Issues > The Green Guide Summer 2008 > Going for Green: Eco-Friendly Family Vacations

New York to Montreal, Slowly

The train trip from New York City to Montreal can be a vacation all by itself. Though end to end it's about 11 hours, it starts and ends in two cosmopolitan cities that could not be more culturally different. Along the way it winds along the Hudson River and through the mountain valleys of Vermont, stopping in small towns and villages and giving you the chance walk into new places that'll happily engage you without a car.

There's Saratoga Springs, for example, the Victorian-era resort whose tree-lined downtown streets are filled with local shops and restaurants. From the train station, you can take the trolley out to the Performing Arts Center, summer home of the Philadelphia Orchestra and New York City Ballet. For a quiet moment, visit Virgil's House coffee house, which combines 21st century green-organic coffees, low-flow toilets, plenty of recycling-with old-fashioned charm. Yes to reading, chess, board games, and just plain visiting; no to cell phones and laptops. 

In Westport, the town lawns roll right down to the edge of Lake Champlain, where you can look across to Vermont and the Green Mountains. The old freight room of the train station, built in 1876, is now the Depot Theater, a professional Equity summer stock theater company.

Photo: Going for Green: Eco-Friendly Family Vacations

Finding ways to step lighter on the planet can open up new vistas—not to mention save you money. Try any of our suggestions below and you might even be able to take one or two more trips this year.

Travel, don't tour
Vacations give us a chance to do something our daily lives don't: slow down. By choosing one spot and staying there for your whole vacation, you can become absorbed in the experience. Try to make a vacation as different from daily life as possible, and you're almost certain to save energy as well as restore your equilibrium.

  • Remove the headphones, disconnect the computer, turn off the phone, unplug the TV.
  • If you're totally lost without a to-do list, go ahead and make one. Let each person pick one must-do, and toss the rest.
  • Take off your watch-stop thinking about things in terms of time and pay attention to the rhythms of the place.

Let yourself be transported
According to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Amtrak is nearly 20 percent more energy efficient than commercial airlines-and is continuing to improve as they swap diesel locomotives for electric ones. Amtrak offers various passes so you can ride as far or as often as you want. Or pick a route that's made for exploring without a car, like the Adirondack from New York City (see sidebar). Many routes, like the Southwest Chief, have on-board National Park Service Trails & Rails programs. Amtrak also links up with its Canadian counterpart, VIA Rail, which offers flexible rail passes and great summer discounts (buy an adult fare and get one free ticket for kids under 11). Via Rail's "Special Stops" lets you arrange to be let off in wilderness areas.

Sample the local fare
Nearly everyone's home region is someone else's tourist destination, and the odds are there's somewhere within 50 miles of you that you've never explored. Stay local, and you can spend the money you're saving on planes, trains and gas on going upscale: the hotel you'd never book or the restaurants you'd never eat in otherwise. Or head for nature: Find a campground close to where you live, or rent a cabin in a state park and bring along hot chocolate mix. Everything feels different when you're cooking on a camp stove or sitting out late at night by a glowing fire. 

Propel yourself
Instead of driving a hundred miles a day, why not try walking 5, or biking 15, or paddling even just 1? You'll become immersed in the landscape, meet more interesting people, minimize your carbon footprint-and lose weight! Active vacations are immensely satisfying even when they're not all that physically challenging. There's a myriad of possibilities out there. Hike the Appalachian Trail, kayak the fjords of Vancouver Island or bike across Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Group tours abound, whether with local organizations or national outfitters like REI.

Filed under: Travel, Green Hotels, Green living, Transportation

For Sports and Travel | posted June 25, 2008