MossRoad said:
Those are some close family ties!

I would trust some of my family memeber much more than a tour guide. It may be an excellent way for the kids to bond with their aunt and uncle and give you and your spouse some time to yourselves, which can be a very fun thing.... I think.... because we haven't had much time to ourselves in the last 15 years.
It has worked out well for us at least, although every now and then I question my own sanity.
My German wife is one of 7 kids, from a small town something on the scale of a good sized subdivision. The family support network there is incredible, and hard to understand if you have not experienced it. These folks ancestors have all literally been together since the middle ages. We / I chose to walk away from that when leaving the Army as I had visions of being an businessman, and Germany is very focused on paperwork, and having the right schools, which makes it difficult for an outsider to walk into. The apprenticeship program etc. etc. is VERY much in place there.
So, we moved to Florida where I had some family support, and while we had some, it was nothing compared to what we had in Germany. My business failed, so in a fit of desperation moved up here to TN getting back into the Military Aviation community as a contractor. This left us with very minimal family interaction.
Sooooo,,, (I am making this a long story I guess

) I am where I am at so I can pursue my dreams, and have a biz, and make a decent living, but sorely miss my kids having the support that extended family close by gives and the interaction that goes with it.
When my daughter was 6 we started launching her over to my sister in laws house for a month or two each summer so she would get that experience. 9th grade, she went and was an exchange student (not with an organization) and attended Gymnasium (college bound high school). Somehow, she always loved it, and spoke German well.
That said, my son (sidebar: when my best freind says his kids are apples and oranges, mine are apples and steak) never really had the urge to go to Germany. He still traveled well with the Motorcycles, the golf and other freinds, but never had the desire to learn German. While my daughter went along and learned German to get along, my son was the kid teaching the Germans english so they would understand him...
Anyway, he spent a month there year before last with my one sister in law, and had a fair time, but it truly suprised me when he wanted to go back.
So, wandering back to the meat of this post, I firmly believe that international travel is a great way to expand your horizons, and broaden your view of the world. We have taken advantage of it in our family pretty much however we could afford too. I let my uncle take me to the middle east and Europe

my wife traveled to America the first time as a Nanny.
What I would like my daughter too do would be to go to Germany for a couple months, base out of her godparents house (where she normally lives, not my sisters) Buy a Eurorail pass and make week or two trips to various Marriot properties in Europe. (my stepdad is part of Marriot and would look after her

)
Hanna and I were talking about Dean at length yesterday, he wants so many different things, and we only have the resources to do one or two, sometimes it gets painful to say what is going to happen, and what is not. Not to mention the time factor.
But as I tell my daughter, this is one of those deals, where there is no "Bad" decision. If he goes, it is great, but he has to weigh it against Kayaking in NC, Motorcycle riding in the Southeast and Golf School in Florida, or staying home and making money to keep his "toys" going.
I don't remember having these problems / opportunities as a kid.
