![]() ![]() “At our parent orientation they were like, “you can take them out of school for 25 days a year and if you need to do more we can talk about it,’ but I was like, ‘that’s a lot of days of school… and we’ll probably use it!’” said Jessica. “That’s like the one thing I feel like I’m taking from them with all of this.” “Sometimes we would have friends come out and visit for a week and when they would go home my daughter would just lose it and it was the hardest thing for me,” said Jessica. “We were just excited because Garrett and I both had that and loved it and loved public school, especially the friendship thing,” said Jessica.įriendship is another big reason the Gee family is slowing down a bit. In fact, he started crawling the day the Gees moved into their new home.īut Garrett and Jessica say they never felt pressured to slow down to put the kids in a traditional school setting. Manilla, 4, began preschool, and Calihan, or “baby Tarzan” as they sweetly call him, is 7 months old and just became mobile. Their 5-year-old daughter Dorothy started kindergarten this year. The kids can get involved with school and soccer and other activities like that,” said Garrett. “This is home base while we continue to travel, this is a place where we can have some consistency, community. School was one of the reasons the Gees decided to buy a home. "But, most of all, we hope they know that we love them and treasure this time we have to experience the world together," she added.A post shared by The Bucket List Family on at 10:59am PDT We hope they gain a love for trying new things." We hope they are open-minded and open-hearted to people from other cultures. That hasn't slowed them down, though they did note during the interview that they now have their kids on a consistent school schedule.Īs Jessica explained, "Through travel, we hope our children gain a love for our earth and wildlife. It’s no more complicated than running into an accident or incident back at home." "The key is to have travel insurance that includes medical coverage. "We had three accidents that led to stitches - in Thailand and Nepal, and at the Male airport in the Maldives," Garrett told Drew and Jonathan Scott during an interview in 2020. The Gees, who call Hawaii their home base, have said that they've experienced other misadventures during their travels. Related: Young Millionaire Utah Couple Sells Their Belongings to Travel the World with Their Kids – and Finds a Way to Give Back TheBucketListFamily/Instagram The Gee family Never miss a story - sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories. Randomly, I texted a photo of it to my girlfriend back home and her husband recognized it as a boy fly! A BOT FLY!!?!?!!" "The next day it had a white tip like a pimple but after showing our guides and a local medic nobody knew what it could be. "Cali had been complaining of a pain on the top of his head but it just looked like a little red bump," Jessica wrote. It was during one of their adventures that things went a little buggy. The Bucket List Family - Garrett, Jessica and their three kids Dorothy, Manilla and Cali - spend as much of their free time as possible traveling to foreign countries. ![]() "This incident actually happened while we were in Botswana this past Summer but we only shared it on our Bucket List Friends video : THINGS GONE WRONG IN AFRICA," she continued. "WARNING this video includes worms and is NOT for the faint of heart," wrote The Bucket List Family mom Jessica, in an Instagram post showing the video of her husband slowly pulling a botfly larva from the head of their 5-year-old son Cali. ![]() What looked like a pimple or an insect bite on Jessica and Garrett Gee's toddler's head during a trip to Botswana turned out to be far more invasive. TheBucketListFamily/Instagram Garrett Gee pulls botfly larva from son Cali's head ![]()
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