In this stressful age, the subject of yoga retreats as “vacation” comes up often. Travelers may ask, are they a good option for a parent-child or three generation getaway?
The answer is yes, if all participants are interested in connecting over the same activities. Family members should also share an appreciation for the contemplative aspects of yoga, like meditation, numerology (read more) and other spiritual practices.

Are yoga retreats a good way to see the world?
The answer is maybe, according to long-time practitioner Teresa Plowright, mom of three living near Vancouver, BC. “One problem with yoga retreats is that, often, the teacher just comes to do the course,” she says. She urges anyone interested in local culture to examine the itinerary, adding, “It seems to me that [on tours] the teacher just flies into a yoga retreat place, does their week or two of classes and the guests either just stay on the property or explore on their own.”
There are more locally-focused options based in local hotels that are usually good value. Another plus is that many organizers will help pair singles with a like-minded partner to share room costs.
Here is a sampling of domestic and international retreats that emphasize local culture, for yogis who consider themselves travelers first.
Traveling Afar with your Teacher
In the studio where I practice, several of the professional instructors are involved in either leading or providing instruction on getaway yoga vacations. James Murphy, director of the Iyengar Yoga Association of Greater New York and a gifted teacher, is one of them.
His Experience Bali: Experience Iyengar Yoga spends two weeks in late February or March each year in Bali, Indonesia, an island he’s visited annually for more than 25 years, where he has “a strong connection and love for the people and can give participants something that they really wouldn’t get otherwise.”
His trip, organized through Yoga Out There, welcomes yoga practitioners of all abilities and ages to join two classes daily as part of an introduction to the unique Balinese culture.
From the clove farms of Munduk, participants head to a north coast beach for snorkeling, then to the rice plantations of Ubud for the last eight days.”It’s a cultural immersion into the world of the Balinese with yoga every day, to both prepare and recover from the day’s activities,” James says. A local guide accompanies the group; land only rates include all programs, hotel and most meals.
Find a Yoga Retreat and Meet Your Teacher
The beautifully rustic Feathered Pipe Ranch near Helena, Montana in the Rockies, runs in-house and some international retreats. After 43 years, it claims to be one of the oldest centers for conscious living in the country. Multiday retreats in different forms of yoga, ayurvedic wellness and philosophy are led by visiting instructors all year, with more frequent programs in summer.
The Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, founded in 1967 by Shunryu Suzuki Roshi of the San Francisco Zen Center, offers public programs from April to September plus some Zen retreats in winter. One or more multiday sessions themed to Body & Mind, Joyful Ease, Cultivating Trust and other mindful living topics take place weekly at the isolated, energy-independent retreat 25 mile southeast of Big Sur. Their invite reads, “Zen and meditation seekers, yoga lovers, artisan foodies, outdoor adventurists, and everyday people looking to unplug and rejuvenate are invited to experience a truly serene environment at Tassajara.” Known for equally celebrated teachers and guests including Steve Jobs, Governor Jerry Brown and Joan Baez — plus hot springs, vegetarian cuisine and a best-selling bread baking book — Tassajara attracts many vacationers during its summer guest season so early bookings are required.
Yoga Abroad – Traveling Inward with Your Practice
In The Minotaur, Albert Camus wrote, “In order to understand the world, one has to turn away from it on occasion.” Several yoga retreats have sprung up with this goal in mind.
The Ak’bol Retreat and Eco Resort in San Pedro, on Ambergris Caye off the Belize mainland, is a full-time yoga and meditation resort where yoga teachers and their students come for organized retreats. It was begun more than two decades ago and now encompasses seven thatch roof bungalows, some village rooms with shared bath, a Soul Kitchen restaurant and two yoga palapas for open-air practice. Owners Milio and Kirsten lead regular yoga classes, and there are frequent drumming sessions, talks on Mayan healing, and other spiritual and wellness programs.
New York based Carolyn Christie, who has been teaching yoga since 1995, is leading a weeklong Yoga Retreat in Belize to Ak’bol. She says, “I see this retreat and the retreat I do in Costa Rica as “yoga adventures,” adding, “they are vacations where there is both exploring an environment through physical activities like walking, kayaking, biking, snorkeling, sitting and looking and exploring one’s potential through the yoga asana and pranayama.”
One April, a family with a 10-year-old who likes yoga joined her retreat. You have to; her program offers four hours of yoga daily. “There is great value to going to a beautiful, natural environment and practicing yoga,” she explains. “One opens up quickly, relaxes and regains strength.” Friendships are made easily. “One finds good company because people actually have time to enjoy each other,” she adds. For more information, contact CarolynChristie[at]me.com.
Commune with Nature and Yourself
I’ve found that teacher Michelle LaRue, a professional dancer turned yoga practitioner, has a real gift for seeing the physical potential in each student. When I heard she leads retreats in rural settings where, in between yoga sessions, her students can hike, swim or otherwise stay active, I signed up.
“I really like to offer a beautiful setting, great vegetarian food and a glass of wine at night, something my students can enjoy if they want to,” she adds. For several years, she has held a weekend yoga intensive at Race Brook Lodge, one of many small inns in that verdant corner of the Berkshires that gave us Arlo Guthrie and the Tanglewood Music Festival. She works with One Hundred Skies, a group that organizes yoga adventures with various teachers at domestic and international retreat locations, and her retreats can be booked through them.
If you’re traveling solo and want a home base with minimal structure, Eremito is a more luxurious spiritual resort than many in Asia or the Caribbean. The environmentally-conscious property is a 14-room stone cloister on a 3,000-hectare preserve in Umbria. Gregorian chants play at the grotto pool. Designed for single guests only, Eremito invites visitors to unplug, detoxify and explore their inner selves with daily meditation and yoga sessions. What it doesn’t offer: WiFi, phones,TV, business center, tennis, golf, minibar. Any power used beyond candlelight comes from solar cells; vegetarian meals are locally sourced and served in silence.
For more options on hotels that focus on wellness, check out the new consortium called Healing Hotels of the World.
Me Time is a Given
I’ve reported on the detoxifying, stress-relief regimen at The Chopra Center in California, and the equally intense ayurvedic healing retreat at Devaaya in Goa, India, both of which incorporate daily sessions of yoga and meditation. Of course, hundreds of variations on the transformational travel or yoga getaway exist, as varied as the yoga practice itself.
Personal growth is the goal of many of these wellness experiences, whether participants travel around together and explore a culture, or stay still and explore themselves as individual family members.
James Murphy sums it up when talking about his Bali trip: “I wouldn’t call what I do a yoga retreat or intensive… it’s more about how yoga can be incorporated in your life in this beautiful setting, among a very special people and culture… and that allows you to look at yourself in a whole new way.”
Please share your thoughts, favorite retreats and resources in the comments field below.
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hope you all like it!
The Paramount Hotel- http://www.nycparamount.com
BDC- Broadway Dance Center- http://www.broadwaydancecenter.com
Ellen's Stardust Diner- http://www.ellensstardustdiner.com
Capezio store- http://www.capeziodance.com
Amy's Bakery- http://www.amysbread.com
Junior's in Times Square- http://www.juniorscheesecake.com
The Ambassador Theater (Chicago)- http://www.ambassadortheater.com
Al Hirschfeld Theater- http://www.hirschfeldtheater.org
I was the same way. I had my Bat Mitzvah on top of Masadah and was complaining of the heat. I didn't truly recognize what an amazing place I was in. I was fortunate enough to return last summer and had the time of my life. I look forward to seeing your post for when you get to return. I wish you all the best!
one of my all time favorite vacations.
This was one of the best trips I have ever been on.
I am ecstatic that I was able to participate in learning my heritage, history, and my parents past.
My trip to Africa was really an extraordinary experience, and I fell in love with the country Nigeria. I am so happy that my father allowed me to see my heritage and my family.
Truly humbling
I hope you enjoy learning about my experiences in Paris, France!
Thank you so much for this information. Multi-generational travel is an area that I am interested in, but it is not easy to navigate various ages, levels of mobility and interests. These tips are super useful!
This was seriously such a life-changing trip for me. I got to see a whole other way that people live life. It really opened my eyes and made me EVEN MORE eager to learn German and to adopt a more frugal lifestyle.
My experience with traveling to a foreign nation, in the form of a blog.
Going on that trip was the best thing I have done in my life. I learned so much, and experienced many different things, such as food, culture, and people. It was a great opportunity for me, and I highly advise others to travel as well. You will not be disappointed.
I recommend this or a similar trip for any future paleontologists. I have since been to the Field Museum in Chicago and the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and am pleased to have visited all the major paleontological museums in North America.
I hope you have fun on your trips, too!
This is my submission to the young travel writer scholarship
My trip to South Africa transformed my life. I grew closer to my best friend, as well as experience a culture very different from my own. As a result, my knowledge of the world has grown.
I quite enjoy I can feel the passion.
I hope you enjoy the lessons i learned over seas in Spain! I know I will take them with me as I move forward in life. Thank you for reading!
-Rebecca Krivitsky
enjoy my story, i pray it will reveal a new cultural avenue while still providing a humorous tale
This trip was truly life changing. It was the first time I realized that there is a whole other world outside the United States!
Thank you very much for your post! I love it very much! I will bring my family to Florida soon!
Thanks and support
Here is the website documenting my trip: http://madisongoestonewyork.blog.com/
My time in El Salvador changed my life. It is my dream that one day I will be able to return there. I can honestly tell you that my love for the people in El Salvador has remained with me. And I hope the best for that nation.
The summer of my sophmore year in high school I spent a week in El Salvador. This one week changed my life. As I volunteered in El Salvador I gained an amazing view of different cultures and life styles. I developed a love for El Salvador and its people. And my memories there will remain with me through out my life. It is my dream that one day I will be able to return their and give more of my time to those amazing people.
My freshman year of high school I spent a week of my summer in El Salvador. It was a remarkable week that literally changed my outlook on life. I have a huge heart for the people of El Salvador and the country itself. It is my dream that one day I will be able to go back.
My amazing trip
It was definitely a trip to remember that I'd do any day! 🙂
A trip to remember that I'd do again any day
It was a trip to remember. Every spect of it was interesting and something I would do again!
I enjoy traviling with my family and creating new memories.
I enjoy traviling and spending time with my family.
– By Ciara Bri'd Frisbie
Thank you for reading my essay.
-Nathan Shaw
Thank you for taking the time to read my essay I really appreciate it.
-Nathan Shaw.
This trip was one of the most incredible experiences of my life. From the Great Wall to the hospitals of Beijing, I learned so much about myself and other cultures.
I just love traveling. Disney World is my favourite destination. Above all 10 sposts are my favourite. I would love to visit all that destination.
Reading this story has been a stroll down memory lane. I stayed at the Diplomat as a little girl in the 1970's, and still remember how impressed I was with it. So glad to hear that the resort has bounced back to its original glory.
I am very glad to know that Disney Cruise Line is taking health so seriously, yet making cleanliness palatable for kids. These suggestions are also great for air travel, another germy breeding ground. Thanks for the info!
My family loves Cancun, and we have had good stays at the Oasis and the Sol Melia and the Sheraton too. Nice to see a new list of recommendations from you. Thanks
This is a really fun outing, but if you can't get out to the countryside, just visit one of those urban tree sellers. A lot of them in the northeast are staffed by college kids from Canada, who take a break, get into a rental trailer and drive it south, then re-sell trees they have bought on consignment to pay for the next semester.
I always ask (nicely) and I always get (with a smile), the extra boughs that they take off to make the trees look even all around. With some ribbon, maybe the wire from a coat hanger and lots of creativity, it's easy to get the kids helping you turn old boughts into beautiful wreaths for around the house.
Love the photos in this article!
Thanks for having this contest; my family loves Snowmass and it would be great to go back there. We took our son when he was about 7 and it was a great learning adventure for all of us. The instructors are terrific and we had fun, but it's not something we could afford to do right now.
Thanks for giving us another chance to go back!
When Jean Carlisle of Menomonie, Wisconsin heard she won a family of four Galapagos Adventure Cruise, she wrote us:
"YES YES YES!!!!!!!! THIS IS MY DREAM DREAM DREAM VACATION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CAN you tell I’m excited??!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"A Galapagos vacation has always been on my DREAM list!!…add it to a cruise vacation makes it even more special. I accept!!!"
Jean explained that she'd enjoyed playing along the scavenger hunt but was anxious about the random drawing for a winner.
"I didn’t sleep well last night because I was so excited!! LOL I entered the contest because I had seen many publications and shows on national geographic on the Galapagos Islands and always thought that would be a place I’d like to visit. I was first drawn to the beautiful pictures on the website and when I saw the contest, I knew that I just had to enter and would love to win!
"I’d like to thank TakingtheKids.com, TravelingMom.com and Family Travel Forum for this once in a life opportunity!! We are excited to make arrangements and show off photos when we return!"
So glad it's helpful to you with your teens, I've already given the Primland brochure to my own mom and her girlfriend who want to tour the Blue Ridge Parkway and look at the Appalachian handcrafts. This is a great base for lots of exploration. If you go, I know you'll enjoy it!
This sounds like a real find and perfect for my own family. I ma always looking for resorts that will work as destinations with lots to do for my two teens, and Primland sounds excellent. Thanks for spreading the word!
Thanks so much for sharing your dreams about the Galapagos; that's the way we all felt when we learned that the terrific Lindblad team wanted to work on this project. so excited to know that someone's dream will reallyl come true! And a 6th grader is the perfect travel companion.
Don't forget to post your a link to your comment here :
http://www.travelingmom.com/freebies/contests/3917-galapagos-giveaway-contest-entries.html
so you're sure to be recorded as an entry into the grand prize drawing. Hope to see you on Twitter too @familytravel4um @travelingmoms @takingthekids @LindbladEXP
If there are no comments on our blog, does this mean that our blog has been rejected, or that it has not been reviewed yet? thanks!
As noted, thanks to your enthusiasm, there are several thousand posts to read, so the judges will be done by mid October. Check back after that to see your status!
I tried following the steps above for finding out about the scholarship judging, but I'm still lost. Does it show up at the bottom of your blog? Or is it just off to the side when you have the option of clicking on your blog? Like, is it next to the name of your blog, the date it was published and then the word scholarship with either a yes or no? Thanks!
Crystal – you get an email