There are some trips that stay with you because of what you saw. And then there are the ones that stay with you because of what you felt.
Years ago, I traveled to Ireland with a couple of my aunts. At the time, I didn’t realize just how meaningful that trip would become. It wasn’t just about seeing a new place—it was about understanding where I came from.
On that trip, I got to know my grandmother in a way I never really had before. She had recently passed away and I hardly knew her. I hardly knew my aunts either, but they invited me to go with them to Ireland where my grandmother’s parents had immigrated from.
I spent time with my aunts, hearing stories about their lives and about my dad when he was younger. Those small, ordinary moments—conversations in the car, stories over meals—became just as important as anything we saw along the way.
But what made the trip even more meaningful was the way I experienced Ireland through my aunts.
One of my aunts was a genealogist, and she had spent years researching our family history—tracing names, places, and connections across generations. We would be standing in a museum or reading a plaque, and she would casually say, “Oh, we’re related to him through this line.” She could trace our family back hundreds of years, sometimes all the way to the 1200s, and explain exactly how we were connected.
Because of her, history didn’t feel distant. It felt personal.
But I had another aunt on that trip who helped me see Ireland in a completely different way. She’s an artist, and she noticed things I might have otherwise missed—the soft purple of heather growing between the rocks, the way a hill rose gently against the horizon, the shifting light across the landscape.
She showed me how to really see the beauty of a place.
And somewhere between the two of them, something clicked for me.
One aunt connected me to the people who came before me.
The other connected me to the place they once called home.
Because of that, Ireland was no longer just a destination. It became something I felt a part of. And it was the kind of experience that I want for my daughter. I want her to connect to her roots and the places and people that she comes from.
- Why Connecting Kids to Their Heritage Matters
- Simple Ways to Connect Kids to Their Heritage
- Bringing that Connection Into Travel
- Letting Kids Experience It In Their Own Way
- Heritage Travel Ideas by Age
Why Connecting Kids to Their Heritage Matters
That experience changed the way I think about travel—especially when it comes to kids.
When children understand where they come from, the world starts to feel more connected. Places aren’t just dots on a map anymore—they become part of their story. A country isn’t just somewhere to visit—it’s somewhere that shaped the people who came before them.
In a world that can sometimes feel fast-paced and disconnected, giving kids a sense of where they come from helps ground them. It gives them roots.
Heritage helps children begin to understand:
- Who they are and how they fit into a bigger story
- Where they come from, beyond just the place they live now
- How history is personal, not just something found in books
It also helps build empathy. When kids learn about the journeys, struggles, and traditions of their own family, it becomes easier to understand and appreciate the stories of others.
And there’s something powerful about realizing that your life is connected to generations before you—people who lived different lives, in different places, and made choices that eventually led to you.
That kind of understanding doesn’t just stay in childhood. It grows with them.
And when you combine that understanding with travel, something shifts. Walking through a place connected to your family history feels different than simply visiting it. There’s a sense of recognition, even if you’ve never been there before.
It turns travel into something deeper than sightseeing. It turns it into connection.
The kind of connection I felt years ago walking through Ireland—where the stories of my family and the beauty of the place came together and made it feel like I belonged there in a way I hadn’t expected.

Simple Ways to Connect Kids to Their Heritage
You don’t have to book an international trip to begin building that connection. It can start right at home, in simple and meaningful ways that help kids see, hear, and experience where they come from.
- Share Family Stories
Talk about grandparents, great-grandparents, and even small everyday memories. Stories don’t have to be big or dramatic to matter-sometimes it’s the smallest details that stick the most.
- Look Through Photos-Both Personal and Place Based
If you have old family photos, take time to go through them together and talk about who those people were. If you don’t, look up photos of the places your family came from. Seeing landscapes, towns, and everyday life helps kids begin to picture their connection.
- Try Foods From That Place
Not every family has recipes passed down, and that’s okay. You can still explore heritage through food by trying traditional dishes from that region- whether you cook them at home or find a local restaurant. Food has a way of making culture feel immediate and shared.
- Listen to the Music
Music is one of the most powerful ways to experience a culture. Play traditional or popular music from that region while you’re at home or in the car. It adds another layer of connection and can make the experience feel more alive.
- Map Where Your Family Comes From
Pull out a map or use an online one and trace where you family’s story begin. Show kids how far those places are from where you live now and talk about what that journey might have looked like.
- Use Online Tools to Explore Your Family History
If you’re not sure where to start, there are several websites that can help you begin building your family tree and learning more about your background. Sites like Ancestry and Family Search offer ways to search records, build family trees and discover connections you may not have known about. Even uncovering a small piece of information can spark curiosity and meaningful conversations.

Bringing that Connection Into Travel
If and when you have the opportunity to travel to a place connected to your family, all of those small pieces you’ve gathered—stories, photos, music, even meals—start to come together in a completely different way.
You’re no longer just arriving in a new destination. You’re stepping into a place that already holds meaning.
It might be as simple as standing in a town your family once lived in, or walking through a landscape that looks like the photos you’ve seen at home. Even if you don’t know the exact street or village, just being in the region can feel significant. There’s a quiet recognition that settles in—a sense that this place is part of your story, even if you’re experiencing it for the first time.
For kids, that connection often shows up in small and unexpected ways. They might remember a story you told and point something out. They might recognize a food they’ve tried before or hear music that feels familiar. What once felt abstract suddenly becomes real.
And travel doesn’t have to revolve around finding one exact “meaningful” location. Some of the most powerful moments happen in the in-between spaces—wandering through a local market, sitting in a park, or noticing how people live their everyday lives. Those are the moments where kids begin to understand culture in a way that feels natural instead of taught.
When you approach travel this way, the experience shifts. You’re not trying to check off the biggest attractions or rush from one stop to the next. Instead, you’re creating space to notice, to connect, and to feel.
And that connection doesn’t have to be perfect or complete to matter.
Even a small thread—a story remembered, a place recognized, a moment of curiosity—is enough to begin building something lasting.

Letting Kids Experience It In Their Own Way
One of the most important things to remember is that every child will experience this kind of connection differently.
Some kids may feel an immediate sense of wonder or curiosity. They might ask questions, make connections, or seem especially interested in the stories and places you’ve shared with them.
But others may not react in a noticeable way at all.
And that’s okay.
Connection doesn’t always look like a big emotional moment. It doesn’t have to be profound or obvious to be meaningful. Sometimes it shows up in small ways—a question asked later, a detail they remember, or a quiet moment of noticing something familiar.
Sometimes it doesn’t show up until much later.
A trip that feels like “just a vacation” to them now might become something they reflect on years down the road with a completely different perspective. The seeds you’re planting—through stories, experiences, and shared moments—have a way of growing over time.
It’s also important to let kids engage in a way that feels natural to them. They may be more interested in the food than the history, more drawn to a playground than a landmark, or more curious about everyday life than major attractions.
And that doesn’t take away from the experience—it is the experience.
Because connection isn’t about perfectly understanding the past. It’s about creating space for familiarity, curiosity, and meaning to develop in their own way.
The goal isn’t to make sure they “get it” in the moment.
It’s to give them something to carry with them.
Something they can return to, build on, and understand more deeply as they grow.

Heritage Travel Ideas by Age
Every stage of childhood brings a different way of seeing and understanding the world. When it comes to connecting kids to their heritage, the goal isn’t to teach everything at once-it’s to meet them where they are and let the experience grow with them.
Here are a few simple ways to approach heritage travel at different ages:
Ages 3-7: Experiencing Through the Senses
At this stage, connection is built through what kids can see, taste, hear, and touch. Focus on trying traditional foods, listening to music from that culture, visiting open spaces like parks or markets, and pointing out colors and landscapes. You don’t need to explain the full history. Just let them experience the feeling of a place. These early sensory memories often become the foundation for deeper understanding later.
Ages 8-12: Making Simple Connections
This is where curiousity really starts to grow. At this age, kids can begin to connect stories to places, recognize names or family ties, and understand basic historical context. You might visit a town connected to your family or share a simple story while you’re there (“This is the area where our family once lived”). Even small connections can make a place feel more meaningful.
Ages 13-18: Exploring Identity and Perspective
Teenagers are often naturally drawn to questions of idenity and belonging, which makes this a powerful time for heritage travel. They may be interested in lelarning more detailed family history, visiting museums or historical sites, understanding cultural traditions and differences, reflecting on how their background shapes who they are. This can also be a great time to involve them more in planning-letting them research or choose meaningful stops along the way
Adults & Traveling Together as a Family: Deepening the Connection
It’s never too late to explore your heritage, and in many ways, it becomes even more meaningful with time. As adults, we often bring a deeper appreciation for the stories behind the places, the generations that came before us, and the connections between past and present. Traveling together as a family-across generations-can add even more meaning. Sharing stories in the place where those stories began creates a connection that goes beyond the individual experience.
No matter the age, the goal is the same- not to teach everything, but to create opportunities for connection. Because those connections- no matter how small they seem at the time- are often the ones that last.

We haven’t yet taken our own family to Ireland or Wales, where much of my side of the family history began. And we haven’t yet traveled to Norway and parts of Germany that shaped my husband’s side of the family either. But it’s something we hope to do one day.
Because now I understand what that kind of trip can offer.
Travel shows us new places. But when it’s rooted in something deeper and more personal it becomes more than just a trip. It becomes a way of understanding who we are and where we belong.
And those are the journeys that stay with us long after we’ve come home.
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Thanks for coming along on the joys of family heritage travel. May you connect to your roots as your family branches extend.

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