How we Planned a Practical, Covid-Cautious Vacation

If you are traveling freely, unconcerned about Covid, today’s post is not for you. Come back next week for more grandkid-friendly things to do.

But if you are grappling with age and comorbidity issues, here are some ideas for planning a Covid-cautious vacation.

Reflecting pool at Getty Villa, an art museum of antiquities. Spending time outdoors is safer for Covid-cautious vacations.
Glorious gardens of the Getty Villa in Los Angeles–enticement to spend more time safely outdoors.

While we are mostly armchair traveling these day, Steve and I yearned to go somewhere–anywhere. So, we took an art-museum-focused, driving trip to Los Angeles last week and we seem to have returned unscathed.

Here are my tips for planning a practical, Covid-cautious vacation. Obviously, I’m no infectious disease expert so I can’t recommend what you should do–I can only tell you what we did.

The Getty Center gardens are best enjoyed early in the day, before the crowds.
Enjoy the peacefulness. There’s no one in the gardens of Getty Center if you get there early.

Timing for a Covid-Cautious Vacation

By traveling before Memorial Day, when the travel season kicks off in earnest, we encountered fewer crowds. If we do another trip, it will be after Labor Day.

It helps if you get to the venues early. For example, instead of heading for the galleries of Getty Center, we started at the gardens and had it all to ourselves until the others descended, much later.

Driving Instead of Flying

Covid-cautious travelers may prefer driving to flying. View along Interstate 5 in California.
The view along Interstate 5 in California.

Both Steve and I like watching the scenery fly by, so driving anywhere is fine by us. By driving, we avoid the crowds in airports and worries about being jammed with others in tight airline seats.

If you are planning a prolonged car trip or a camping vacation, check out the best gear for your road trip from Wirecutter.

We Stayed at a Vacation Rental

Covid-cautious vacations may including staying at a vacation rental rather than a hotel, to self-isolate.
Our Airbnb was a lovely studio apartment up in the hills of Studio City.

We love vacation rentals and have rented apartments in Paris and many parts of France, as well as in Hawaii. On our covid-cautious vacation, it was another way we could control our environment better than we could staying at a hotel.

Our Airbnb in the hills of Los Angeles was a self-contained studio apartment with an outdoor deck and free parking space. It was comfortable, conveniently located, and perfect for our needs.

We Dined Outdoors–and Early

We dined at restaurants that had patios, decks, or other alfresco options. On one unusually drizzly evening, the restaurant staff unfurled their sun umbrellas and fired up their heaters and we were fine.

Pre-Covid, we always made dinner reservations for 7:30 or 8 o’clock, but for our covid-cautious vacation, we resorted to dinner as early as 5:30–not our favorite time, but we encountered fewer diners and didn’t have to compete for an outdoor table.

Sometimes, if we happened to be at a place where we could get a really good lunch, we’d have our main meal at noon. For example, The Restaurant at the Getty Center is a truly exceptional museum restaurant. It’s on the pricey side for lunch, but well worth the money.

Eating outdoors figures into a Covid-cautious vacation. This flat iron steak is from the Restaurant at Getty Center.
The Restaurant at Getty Center: Beautifully prepared flat iron steak with baby planet carrots, marble potatoes, pearl onions, and porcini sauce.
Dessert from the Restaurant at Getty Center features honeycomb-themed plating.
Dessert at The Restaurant at Getty Center, plated to reflect the honeycomb theme: lemon crémeux, honey mousse, honey-blueberry sauce, crispy honey puff.

We Sought Out Open Spaces

This was a museum trip, so we hit all the major ones in LA: the Getty Center (Middle Ages to present day), the Getty Villa (Greek and Roman antiquities), The Broad, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) Grand Avenue, and the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena.

Art galleries, such as this one at the Los Angeles Museum of Art (LACMA) are usually high-ceilinged and it's usually easy to distance from others to keep safe.
Alexander Archipenko’s Dance (version C) at The Los Angeles Museum of Art (LACMA).

At all the museums, masks are strongly recommended, but about half the visitors went maskless. We just kept our distance from unmasked people. Masks are required at the LA County Museums, as well as proof of vaccination or proof of a negative Covid test.

The Broad Museum features an in-depth installation of Roy Lichtenstein art, including Interior with African Mask.
Interior with African Mask (mounted)–part of an in-depth installation of Roy Lichtenstein at the Broad.

Museums were mostly high-ceilinged, with large, open galleries. On the rare occasion when a room was too small or too crowded, we’d skip the gallery and return later.

The gardens at Getty Center features water elements and beautiful landscaping to enhance the architecture.
The gardens of Getty Center are vast and spectacular.

Some museums had extraordinary gardens–especially the Getty Center and Getty Villa. Spending time enjoying the landscape and sculpture was a good, safe way to enjoy art outdoors.

The Norton Simon sculpture garden is serene and beautiful. Spending time outdoors is a good idea for a Covid-conscious vacation.
Aristide Maillol’s La Montagne (Mountain) sculpture at the Norton Simon Museum sculpture garden is reflected in the water-lily-filled pond.

What to Pack for a Covid-Conscious Vacation

Our last trip was in the fall of 2019. By the spring of 2020, a time when we would normally go on vacation, we were in lockdown. So Steve and I were a bit rusty, packing a bag for a week-long vacation. It’s good practice for a major trip, when we feel more comfortable traveling again.

Essentials for Covid-conscious traveling:

  • Small bottles of hand sanitizer and extras to keep in the car and in purse and pocket.
  • N95 and KN95 masks (we used the ones with the double head loops for museums and longer indoors stays; the ones with ear loops for going to restaurants, since we would be unmasking at the table anyway. It’s a good idea to bring extra masks and also keep some in the car, since masks are so easy to misplace.
  • Clorox Disinfecting Wipes to sanitize any suspicious, well-touched surfaces.

It was wonderful to go on a trip after nearly three years–no matter how cautiously. We’ll stay put for now, enjoying our garden that we landscaped last fall, taking short day trips, and armchair traveling the rest of the summer.

Whether you’re a fearless traveler or Covid-cautious like us, I hope you have a wonderful, safe summer!

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2 Comments

  1. Carol on May 28, 2022 at 8:48 pm

    So envious that you could get to some museums. Tbanks for the great tips. Always wise to be cautious. Keep fantasizing about getting back to visit museums!! Thanks for a peek into your trip!



    • admin on May 31, 2022 at 5:06 pm

      Thank you for your comments. It’s wonderful to be visiting art museums again. Certainly lifts the spirits!