Sunday, August 17, 2025
spot_img
More
    HomeTravelMore single moms are taking long trips abroad with the kids —...

    More single moms are taking long trips abroad with the kids — here’s how they do it


    Two and a half years after Roni Dagan’s husband died, she and her seven-year-old son, Gal, found solace in places far from home.

    They didn’t confine themselves to a single location. The act of traveling itself is what has brought Dagan and her child joy — something they started after that first year of grieving.

    Before she had Gal, she lived in the United States, and traveled to India and Ibiza.

    “To have adventures and to explore — this is freedom to me. And Gal is in the place where I can do that with him,” Dagan told CNBC Travel. “That loss … it made me realize … you just have to go and do the things that you love to do.”

    Dagan, who runs her own marketing firm in Tel Aviv, Israel, has spent the past year and a half traveling as often as possible with Gal. They’ve camped in the deserts of Egypt and snorkeled in the Red Sea. They also did a safari in Tanzania and visited Bulgaria last summer.

    Of her son Gal, Roni Dagan said: “It was difficult when he was younger, but … he’s now super easy to travel with.”

    Source: Roni Dagan

    The pair just spent six weeks on the Greek island of Syros with Boundless Life, a travel company for “slow-traveling” families. She said the trip pushed them out of their comfort zones, but checked three critical boxes: she had time to work, her son engaged in educational  and social activities during the day, and the trip gave the feeling of “living” someplace else.

    “I wouldn’t do this on my own. You need to have community; you need to have coverage when you’re traveling on your own as a single mom,” she said. “Here, there’s always someone you can count on to help you out if you need to.”

    Work, school and play

    What it costs

    Boundless Life’s six-week summer package for a two-bedroom apartment and one child in school is around €9,050 ($11,540).

    That includes Wi-Fi, weekly cleaning, access to a coworking hub and yoga classes. Packages are cheaper in the winter and get proportionately cheaper the longer you stay.

    “We have several families in every cohort joining us as single parents,” said Elodie Ferchaud, Boundless Life’s head of demand generation. And “we’re welcoming more and more.”

    “We often hear from single parents that they need the community to make the traveling experience richer and more fun for the kids — and for themselves. Single parents deal with so much already. They showcase strength, resilience and connection, but they want more for their children,” she said.  

    Travel ‘saved me’

    Breaking free

    “I wanted to break out of the life we had built up in London. Sonny was starting school, and I was doing my Masters in Fine Art at university and it was all pretty hardcore,” she said. “I wanted … three months just to focus on him.”

    They returned to the U.K. and put travel on hold during the pandemic, she said. But that feeling of wanting to get away again soon resurfaced.

    This time, though, Chinatree had a major solo exhibition to prepare for, so she needed facilities for Sonny while she worked. She joined Boundless Life for a three-month trip to Sintra in the spring of 2023.

    “Sonny loves football, so we went to the local football team, and asked if he could train with them. He joined that straight away, then we had this instant community of Portuguese football kids,” she said. “My social life also became bigger there than it is at home, but I also was able to consciously choose to do things on my own too.”

    Revitalized by their travels, and feeling confident as single mom travelers, Dagan, Lewis and Chinatree are already considering destinations for 2024 with their children. Possibly Sintra for Dagan this time, or even India, she said.

    For Lewis, Costa Rica is calling, to see an old friend who lives there. Chinatree is open to her next travel destination, as long as there’s a community for her and her son.

    Regardless of where they go, Dagan is painfully aware that traveling with her son may have a shelf life.

    “By the time they’re teenagers, kids can be done with you and want to be with their friends instead over the summer,” she said. “I have this window that I want to make the most of.”



    Source link

    RELATED ARTICLES

    Most Popular

    Recent Comments