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    Bring the Kids

    Kid-friendly travel site helps globe-trotting Dallas families feel at home on the road

    Diana Oates
    Aug 9, 2018 | 2:50 pm

    Anyone traveling with tots knows that not just any motel room or Airbnb will do. Zoie Kingsbery Coe found this out the hard way when she traveled the world with her husband and baby and noted lodging after lodging that lacked child-friendly amenities.

    She took matters into her own hands and founded Kid & Coe, a website that helps makes vacationing with family easier and more fun. Five years after making all those lists, Coe's site has become an indispensable tool that families use to make their trips more comfortable and enjoyable.

    As a traveling mom of a little one, I use it all the time to book my excursions from Dallas. Kid & Coe curates a list of stylish vacation rentals around the world that offer kid-friendly perks like playrooms and backyards. Folks can list their homes and become hosts, as well.

    What makes it different from Airbnb and VRBO? In addition to every property looking like it is straight out of an editorial shoot (s-t-u-n-n-i-n-g), they are hand selected by families for families.

    "Just about all of our homeowners are parents, and that means they have empathy with your situation as a traveling family — more than likely, they are one, too. The shared ground makes a stay so much easier," says Coe, who currently resides in Ibiza.

    Amenities listed range from babysitting services to fridge stocking and everything in between. Customers can easily search for properties with cribs, games, and even baby monitors.

    Parents know that often, destinations that tout themselves as "child friendly" are long on style and short on substance. Coe recognized this, which is why a demand to share her findings about family-friendly travel inspired her to start the site. Part of her mission is to inspire people to think outside the box when it comes to family vacations.

    "Disney must be done, and we love a kids club as much as the next person, but we also believe in showing our children a world that stretches beyond typical family travel boundaries," Coe says.

    Coe says that the majority of renters are choosing to stay in the city rentals listed on the site (think Amsterdam, Paris, and London); however, she personally has wild and off-the-grid locations saved in her bucket list file. At the top of her wish list is this Brazilian treehouse. (I personally am dreaming of a trip to New York City that involves my family making ourselves at home at this Tribeca beauty.)

    The site has picked up steam quickly in the U.S., especially in Texas. When it started, just one Texas rental — a Hill Country beauty — was listed. Now, customers can find vacation homes all over the state, from Houston to Austin to Dallas-Fort Worth.

    Kid & Coe is constantly adding new properties in popular travel spots and has its eye on bringing even more options in fun destinations like Sardinia and Ile de Re, off the coast of France. Coe's hidden-gem travel destination? Portugal, for its affordability, great cafes, and beautiful beaches.

    "It’s about seeing that the world is wider than the bubble we live in," Coe says. "Trying new food — even if you don’t like it — seeing new animals, meeting new people, and trying out new activities are good for all children. Kids understand more about what they like and don’t like, they gain a curiosity about the world around them, and they are more outgoing and accepting in their approach."

    Traveling with kids can be truly magical and always memorable (for better or worse) for the whole family. Coe encourages parents to travel with their kids as much as possible, and to savor their time together.

    "The generosity people in other countries extend to your children — a cheeky head rub in Morocco, a little tickle under the chin in Italy, extra sprinkles on your daughter’s ice cream in Mexico — makes you see that the world is a varied and wonderful place."

    The Brackenridge Street Residence in Austin, listed on Kid & Coe.

    Brackenridge Street
    Photo courtesy of Kid & Coe
    The Brackenridge Street Residence in Austin, listed on Kid & Coe.
    vacationfamilies
    news/travel

    REVIVING THE ALAMO

    Texas landmark the Alamo reclaims historic cannon from private ownership

    Brandon Watson
    Jan 19, 2026 | 2:00 pm
    The Alamo
    Photo by Gower Brown/ Unsplash
    A 90-pound cannon used in the Battle of the Alamo is returning to its San Antonio home.

    It turns out the Alamo's original 1836 cannons are good for more than just defense — they also make a sturdy birdbath. After serving as a garden ornament for Samuel Maverick’s descendants, an authentic piece of San Antonio history is finally returning home to the revered mission.

    According to an Alamo announcement, the swivel cannon weighs 90 pounds and is approximately three feet long. The relic was originally found in 1852 when Maverick built a home near the northwest corner of the battle’s site.

    The lawyer and land baron was saved from death when he was urged by William Barret Travis to ride to the Texas Declaration of Independence convention in Washington-on-the-Brazos to send reinforcements. Returning to the Alamo’s grounds, he found a cache of cannons buried where the Hotel Gibbs sits today.

    From there, the cannon wound up at the Maverick family’s Sunshine Ranch on the Northwest Side, where it was eventually incorporated into the garden DIY project. In 1955, the cannon was removed from the ranch, and the current location remained a mystery until the Alamo received a call from a Maverick relative in Corpus Christi.

    Alamo cannon This Alamo artifact gives an idea of what the cannon will look like once restoration is complete.Photo courtesy of the Alamo.

    “The relative graciously donated the cannon to the Alamo,” wrote a rep from the mission. “Alamo Senior Researcher and Historian Kolby Lanham and Head Conservator Pam Jary Rosser drove down the very next day to take this piece of history home to the Alamo.”

    Although the artillery is mostly intact, it is missing its trunnions (the pivot-point protrusions on the sides of the barrel) and cascabel (the knob and neck assembly at the rear of historic muzzle-loading cannons). The parts were removed by the Mexican army to make the cannon inoperable.

    Once preservation is complete, this cannon and the Alamo Collection’s other battle cannons will make their way to the upcoming Visitor Center and Museum, where they will be joined by rocker Phil Collins' collection of Alamo artifacts. The Alamo is in the midst of a $550 million preservation project, which includes conserving the Alamo Church, Long Barrack, and the mission’s original footprint. The museum is on track to debut in late 2027.

    historymuseumsartifactstexas historythe alamo
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