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Inviting the Buddy: A Guide for Hosts and Guests

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If your child is a baby or toddler, the item most essential to his happiness on the road is probably a cuddly blanket or a balding bear. One day, though, you may find that in planning a trip for optimum family fun, the key element will be a member of someone else's family: your child's buddy. That time has arrived when you start planning a trip to Washington/Tortola/the Yukon and find yourself worrying that your child might be bored.

Indulgent? Not necessarily. The truth is, bringing along your child's pal can make a good trip better for everyone. But exactly how do you extend the invitation? And if your child is the invitee, what will you want to know before you accept or decline? Travel involves expense, so the proposal is not just social, it's financial. And it can be awkward if the terms are not made clear.

Based on a poll of friends and fellow travelers, both inviters and invitees, here's a plan of action. 

Step 1: Agree on the friend. Negotiate if you have to. If Johnnie's first choice is someone you don't care to watch whales with, ask for an alternate. It's your vacation, too.

Step 2: Decide on what you're offering. Everyone polled agreed that it's usually food and lodging. "Remember, you're inviting the child to make your vacation more enjoyable," says Gay Kimelman, a Philadelphia mother of three. "Food and lodging is the least you can do."

Step 3: Clarify the transportation and ground costs. I spoke with one woman who offered airfare because it was within her means, but not the other family's. This kind gesture is certainly proper, but not routine. More often than not, the guest pays for his own transportation. Another item frequently mentioned: lift tickets. These, too, generally fall on the guest's side of the ledger, as do amusement park admissions and other big ticket expenses.

Step 4: Extend the invitation to the child's parent or guardian, and be explicit about what's on the table and what isn't. Give all the pertinent information, including the type of accommodation (hotel, condo, etc.) and suggest they take a little time to decide. If your child is invited, don't hesitate to ask questions.

Step 5: Once the invitation has been accepted, fine-tune the deal. Someone (ideally the guest's parent) should bring up the issue of spending money. My friend Barbara Hunt, a New Jersey mother of three explains, "It's important for both kids that the guest has roughly the same amount as his friend. If, for example, Nat wants to rent a Jet Ski for half an hour, I'll say yes only if his friend can, too." Ask how much spending money the host feels your child will need to have. The response should be a ballpark figure. Depending on the child's age, you might ask the adult to hold onto it.

Step 6: Offer to cover other expenses. If you want to contribute to meals or other expenses, offer it up front. Karen Maudsley, a New Jersey mother of two, once took her daughters' fifth-grade friend on a family trip to Washington, DC. "The little girl told me that she had enough money to cover her meals," Karen laughs. "But when you're in a restaurant and the check comes, it's hard to ask a 10-year-old to chip in." If it's important to you to have your child foot her own bills, it's best to give the money directly to the host.

Step 7: Accept another family's generosity. If expense money you've offered is refused, give in. You can always invite the hosts to dinner sometime or give them a thank you gift later on. An artist friend uses this option to thank the parents of her 13- year-old daughter's best friend. "They take both girls to the Caribbean every year," says upstate New Yorker Randi Foreman, "but I don't have the means to underwrite my daughter's share of the trip. So I express our appreciation in other ways. While they're away, my daughter always buys ice cream cones for everyone. When they get home, I send them homemade soup and candy. I made the mother a nightgown out of antique fabric. But I think the most important thing I do is make sure my daughter knows how to be a good guest."

Step 8: Remember to raise a good guest. Diane Murphy is an American friend living in London. Her family often travels internationally with friends of her only child, 17-year-old Lauren. "Meals are the least of it," Diane says. "Parents should tell their kids to be polite and cheerful, help out, pack their own stuff and say 'Thank You'. And especially for teens: don't sulk and don't sneak out!"

Words to live by, at home or on the road.

 
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