Wise Woman Travel

Exploring the world from a female perspective

DSCN2272If you vacationed with your parents when you were a child, you might have fond memories of the kids you met in the campground play areas, the motel swimming pool, or the beach near the trailer park. You bonded with them for no other reason than they were kids too. You rode your bikes together, made up games in the afternoon and promised to continue them after dinner, got up the next morning to see if anyone new had arrived to join the gang. Before you knew it, your parents were packing up the car, and you were saying goodbye to your friends. Maybe you exchanged addresses, and promised to write. More often, you didn’t. And that was OK, because you’d had such a good time while it lasted.

As adults, these vacation connections don’t seem to happen quite so effortlessly. Maybe we’re too busy organizing the activities of our own families. Maybe we become a little more private or protective as we age, drawing an invisible line around us and ours. But, once in a while, given the right surroundings, and the right mix of people, those connections happen again. And when they do, they’re just as magical as they were when we enjoyed them decades ago.

DSCN2201When we planned our trip to the Cook Islands last June, we hoped to raise our chances of meeting other travellers by choosing to stay at the Lagoon Breeze Villas. According to its website, “this expansive 4 acre lush garden property offers 18 spacious, stand-alone villas with a full range of rooming options and a home away from home experience. Lagoon Breeze Villas is an excellent choice for couples, families and groups of friends seeking a safe, secluded and self catering accommodation on Rarotonga.” We also noticed pictures of the communal, open air breakfast room, which became a happy hour “Tiki Bar” between 4:30 and 6 p.m.

After our ten hour flight from Los Angeles to Rarotonga, we realized that some of our airplane seatmates would be our Lagoon Breeze neighbors. On board the villa’s courtesy shuttle, we began to introduce ourselves: coincidentally, the first woman I met had not only grown up in my hometown of Edmonton, but had attended the same junior and senior high school. The rest of the gang on the shuttle were from Calgary, the Alberta city three hours south of us, so it wasn’t hard to establish a sense of kinship with them either.

Our first few days on Rarotonga, we mostly went our separate ways: renting cars and scooters and bicycles, wandering along the beach, exploring the island at our own pace. New travellers – from the Canadian North, the U.S., New Zealand, and Poland – joined us at breakfast every day, which became a time to swap stories about the adventures we were having, to pass on tips and recommendations, to sit over a second and third cup of coffee while we browsed the Cook Islands News, pointing out job opportunities and property for sale. At the end of the day, we repeated the experience, swapping out the coffee for fancy tropical drinks.DSCN2535

If you recall the campground kids whose company you enjoyed years ago, you might remember a leader-type: someone who had great ideas for the day’s activities, and made sure that everyone felt welcome and included. For us, that role was adopted by Jason Webb, the owner of Down Under Travel, the agency through which we’d booked our trip. Although he’d arrived on Rarotonga with a large posse of family and friends, he remembered to inquire about how our vacation was unfolding, and provided great suggestions for activities we could try. On Christmas Day, he and his cooked and hosted Christmas lunch, a festive affair of barbecued lamb, veal, and chicken, salad, baked potatoes, and strawberry pavlova.DSCN2329

No matter where we’d been or what we’d done during the day, we all gathered on the beach shortly after 7 p.m. to experience the sunset together. Lugging beach chairs, and wine, kids and cameras, we crossed the road and settled in to wait for the show. The little kids poked around at the edge of the water. The older kids skipped stones or tried to whack down low-hanging coconuts. The rest of us looked at each other’s photos from the day’s adventures, and adjusted our cameras to capture that night’s show.DSCN2610
DSCN2499Sometimes, we were treated to magenta and fire reds. Other nights, the shifting violet clouds took our breath away.  Occasionally, the sun would dip below the horizon without any fanfare at all. Disappointing, but not always a reason to abandon the evening’s beach fellowship. We often lingered until the sky became a dark canvas for thousands of stars, not wanting the day to end.

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8 thoughts on “The kids in the campground

  1. Amy Weaver says:

    What a lovely picture you paint! I do remember playing with strange kids at campgrounds and beaches – and have also enjoyed new friendships with adults on recent travels. What lovely memories you invoke.

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    1. Pamela Young says:

      Thanks, Amy. The group we met at Lagoon Breeze Villas was truly special! Many of them are Canadian, and we’re mostly now on FB together, so I hope to stay in touch.

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  2. Stacey says:

    I remember playing with kids in the pools in various locations. So much fun the games we made up!

    However, as an adult – and maybe someone on Facebook a bit too often – I have kept in contact with a number of friends that I met on my many travel adventures around the world. While we may not be close, it is always a treat to see one of their names pop up on my Facebook feed and to get to comment on life events, children’s pictures or new travel adventures they have embarked upon. I even had the chance to meet up with one of them who lives in NYC the last time I was there!!

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  3. dancedoll says:

    Meeting people while travelling is truly the best part of exploring new places!! I loved meeting up with kids in the campground or in the pool.

    However, as an adult – and maybe someone on Facebook a bit too often – I have kept in contact with a number of friends that I met on my many travel adventures around the world. While we may not be close, it is always a treat to see one of their names pop up on my Facebook feed and to get to comment on life events, children’s pictures or new travel adventures they have embarked upon. I even had the chance to meet up with one of them who lives in NYC the last time I was there!!

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    1. Pamela Young says:

      It seems I’ve met up with at least one person on many of my travel with whom I’ve stayed in touch. But the crew on Rarotonga was a truly special group, in that we became part of a big gang of people, whose company we really enjoyed. I hope to see at least some of them again – maybe during another trip to the Cooks!

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  4. Brenda McKay says:

    What beautiful photos. Might just have to plan another trip to New Zealand to do some of the things we have missed with a relaxing stop over in Cook Islands

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  5. Pamela Young says:

    Photos bring back all the sensations of those warm, gentle nights on the beach at Rarotonga. I hope you and Paul get there one day.

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  6. Pamela Young says:

    I of course remember those days at Englishman River campground! Love,
    Deb

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