Visit one of our other cities!
McKinney Banner Advertising Your #1 Online Kids Event Calendar & Resource Guide for Busy Parents Since 2004 Not a member yet? f AroundTownKids Twitter McKinney Goes Green! WHAT’S NEW COUPONS CONTESTS

Welcome to AroundTownKids McKinney!

CampsMasthead07.jpg
 

The Ultimate Summer Camp Guide is here for Summer 2010! The McKinney Texas Summer Camps 2010 section is THE most comprehensive online summer camp directory around DFW for McKinney Summer Camps!

Choose a menu item above for our online directory of Dallas area summer camp locations for Summer 2010 - everything from Day Camps to Sports Camps, Vacation Bible School, Overnight Camps and a whole lot more!

 SPRING BREAK CAMPS  - Check back with us for Spring Break Camps. We'll have the complete list as your most comprehensive Camp Resource Guide. Dallas area Spring Break Camps will be listed on our newly re-designed user-friendly Event Calendar.


** If you are a business hosting summer camps and would like to advertise, please check out our Advertising Section for more information and to Contact Us.


AroundTownKids.com provides these listings as a service to our web site visitors. These listings do not imply an endorsement of any particular business, product or service. Please see our Terms of Use for more information.



Bargain Priced Family Vacations

It's easy to spend a bundle on family vacations.  How about some ideas that fall into everyone's budget....

family-camper.jpg1. Family camps

Camps are a way to have some fun in the woods. In summer there are generally plenty of affordable packages.

Try national parks since the fees are typically low.  Some favorites are Yellowstone and of course the Grand Canyon.  For closer to home there's always Big Bend and Riudoso, New Mexico. 

2. Dude ranches

For close to home try being a real Texas cowboy at the Flying L Guest Ranch, 40 miles northwest of San Antonio in the spectacular Texas Hill Country. The Flying L has hosted John Wayne and Willie Nelson, among others, a/assets/nd now spreads over 700 acres. There's breakfast and dinner, nightly western entertainment. Swim outdoors year-round, play tennis, golf, or fish in the San Julian Creek.

If you don't want to ride, you can traipse miles of hiking trails. All-inclusive rates average $90 per night for adults and $40 for kids and teens. Contact 800/292-5134 or flyingl.com.

3. Cruises

offer the benefits of an all-inclusive vacation with the added plus of being able to explore many new places during one trip. They are especially good bets if the grandparents are coming. There are morning-till-night activities for children as young as three on most major cruise ships and plenty to keep adults busy, no matter what their ages. And, because of increased competition in the industry, cruising has never been more affordable. Even cruises to Alaska and Europe can be had for under $900 per person, less for kids.

Carnival Cruises and the Disney Cruise Line are especially popular with budget-minded multigenerational groups. Kids will love the waterslides on Carnival ships and Disney's private island--Castaway Cay--complete with a jungle gym that's anchored in the water. Seven-night cruise packages for fall until just before Christmas, and in late spring, start at $799 for adults and $399 for kids up to age 12 who share a stateroom with two parents. There are also shorter cruises available. Contact 888/325-2500 or disneycruise.com

4. Breakfast with Mickey Mouse

If it's your first trip and you're planning to concentrate your time within Disney World, stay at one of Disney's own budget-priced properties (All-Star Sports, Music, or Movies Resorts) for as little as $80 per night (less for campsites), entitling you also to use Disney World's free transportation system and thus avoid a car rental. Call 407/934-7639 or visit disneyworld.com.

5. Giant faces, buffalo, and more

On a visit to the Badlands of South Dakota, the kids can count all of the different license plates in the parking lot of Mount Rushmore, which just celebrated its 60th anniversary. (Get more Mount Rushmore information at nps.gov/moru or 605/574-2523.)

Kids can't climb on the monuments, but Mount Rushmore can still serve as a welcome respite during an interminable cross-country trip or the centerpiece for a family vacation that's certain to please. You can explore caves, pick up rocks blasted from the mountain where the colossal statue of Chief Crazy Horse is a work in progress, join a "dig" at the Mammoth Site where more than 50 giant mammoths were trapped more than 26,000 years ago, and take a Jeep tour through a buffalo herd. Call 800/952-3625 or visit South Dakota's official tourist site at travelsd.com or blackhillsbadlands.com, the site of the Black Hills, Badlands & Lakes Association, which lists 50 "G-rated" family attractions in the region.

Stay also at Custer State Park, where besides seeing the buffalo, you can rent an old-fashioned cabin on a lake starting at under $100 a night, go gold-panning, or make animal tracks with the kids at hands-on junior naturalist programs. Contact 800/658-3530 or state.sd.us/sdparks