Show HN: Roadtrip Ninja – Find the perfect stop for your kids
But when you pull up, your heart sinks. The bathroom looks like it hasn't been cleaned since the Clinton administration; there's broken glass in the "playground," and the vending machine is held together with duct tape. So you pile everyone back into the minivan (cue the protests and tears) and keep driving to find something better.
Sound familiar? This was my life for years.
The Birth of a Mission: Hi, I'm Josh Anderson, and I'm the parent behind Roadtrip Ninja. Like you, I spent years loading up our minivan for family adventures – weekend trips to visit grandparents, cross-country vacations, and countless drives to youth sports tournaments. My kids were young, energetic, and had bladders the size of walnuts, which meant we were stopping A LOT.
No matter how much research I did beforehand, I kept getting caught off guard. The rest area that looked great online turned out to have bathrooms that made gas station restrooms look luxurious. The park that promised "playground equipment" had a rusty swing set and suspicious stains on the slide. The family restaurant with rave reviews had been closed for renovations for six months.
Each disappointing stop meant the same frustrating routine: everyone back in the car, drive to the next exit, hope for better luck. Our "six-hour" drives regularly turned into eight or nine hours, not because of traffic, but because we kept striking out on decent places to stop.
From Frustration to Solution: Roadtrip Ninja was born from one simple idea - parents helping parents navigate the real world of family travel. Not the glossy magazine version where everything goes perfectly, but the experience where you need to know which rest areas have clean bathrooms, which gas stations have decent food, and which playgrounds are worth the detour.
This isn't just another travel app filled with marketing copy and sponsored content. This is real intel from real parents who've been there, done that, and lived to tell the tale. Every review, every photo, every recommendation comes from someone who understands that when your 4-year-old says they need to use the bathroom, you need options that won't traumatize anyone.
No comments yet