July 2026 Family Vacation — Colorado/Wyoming road trip

hoosierhunter11

Lil-Rokslider
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Hey folks,

My wife and I are wanting to take our daughters (ages 3 and 4) on a trip out west this coming summer. I have spent a decent amount of time in the mountains and love it and want to share that experience with my young family. We live in Indiana. I’ve considered road tripping from here but also exploring flying out and renting a camping rig of some sort.I’ve done some preliminary searches on Google and found companies that provide this type of experience, but does anyone here have firsthand experience or tips?

Open to Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, and Montana. Prefer to be outside of Grizz country.

Our desire is to spend 5-6 days with minimal itinerary. Main activities:
- day hikes
- fishing in streams and lakes
- stopping in mountain towns for a meal / shopping (keep the wife happy)
- glassing animals
- camp time / letting the kids slow down and experience the grandeur

Appreciate any input y'all might have. Thanks!
 
Grizzly country is some of the best for the things you listed. Is there a specific reason to exclude it?
 
You might find the RV rental to be a bunch. I’d also consider a vacation rental set up with camp chairs, a cooler, and books/maps of the local spots. Going out every day to fish, roast marshmallows/hotdogs, and lounge around is still fun, even if you do get to shower every night and sleep on a bed.
 
Scratched the RV rental idea. Current plan is to do mix of Airbnb/VRBO and truck and tent camping. Looking at either doing northern CO and Wyoming or staying in CO and working our way towards the southwestern part of the state before heading home.

My wife and daughters are going to fly into Denver while I drive out in my truck. Looking forward to this. Need to start booking some stuff. Open to ideas from yall!
 
Grizzly country is some of the best for the things you listed. Is there a specific reason to exclude it?
I agree. I have not spent any time in grizzly country and don’t feel 100% comfortable or confident with the idea of hiking and camping with them there without getting some experience myself.
 
Hey folks,

My wife and I are wanting to take our daughters (ages 3 and 4) on a trip out west this coming summer. I have spent a decent amount of time in the mountains and love it and want to share that experience with my young family. We live in Indiana. I’ve considered road tripping from here but also exploring flying out and renting a camping rig of some sort.I’ve done some preliminary searches on Google and found companies that provide this type of experience, but does anyone here have firsthand experience or tips?

Open to Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, and Montana. Prefer to be outside of Grizz country.

Our desire is to spend 5-6 days with minimal itinerary. Main activities:
- day hikes
- fishing in streams and lakes
- stopping in mountain towns for a meal / shopping (keep the wife happy)
- glassing animals
- camp time / letting the kids slow down and experience the grandeur

Appreciate any input y'all might have. Thanks!
You arent going to visit grizzly country on a cross country road trip in an RV and have problems with grizzly bears. I wouldn't make that a limiting factor.

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20 years ago but always one of my fondest family memories as a Dad was a circle tour from Michigan with the furthest point Devils Tower WY. Stops at John Deer Museum, John Wayne’s birthplace in Iowa (thought it would be hokey but was awesome!), Iowa covered bridges for my wife, Laura Ingals Wilder first homestead (simply amazing what they lived in/thru), Mount Rushmore (awesome-stay for lowering of the flag ceremony and maybe time it for fireworks), Needles Hwy and Badlands, North Dakota Badlands and both Teddy Roosevelt national parks, tip of Lake Superior in MN, headwaters of Mississippi, Wisconsin Dells.
 
Looking at either doing northern CO and Wyoming or staying in CO and working our way towards the southwestern part of the state before heading home.
That may be a lot for 5 days. SW Colorado is a 5 hour drive from Denver. I think you’d be best picking one or the other.
 
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