have three kids so close together that none of them can read yet:) but we did some other things that may work for your toddler. This may sound lame, but I totally had a road-trip schedule: get up @ 4:30 a.m. and drive before breakfast, stop for breakfast and get dressed/brush teeth/do hair, drive and do activities/snacks, take a longish break for lunch/potty, put kids in pull-ups and have them do nap time while we get 2-3 hours driving done, stop for early dinner, drive for a few more hours, and then stop at a hotel and swim and go to bed. We always tried to be done driving by 7 p.m. It seemed like that was the most the kids could handle. We would do this everyday on the road and the kids did really well with it! My toddlers really loved Disney sing-a-long cd’s I would burn for them, sticker books, touch and feel board books, those magic coloring pages by Melissa and Doug (you know – the marker doesn’t color on anything but the special paper and it makes colors and pictures appear?) and of course tons of awesome snacks we don’t normally buy! When I road-trip by myself, I usually just plan on stopping real fast on the side of the road every 30-45 minutes to change out activities and snacks. Good Luck! Road-tripping with kids can be a lot of fun. My mom used to drive all 7 of us kids from Philadelphia to Utah every summer BY HERSELF! She made it so fun and they are some of my sibling and I’s BEST memories!

    1. Emily, that is so inspiring! Rock on, girl! I have two kids, ages 2 & 3, and we’ve got a 13-hour drive awaiting us next week. Your schedule is awesome, and I’m going to “borrow” most of these ideas 🙂

  22. Great ideas!!!! Thank you! We live 8 hours (800km) from major cities so make long trips fairly often! Love all the comments on this post too!!!

  23. We drove from Massachusetts to Washington State when my oldest kids were almost five and 2, because we were moving. We did not have a DVD player, but my oldest had a leapster (which he used maybe twice)-there was so much going on that he was engaged and happy-the almost two year old slept maybe three hours the.whole.trip. (But he didn’t cry, so I won’t complain)-we did the a-z game which my kids actually still love to play on the road (9,6 and 2 now) and we packed a huge cooler with picnic supplies and made sure we ate lunch at parks or rest stops with green space, giving the kids a good fifteen minutes to RUN and it was actually great (plus you weren’t stuck with fast food which is fun for a great, but not in abundance). I honestly dreaded the long drive but it was totally fine! Your binder is awesome and I’m going to use it next time! Having some books they each like and my boys are Lego crazy so a small Lego tray with a few figures gets us a long way on trips these days. Plus, I know you’ve blogged about road trip snacks before and I totally agree that an un-hungry kid is a happy kid. You’re going to have a great time! (Flight prices are crazy all around this year!!)

  24. We took our first road trip last year, from VA to UT and back, with kids ages 11, 6, 3 and not quite 2. I spent about a month on Pinterest, pinning and preparing things to do. “If ye are prepared, ye shall not fear”, right? It actually went surprisingly well and the kids wanted to go on another when we got back! You can find all sorts of activities and ideas online, and you’ll know what would probably work for you crew, but my big tips are:

    Take it slow. We took 6 days each way so that we could stop at the Natural Bridge, St Louis Zoo, Cahokia Mounds, Liberty Jail, Carthage and Nauvoo, and other random local attractions. And we had a 9-day rest in Utah, with a family reunion at Bear Lake and a few days at Park City, etc. I tried to plan the travel time for each day so it wouldn’t be exhausting. And I made sure a hotel with a pool was waiting for us at the end of each day, with time to swim- this was huge for the kids, since we don’t have membership to any pools around here. I also made sure that breakfast was included with each night at a hotel, so we needn’t waste morning travel time (when everyone is rested and pleasant) by looking for that.

    Change seats. Every day we changed where the kids sat and who they sat by. It helps that my oldest can sit in the front now, so sometimes my husband or I was in the 2nd or 3rd row.

    Download audio books and buy or borrow new movies. (We only allowed 1 movie per day, and we did not have any internet access or video games in the car.)

    I printed a map of the whole route (with every overnite stop and attraction labeled, etc.) big enough that it took 10 pieces of paper to print and tape together. Then I attached it to the ceiling of the car and got a laser pointer to show the kids our progress. I did not hear a single “are we there yet?” They would ask me to point out where we were and they could see where the next destination was.

    I had a big tub full of activities that were new to them (thank you, Pinterest) and I spaced out the presentation of them. I had a decent-sized cooler for lunch on the road (money and time saver, although we did often pull over to picnic at a local park), dinner was always eating out. I also had a bag full of surprises (candy, stickers, little toys, etc) that were wrapped and each time we stopped, those whose clip had not been removed from the visor for misbehavior got to open and enjoy one.

    It will be an awesome opportunity for memories. If you want to take a closer look at my road trip prep posts and my report of the trip, let me know. Good luck!

    1. Lynness, I would love to see what you did as we have a shorter trip coming up. Those sound like great ideas! Thanks!

    2. Sounds similar to what we do and we have a great time with the kids! I agree the most important thing is to just take it slow, don’t get rushed, and realize that this is for the kids too 🙂

    3. My blog (mostly just for letting grandparents know what we’re doing, so don’t expect much) is nlhawkes(dot)blogspot(dot)com- it’s not private, but I have it set so that search engines don’t crawl it for a little more privacy, so you have to know the address to get there. Just click on the “road trip” tag in the tag cloud and you’ll get 6-7 hits, and 4-5 of them refer to the trip I speak of.

      My pinterest board for the trip is at http://www.pinterest.com/lynnessh/to-do-on-our-big-road-trip/

  25. Those look so fun. We have a road trip coming up also. I am not sure my kids are old enough for these yet. But they are super cute ideas!

    1. Yeah…haven’t totally figured out what to do with the 2-year-old yet, haha!

      1. My son will be 2 in August, when we will drive 2 days each way to visit my family… I’m already wondering what I was thinking! If you do think of great ideas for 2-year-olds, please, please post those! My older kids love new school supplies, so I think this binder is a great idea and I’ll bookmark it.