We are very, very lucky. In 1978 my dad and grandpa bought a house on the Sunshine Coast. So since I was a kid, the summer holidays have been a relocation of home.
I approach it every year with a sentimental glow of anticipation.
I can work wherever I am so we head off for weeks at a time.
No packing lunches! Stay in bed until it’s so hot you get up for a swim! Let’s have sausages in bread for dinner!
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Telstra. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100% authentic and written in their own words.
It’s going to be so great, I tell the kids. Long, lazy days of table tennis and beach cricket. I shall serve watermelon slices and it will be like those summer holidays they show in old-fashioned cordial commercials.
That’s week one.
By week two or three, especially if the weather turns sour (no dryer, no dishwasher, dodgy TV reception) I’m whistling a different tune. It sounds a bit like the theme from Prisoner. On the inside the roses grow. Except there are no roses in this beach house. Instead, there are:
• 1,200 x Barbecue Shapes packets (empty).
• Squashed sultanas (innumerable).
• 24,000 broken or blunt coloured pencils.
• 2 x functional pens (whereabouts unknown).
Top Comments
Ummm yes and it doesn't end with primary or high school either, my 2 big girls who are in Uni and could easily entertain themselves and don't go back until the end of Feb still ask everyday can we do ( something annoying I do not want to do or that's going to cost me millions of dollars ) pretty much everyday.. I can't wait until they go back! Bring on the assignments that take up all their spare time lol
I have read a number of downside posts on family holidays lately on this site. I LOVE family holidays. Our day to day life is hectic. I work part time. My husband works 6 days a week. I can't wait to spend time with him and the kids and explore and relax. Call me one of the minority but even if it is raining and the kids are whinging, I am much more relaxed than if we are at home and they are whinging and I have a million things to do.