I'm not well heeled enough to travel first class and I find traveling as a run of the mill tourist loses it's charm after a cruise or two. As we were in line waiting to ping our cards to get off the boat at one port the cattle in the chute effect became apparent and my wife turned to me and went Bah-- Mooo.
Tonight we went out for Valentines day dinner at a restaurant that tries to be a bit pretentious. The waitress went through the wine tasting ceremony for a $25 bottle of wine. Like I would ever pretend to know that that bottle was off and not what I ordered. It was good wine and the food was good but I really didn't need the show.
My point is I've been the places I want to see and done the things I could both afford and wanted to do and now I am content to retire to my home and have nice dinners with her cooked by one of us and topped off with that same wine for $13.00 a bottle down at the store without all the fuss. When we are done the kids will get what is left but they hopefully will be well into middle age by then so need to make their own way in the meantime.
Way off-topic for this thread, but it's already pretty derailed, so...
We took my mother on a cruise and really disliked it. We felt the same way about an all-inclusive resort we went to in Jamaica to attend a friend's "destination wedding." We chose one of the nicer cruise lines, and the Jamaica trip was at a well-rated resort. They just weren't for us.
For us, travel is a way to enjoy some of the finer things, see the country or the world, and to immerse ourselves in a culture we wouldn't get to see otherwise.
Before we went to Europe, we had arranged for a rental car for the three weeks we were there, a hotel room for the night we arrived, tickets for a big event we wanted to attend (The Formula 1 Grand Prix in Italy), and hotel rooms for the race weekend. Otherwise, we would get up in the morning and decide what we wanted to experience that day. A few days were incredibly cheap (A room at a small hotel in rural Italy and street caf駸 along the way), while a few days were staggeringly expensive (A room on the bay in Monaco and high-end restaurants). We might spend an entire day just walking around a big walled city on the mountainside that we had happened upon during our drive. Of course we still stopped at places like the Coliseum and countless museums and duomos, but I feel like we know the places we visited so much more than if we'd taken a canned tour. It was wonderful to be eating dinner along the Grand Canal in Venice and be able to decide that we wanted to see what the Adriatic resort towns were like, or visit a lake-side town in Switzerland, then get up the next morning and do it.
Another example is the trip we took to CA recently. We got a car for the week and a hotel for the first night. Then we spent a couple days in Fisherman's Wharf, a couple days driving through Napa and Sonoma, drove up to Lake Tahoe and Reno, then down to Carmel, Monterey, Big Sur, etc. before looping back and spending a couple days in Union Square.
We spend the flight home from our vacations talking about where we might like to see next. Right now, we're limited by our vacation time. But when we're retired, we want to be able to travel as far and as frequently as our savings will take us. So I fully expect our retirement spending to outstrip our current spending, at least until as long as our health permits it.