Tulsa and Oklahoma City Moving Blog - Tips, Tricks, and Insider Info
May 17, 2019

Mapping Your Move to Tulsa and Oklahoma City--A Tech-Free (Mostly) Road Trip

Road tripBy Julie DeLong, A-1 Freeman Moving Group 

Ahh, the lure of the open road. Visions of road-tripping across the nation, sightseeing, looking for a perfect neighborhood restaurant--all the romantic images of driving Route 66 fade away in a rush if your reality is shepherding the children along with a dog to your new home. Planning a drive that helps to keep everybody on an even keel is probably not in first place on your to-do list right at this point however take a couple of minutes to pre-plan your travel strategy plus your course--it is absolutely worth it.

If your moving company has packed and loaded everything, and a multi-day journey is standing between you and the new house in Tulsa and Oklahoma City, the apprehension of the drive is legitimate. And it appears like the most convenient thing to do is to load up on USB chargers to ensure everyone seems to be continually occupied, and you will be able to have some peace and quiet and also NPR. That is the effortless approach, but who said life was meant to be easy? Get some road maps, activities, coloring books, crayons, and load up your phone with road songs--this is seen as a generation that has matured on "Baby Shark" and should be taught "John Jacob Jingleheimerwhatever".

Setting up Your Path to Tulsa and Oklahoma City

Get authentic paper maps for your children and teach them how to check out the icons and pick out the rivers, streets, state borders, etc. Ask them to identify fun stuff to do--"sight-seeing opportunities"--along the path and have everyone pick out at least one tourist trap along the way, or one per day you're on your way. If you are going with family pets, this can be the chance to get them out and exercising a little through the day.

Car Activities

Kids these days. They are so obsessed with Snapchat and YouTube they've overlooked the fun of car games. If you cannot recall any, or you hated them as a kid and did not pay attention, try these. You just need your creativeness for these kinds of classic favorites. You and your partner will start off each of the games till there is total buy-in.

· Name Game--say a name. The subsequent person must think of a name whose first letter is the last letter of your name--George--Ellen--Nathaniel. You may make your own guidelines regarding nicknames and diminutives, subject to your kids' age groups as well as all round inclination for hand to hand hostilities. Proper names, locations, automobiles--everything goes here.

· Punch Buggy--play this one while you can, since VW is ending manufacturing on the Bug. If you notice one, you shout the color in addition to punch buggy--"orange punch buggy" and then--quickly say--"no punch backs". The champ consequently gets to LIGHTLY poke brothers and sisters in the arm--with zero retaliatory punch backs.

· Grandma Visited London--there are numerous nicknames for this activity, but essentially, you start out with "Grandma went to London and she packed ......" The following person affirms the same thing and adds an additional thing, and so on. It is better to go alphabetically to get beyond the third round.

· I Spy--easy enough, just one rule. The item you spy will have to be in the car.

· My Cows--or billboards, or bridges. Pick the thing, and the individual who notices it first receives the points. If you are going through a rural area and see actual livestock, make sure you count quickly.

Sing Songs

Cue family-friendly, enjoyable to sing music on your gadget, and provide the children the pleasure of the aforementioned John Jacob. Let them instruct you on songs they've learned, also--but one Baby Shark per trip. Or Mommy's visiting London with an bare suitcase.

Audiobooks

Lengthy times in the car tend to be monotonous, and no one wants to be endlessly entertained. Play audiobooks--pick books you happen to be all acquainted with, therefore if someone dozes off they do not miss anything. Nothing beats Harry Potter for road trip listening.

Avoid being the mean mom and dad and prohibit all their technology however do try to minimize it by offering other things to do. Too much screen time will make everyone a touch dialed out and touchy, and this is never the time to encourage the grouchies. In no time, the professional movers in Tulsa and Oklahoma City will likely be unloading the truck and you'll be in the midst of unpacking your new house. The kids can retreat to their new spaces and never be seen again. Use this time to push a bit of old-school amusement on them--years from now, these are going to be happy recollections.

 

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The Mickelson Family
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Very pleased with the overall respect and care the men gave to my possessions. Even mailing me very quickly the only thing lost in transit. Would recommend to anyone needing a long distant move.
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