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Things to do, places to go 01.31.2008

I’ve been remiss in posting the Thursday look-ahead/deal roundup in accordance with my blogging editorial calendar, but good intentions are always there.

Things coming up….

**  It’s Fabulous First Friday on February 1 at the Miami Science Museum. This month’s planetarium “Live Star Show” will feature information about the Total Lunar Eclipse, which will be visible from Miami Wednesday February 20th.

**  What will happen with Punxsutawney Phil on Gobbler’s Knob in Pennsylvania? It’s Groundhog Day Feb 2nd.

**  The St. Kilda Festival in Melbourne, Australia February 2-10.  Australia’s “largest outdoor festival” is a huge beach festival with live music, tons of summer activities (since it’s the Southern Hemisphere) and Kid Zones.

**  Sample Oman’s heritage and culture at the Muscat Festival Feb 1-2.

**  It’s Candlemas, the formal end of the holiday season in Mexico, February 2nd.

**  For the Japanese, it’s “out with the demons and in with good fortune,” plus ceremonial bean-throwing, at Setsubun February 4th.

**  In London, it’s Magic Carpet Storytelling for toddlers at the National Gallery February 3rd, and the Great Spitalfields Pancake Race (for charity) on Feb 5th.

**  Oh, yes, it’s Mardi Gras on Feb 5th, with parades in New Orleans (and other cities.) Sure, you can take the kids. Really. Just stay away from Bourbon Street with them. Come to think of it, that’s always good advice….

**  On top of everything else, it’s the Year of the Rat, Chinese New Year, on and around February 7th.

Good deals and opportunities right now….

**  Whale-watching in Virginia Beach, Virginia and 2nd day free at Universal Studios Hollywood.

**  Tips and tricks if you’re thinking about sun and fun at family resorts in Cancun, Mexico, a family reunion on a cruise ship, deals for skiing, a last-minute Caribbean vacation, advance booking for popular London summer events and planning those summer holidays.

**  This is the time of year for good deals at US national parks, at Club Med all-inclusives and even for hotel/travel packages to Bali and tied to the American Girls dolls.

**  Arthur Frommer’s blog recommends the Top Picks section of the Spirit Airways Web site, and Roe Gruber’s Escapes Unlimited to Central & South American and Asia.

**  Finally, Frommer’s recommends deals to the French & Italian Riviera, Botswana, the Rivera Maya in Mexico, Hong Kong (sigh – I’d kill to go) and Cape May, New Jersey.

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Photos USA

Photo of the Week: 1901 spa therapy still used today

The still-in-use 1901 steam bath at the Palace Hotel and Bath House, Eureka Springs, Arkansas (Scarborough photo)This woman’s head in a strange contraption is me.

I’m in the circa-1901 steam bath at the Palace Hotel and Bath House in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, taking a “eucalyptus steam treatment” for my (then) stuffy nose.

The price for it is a lovely throwback, too — US$16.00

There is a bench that you sit on inside the cabinet, and you can push the door outward a little whenever you start to feel too warm.

Legend has it that the curmudgeonly comedian W.C. Fields used the Bath House spa services.

Can you imagine him in this thing with a hangover? He famously enjoyed his booze. Hmmm, not sure that works for a blog about travel with kids.

I visited the lively Ozarks town of Eureka Springs for an upcoming article in National Geographic Traveler; will update you when the magazine is out.

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Florida USA

Educational tours at Walt Disney World

Are you in China? No, you're in Epcot's World Showcase (courtesy goodgrief at flickr's Creative Commons)Yes, you can do more at Florida’s WDW than scream your head off on the rides….not that there’s anything wrong with that….

My new article on education.com, Learning at Disney World? outlines some behind-the-scenes tours that your family might enjoy at Disney Hollywood Studios (formerly Disney-MGM Studios,) Epcot, etc.

All tours are an additional cost above park admission.

As you’ll see from my discussion in the article’s comments, the vast majority of the tours have a pretty high minimum age. A teenager or maybe a tween can have a heck of a time, but younger children don’t have many options.

For best general educational value, I recommend Epcot’s World Showcase and Animal Kingdom, where there are plenty of (free) educational demonstrations and activities going on all day. My kids loved the Dragon Legend Acrobats in Epcot’s “China,” and you might consider Flights of Wonder to learn about birds at Animal Kingdom.

Always check each park’s Daily Activities handouts when you arrive, for a complete list of presentations, performers and musical highlights.

Related posts: Survivor’s Guide to Walt Disney World (first in a Family Travel series)

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Walt Disney World, Florida, educational travel, Disney, WDW, Epcot, Animal Kingdom, Orlando, travel with kids

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Blog Video Posts

Socializing on social media

I had about five minutes worth of thoughts on social media and Web 2.0, but first I had to overcome technical hassles and keep the cats out of the litter box….

(and here’s the YouTube URL for it, in case the video box is acting squirrelly)

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Florida Photos USA

Photo of the Week: Indian River fruit at Crystal River, Florida

                Bags of oranges and grapefruit, Crystal River fruit stand, Florida (Scarborough photo)

Normally the Photo of the Week would be up on Wednesday, but we’re slipping a little this week as we battle a (nice-to-have) tidal wave of work.

I took this photo in Crystal River, Florida, about 75 miles north of Tampa/St. Petersburg near the western coast of the state.  I’ve talked about Florida’s manatees, pre-Columbian mounds and sugar plantations this week (and it’s the height of Florida citrus season) so here’s a juicy shot from a roadside fruit and produce stand.

“Indian River fruit” is just a moniker attached to fruits, usually citrus, harvested within a certain distance from the Indian River in central Florida.

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USA

It’s cold, so let’s go to a water park

A typical Great Wolf Lodge indoor water park, with giant water bucket (courtesy thedriscolls5 on flickr CC)No, I haven’t lost my mind.

As noted in the Miami Herald, hotels with indoor water parks are becoming very popular, and for good reason. They allow families, including weak swimmers and non-swimmers, to enjoy watery fun year-round.

I’ve taken the kids to Juliplatz indoor water park in Japan and Mosaqua in the Netherlands, but nothing on the scale of the properties in the article.

I can, however, vouch for the Great Wolf Lodge in Williamsburg, Virginia. We stayed there in a very nice, big room for one night last summer, and I learned something.

A giant facility like that with hundreds of hyper kids is not normally my idea of fun, but as I wrote over at the Perceptive Travel blog, sometimes the traveling parent faces a hotel reality check:

“The enormous indoor water park section of the hotel was spectacular, I must say, and much easier to enjoy than tromping around a spread-out, hot, open-air water park. Still….I guess I just don’t tend to look for indoor water parks in my hotels. The kids, naturally, were in heaven. I don’t think I physically saw my son for about two hours in the water park, as he went from ride to ride and up and down slides. Sitting in the park, surrounded by screaming, laughing wet children and adults and 300,000 gallons of water, I had time to reflect about getting over myself. Maybe I need to build a few more of these kid-focused places into our trips, even if they aren’t my cup of tea.”

There’s more to Great Wolf than the water park, and you’ll see it as soon as you walk into the soaring lobby, decorated in Great North Woods rustic style with lots of animals and a big fireplace.

Just in case your kids don’t get enough video games, there is the Northern Lights Arcade, a whole blacklighted room with more than 100 games. I saw families going all over the resort playing Magiquest, a live action adventure game/treasure hunt with special Harry Potter-like wands.

In milder weather, there are outdoor pools with cabanas, a rock climbing wall and the Howl in One 18 hole putt-putt golf course. The Elements Spa/Salon pampers adults, and a variety of in-house restaurants cover meal requirements.

Rooms are not cheap; they start at around $200/night, but considering that they include waterpark admission and other amusements, that may work for your budget, especially if you take advantage of in-room kitchenettes to prepare meals.

Look for seasonal specials, particularly right now in wintertime.

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Florida USA

Guaranteed Florida manatee sightings

Manatee, Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park, Florida (Scarborough photo)If you are anywhere near Florida or are planning to visit soon, you’re in luck.

November to March is the best time to see (in the wild) the large, gray aquatic mammal known as the manatee.

The “Save the Manatee” organization suggests several Florida spots for best viewing, but what if you plan to visit the state between April and October, maybe on summer vacation?

Try Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park, located in the aptly-named Citrus County on Florida’s western coast, about 75 miles north of Tampa/St. Petersburg.

Weather permitting, a short boat tour along Pepper Creek takes you from the Visitor’s Center to the park entrance. A Ranger-led manatee education program three times a day introduces visitors to the rehabilitated manatees that live year-round in the park’s springs.

Bird trail flamingos at Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park, Florida (Scarborough photo)

A big winner with families is the Fish Bowl, a submerged viewing bubble.

Visitors can look out through large windows into the spring and watch the manatees and other wildlife swimming around.

Homosassa also has extensive birding trails (lots of lovely pink flamingos and owls) plus black bears, bobcats, white-tailed deer, Key deer, American alligators, American crocodiles and river otters.

A walking trail through the animal enclosures is stroller-friendly.

  • Wildlife Encounters: 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
  • Manatee Programs: 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m.
  • Alligator/Hippopotamus Program at 12:30 p.m.

Fruit stand bounty near Crystal River, Florida (Scarborough photo)

There are many special events in 2008, including birding walks, a birthday party for the popular local hippo, an Easter Egg Hunt and a spring gardening workshop.

An extensive Educator’s Guide to the Manatee helps with the details, if you and the kids want to brush up before you go.

Nearby is the Crystal River National Wildlife Refuge (accessible by boat) where you can see manatees in the wild.

If you’d like a guided tour there, check with Adventure Outpost based in pretty High Springs, FL, near Gainesville. They often run family-friendly manatee tours to the Crystal River area.

Technorati tags: family travel, travel, manatee, Florida, travel with kids, Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park

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Asia Photos

Photo of the Week: Harbin, China

Harbin Ice and Snow Festival, China (courtesy silverlinedwinnebago on flickr's Creative Commons)

(photo courtesy silverlinedwinnebago at flickr’s Creative Commons.)

“In the bleak midwinter” there are plenty of cool things to do, like the Ice and Snow Festival in Harbin, China.

It’s an entire town built of ice, and illuminated at night. Amazing.

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USA

It’s true; Chicago has changed from the 1920s

Highlights of Millennium Park, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

(This is cross-posted with the Perceptive Travel blog.)

In the U.S., there’s a saying usually ascribed to Native Americans about getting another person’s perspective by “walking a mile in their moccasins.”

As a traveler, it’s always interesting to see my country through another’s eyes.

Monet at the Art Institute, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

As I scanned my local newspaper the other day, I noticed an Associated Press article in the Sports section about how Chicago is trying to convince international officials to pick their city to host the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Apparently Chicago’s international image is pretty much summed up by….the gangster Al Capone.

Industrial grit and grime. Violence.

This is not at all the city that I’ve visited, but when you live in a big country and travelers tend to cluster in well-known coastal cities like New York, Los Angeles or San Francisco, it’s natural that a sprawling Midwestern place on Lake Michigan might tend to be overlooked.

In the AP article, Edinburgh resident Carol Morrison is quoted: “It’s much more visually stunning than I’d expected.”

Chicago Theater (Scarborough photo)

Gosh, yes, Chicago is that.

I visited last summer with my teen daughter to speak at the BlogHer blogging conference, and even though I’d been there before, I was struck anew by the energy, verve, sports enthusiasm, beautiful parks and dazzling architecture.

If you like history and amazing buildings, I strongly recommend the 90 minute docent-led Chicago Architecture Foundation river cruise (what, you didn’t know that Chicago has lovely rivers? See, you should visit….)

The museums alone could keep a visitor tied up inside for days.

For a hard look at press freedom and freedom of speech in general, there’s the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum. For mind-blowing beauty, there’s the Art Institute of Chicago (I was crushed that Edward Hopper’s 1942 painting Nighthawks was gone when we visited….it was on loan to the MFA in Boston.) For T-Rex-sized portions of natural history, there’s the Field Museum.

Sheila reflected in the Bean, also known as Anish Kapoor's Cloud Gate, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

Inside “the Loop,” the main downtown area, I was never concerned about my personal safety, even at night.

Some parents might be horrified, but my teen walked from the Navy Pier to the Field Museum on her own, and I never worried about her.

Sorry, Al Capone and assorted gangsters no longer rule Chicago.

Poke around in the Chicago Tribune‘s travel section for plenty of visitor fun in what we call the Windy City or the City of Big Shoulders.

And if you plan a trip to any country, always try to explore a little bit beyond “the usual” places….and don’t rely on a city’s reputation from the 1920s.

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USA

Eyes on the prize: U.S. civil rights landmarks

Civil Rights Memorial, Montgomery Alabama, designed by Maya Lin (Scarborough photo)

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Birthday (the observed Federal holiday) is coming up on January 21, 2008.

What better way to have “a day on, not a day off” than to visit some places that tie into the civil rights movement?

My article “Experience History at these Civil Rights Landmarks” is online at education.com, and I discuss a number of different locations: 

**  the National Civil Rights Museum (housed in the infamous Lorraine Motel) in Memphis TN

**  the Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati OH

**  the traveling exhibit 381 Days: the Montgomery Bus Boycott Story (its last day in Dallas TX is tomorrow, January 13th, then it moves to Memphis, Evansville IN and Kansas City MO.) 

….and several others are covered in the article.  Check it out!