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Ransom Riggs
Planning the Ultimate Staycation
by Ransom Riggs - December 5, 2008 - 11:14 AM

stay.gifEver since my trip to New Zealand last Spring, I’m hooked on international travel. I’ve been dreaming up new trips left and right, and when I heard that absurdly expensive airline ticket prices were starting to drop, I thought my fantasy vacations to Thailand and the South Pacific were suddenly no-brainers — but then a quick check of sites like Kayak.com brought me back to cruel reality; I’d still need to pony up about a thousand bucks just to reach any of those spots. So like millions of other Americans, I’m considering sticking around the homefront instead.

According to the neologism du jour, what I’m planning is called a “staycation.” So what is a staycation, and how is it different from what I do at home normally?

A staycation is life unplugged. Home is where I’m most connected — I’ve got phones, computers, internet-enabled gadgetry — and the constant temptation to check in is an unwelcome stressor. Unplug them, if you dare. You’ll be glad you did. You can certainly do it for a few days — heck, my undergrad thesis adviser, poet John Kinsella, just announced that’s he’s going offline more or less permanently: “Some time early next year, I will be going off-line pretty well. I will have to maintain some computer access through my university research fellowship, and to communicate with students, but otherwise I am reverting to snailmail and a much diminished use of computer technology. I have been writing poetry in pen and on a manual typewriter since I was a kid, and once wrote entirely in pen and on a manual typewriter … Anyway, it’s time to step off the techno bandwagon and revert.”

Choose an end date to your staycation, just as you would any normal vacation. Otherwise it runs the risk of just feeling like you’re suddenly unemployed.

Explore your area. Just because you’re not leaving town doesn’t mean you can’t leave your house. I’ll bet there are plenty of things to do in your area that you’ve never tried — a great restaurant, a hiking trail, a river to kayak down; this is certainly true of the greater LA area, where I live. I could try something new every day for a year and never run out of new options. And even though some of them may cost a bit of money, think of all the money you’re saving on gas, airfare, hotels and not getting pickpocketed by local urchins at the train station.

See movies on the big screen. No, not your 50-inch flatscreen — an actual theater. ‘Tis the season for quality films to be released: awesome movies now playing include Milk, Slumdog Millionaire, Changeling and even the new Bond flick. But you might want to skip the popcorn.

Books! Remember books? How you gaze at them longingly as they sit taunting you on the shelf, wishing you had time to read them? Now you do! If you haven’t already, check out John Green’s Paper Towns.

Take staycation pictures. Why is it most of the pictures we have of ourselves are taken when we’re far away from home, in unfamiliar surroundings, wear goofy tourist clothes? Looking back at my personal stash of photos, I always wish I had taken more slice-of-life pics of everyday things — my old house, my old school, my old cat, etc. Not some statue in Italy I’ll never see again. So get out your camera and use this staycation as an excuse to document your native environs.

Spend a night in a local hotel. It’s amazing how you can get away from it all without really going anywhere. Sometimes the best escape is just around the corner, as my wife and I have discovered; pick an inexpensive night to stay at a nice place, get room service, take advantage of the spa downstairs. (Maybe skip the complimentary Botox injections, though.)

Graphic courtesy the Sacramento Bee.

And now for a thematically-appropriate song.

Comments (6)
  1. We had done a couple of in-town hotel stays as a family this past summer. It’s a great way to take the kids to a hotel with a pool to blow off steam and have a little fun during your stay. We swam in the pool , stayed up late, ate a huge continental breakfast and then went home. We felt relaxed and relieved after we wewre done.

  2. every summer we go to a nice resort just 20 miles away. the summer rates are low, they have a great pool/poolside bar, and a relly nice restaraunt. its nice to “get away” for the weekend without the hassle of getting there.

  3. Support your local musicians and artists – pick a time with a festival going on to take a few days off work.

  4. We’re still fairly new to New Zealand (2 years here!), so we’ll spend half of our xmas break in Wellington exploring more of the city, and half on the South Island in Kaikoura, which is just a ferry ride + train ride away.

    One of these years, we’ll make it to the Cook Islands…

  5. I have had an inadvertent staycation this weekend! My computer is on the fritz and is currently being doctored by the campus virus lab. I popped in some favorite movies, discovered some new ones, finished two books, an assignment or two and did it all from the comfort of my bed. It has been the most relaxing weekend I think I’ve ever had!

  6. Some great ideas. I abide by that saying (may have heard it at some graduation speech): “Do something that makes you uncomfortable everyday.” No matter where you are, you can always do something new and different. Good tips here.

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