Categories
Photos USA

Photo of the Week: Hey, doll face!

Dolls in period costume for sale, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia (Scarborough photo)

These dolls were in a box in an outdoor, tented market stall on Duke of Gloucester Street in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia.  Vendors in Colonial dress were selling all sorts of related gizmos – penny whistles, tri-cornered hats, butter churns (OK, just kidding on that last one.)

I have photographic evidence of my teen daughter wearing a replica of a late 1700s women’s cap, also for sale at the stall, but I can only push the Blogging Mom thing so far!

Check the Colonial Williamsburg Monthly Specials page for deals on lodging and admission, and the Calendar page for upcoming events and focused tours for children, like a chance to be a pretend trade apprentice (like a weaver or silversmith.)

Related posts:

Categories
Texas USA

Root, root, root for the home team

A young hopeful waits for a ball, Round Rock Express, Texas (Scarborough photo)Although I’m not a huge baseball fan, I’m all for taking the kids to a baseball game, especially if it’s one of the minor league teams all across the US.

As long as you can avoid the midday sun with shaded seating, or go to an evening game, it’s hard to beat for the price and it makes for an All-American family night out, with amusements for everyone.

When we travel, I look to see if there’s a local minor league team playing, because it’s a great way to get the flavor and atmosphere of a town, and the audience includes all ages and all attention spans.

The Pawtucket Red Sox, for example, are part of the Boston Red Sox organization, but they’re also the pride of tiny Pawtucket, Rhode Island, close to where my son was born.

Montgomery, Alabama has the Montgomery Biscuits; the mascot has a pat of butter for a tongue. What’s more Southern than biscuits?

Here in the Austin area, we have the Round Rock Express baseball team at the Dell Diamond (yes, that Dell – the company is based in Round Rock, about fifteen minutes north of the city of Austin, where Michael Dell attended the University of Texas.)

The Express is a Class AAA affiliate of the Houston Astros organization and a popular diversion in central Texas, averaging 9,000 attendees per game for eight years running.  Famous pitcher Nolan Ryan is part owner of this team plus another down in seaside Corpus Christi.

Local “livestock,” Round Rock Express, Texas (Scarborough photo)

As in most small ballparks, the atmosphere at Dell Diamond is decidedly local – it’s Texas, so there’s plenty of Blue Bell ice cream, BBQ, Dr Pepper, Whataburger and Shiner beer.

One billboard features the Nyle Maxwell auto dealership; he was also the mayor until very recently.

Another billboard is for Hill Country Staffing; “Your on- and off-shore hiring experts in the oil and gas industry.” KLBJ radio advertises itself as the “Rock of Austin;” President Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) was born and raised in central Texas.  Bakery company Mrs. Baird’s sponsors the popular Monday night $1 hot dog/$1 drink event (presumably the bun portion.)

Paying attention to the action on the field is secondary for many in the ballpark.

Teenagers hang out on the grassy berm; “We don’t actually watch the game,” says my teen daughter – the point is to pay a minimal amount to get into the cheap seats, then visit with friends. There’s also a kid’s play section with basketball hoops, a rock climbing wall and bungee-trampoline contraption.

There’s always something to see.

***  A pause in the game brings us kids dressed in giant red felt claws, slippers and a hat with crab eyes from Joe’s Crab Shack to do some sort of crustacean “cash grab.”

***  Whenever a ball is hit out of the park, the PA system plays a variety of amusing sounds related to what the ball might hit – we hear a cow moo, the (recorded) sound of glass breaking and baaa’s from supposedly perplexed ball-bonked sheep.

***  The “Home Run Porch” area above one of the berms has actual porch rockers to sit in. First come, first served.

***  Different action on the field warrants certain snippets of songs to be played over the PA – if a player swings and misses, he might get “They Call Me the Breeze.”  When the team’s just barely hanging on against an opponent, the audience hears “Stayin’ Alive.” A ball that blows past a batter cues up “Blue Bayou.” A conference on the mound results in “The More We Get Together.” Each Express team member has a song when they come to bat – pitcher Josh Muecke gets the (rapidly annoying) “Oh Mickey, You’re So Fine.” Looking for their seat on Boy Scout night, Round Rock Express, Texas (Scarborough photo)

The Dell Diamond is just across the road from a major railway freight line, so loud and lonely “woo-woo” train whistles occasionally cut through the crowd roar.

Those trains used to haul a lot of cotton, because before this was a snazzy modern ballpark full of cheering suburbanites, it was just a bunch of cotton fields, out in the middle of nowhere.

For bonus fun during the rest of July and the month of August, see if the traveling Family Funfest three-hour free baseball celebration is scheduled for your ballpark.

Check your local minor league ballpark for an enjoyable family outing, and if you can drop in on a game in another city during a visit, by all means do so.

What’s your favorite minor league ballpark, at home or away?

Categories
Uncategorized

Fabulous for families: California

Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, California (courtesy nplugd on Flickr CC)

It is certainly difficult to narrow down a list of family-friendly, educational travel attractions in the massive Golden State, but I gave it a try….

Kid-friendly fun and learning in California is now posted on Education.com.

Here are four of the 21 items that I featured, to whet your family travel whistle:

  • Monterey Bay Aquarium– Located on author John Steinbeck’s Cannery Row, this world-famous aquarium submerges visitors into watery California marine habitats and offers close-up encounters with hundreds of sea creatures, enhanced by special programs and hands-on activities for kids. Bonus: drive some of the Pacific Coast Highway around scenic Big Sur while you’re there.
  • Butterflies – The migratory paths of the Monarch butterfly bring them to California from about mid-October through March. See them at state parks like Point Mugu, Leo Carillo, Malibu Lagoon State Beach and the town of Pacific Grove.
  • Walt Disney Concert Hall– The twisty, curvy Frank Gehry-designed metallic home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic appeals to kids not only with its looks, but also the Saturday morning Toyota Symphonies for Youth.
  • Love Your Food– The modern movement to “eat local” can be credited to Alice Waters and the Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley. Older kids might enjoy sampling the imaginative rotating menu (lunch in the more casual Café at Chez Panisse might be the best bet.) Another way to introduce great fresh food is to visit the San Francisco Farmer’s Market at the Ferry Building Marketplace on Tuesday and Saturday, when local restaurants bring samples and California farmers are out in force.

The other 17 recommendations are here on Education.com.

The state has long drawn adventurers (Gold Rush, anyone?) and is famously tolerant of the unusual, but that’s precisely why I love it.

Categories
Blog Philosophy

Tight travel budget? Another world awaits you

BlogHer in Second LifeNow, bear with me here.

My Mom already thinks the whole blogging thing is a little “out there,” so I can imagine what she and probably many of my Family Travel readers will think about me gallivanting off to travel through a world that doesn’t really exist.

I’ve just spent several hours over the course of yesterday and today on my computer, running around in the Second Life virtual world, dressed up as a punkish Goth avatar named Boadicea Merryman (my SL name.)

It didn’t cost anything; well, until I bought that virtual Frozen Pea Fund necklace as an American Cancer Society donation – all of about 40 cents – yes, you can spend real money there.

Sitting with my virtual/real life friend Connie Reece (green hair) in Second Life (Scarborough photo)

Since I do some Web 2.0/social media teaching and consulting work with the Every Dot Connects consortium, I make it my business to figure out new and intriguing stuff.  Since I could not attend the fabulous BlogHer blogging conference in San Francisco in person this week, I did the next best thing and attended the conference on my computer, in Second Life.

I had girly fun trying on computer-generated clothing in a virtual house with two giggling girlfriends, watched my avatar Boadicea execute some cool dance moves to an excellent DJ at two BlogHer parties,  attended a panel on how nonprofits can raise (real) money and make a (real life) impact through Second Life, and watched online with a bunch of other avatars in a sold-out Second Life virtual stadium as the Real Life BlogHer keynote speakers on 19 July (Heather Armstrong/dooce and Stephanie Klein) were live-streamed to us in video and audio from a San Francisco ballroom.

During and after each event, I met avatars/people and exchanged contact info.

Behind every avatar listening to a speaker panel is a thinking, tech-savvy person (Scarborough photo)

I feel as though I’ve had an amazing trip, really, and I didn’t have to pack, unpack or deal with security lines and airfare.

To those who would harrumph that this is all silly, and I should be writing things, like a good little writer, let me also point out that as I wandered the BlogHer SL Exhibitors Hall – with booths and displays from different companies, just like any conference – I stopped at conference sponsor AskPatty.com’s booth (they had a virtual racetrack at BlogHer SL where you could race all kind of cars, and they sponsored the parties as well.)

AskPatty.com is a forum and information resource about women and automotive issues, and one of its editors, Brandy, is also my editor at Automotive Traveler magazine.   There was an avatar standing at the SL booth, so I introduced myself, and doggone if it wasn’t Brandy, working at the Second Life conference!

The AskPatty.com sponsor exhibit booth in BlogHer Second Life (Scarborough photo)

We even talked about a travel-related article that I’m going to write for AskPatty.com; never let it be said that you can’t do business in a computer-generated world (and I hope to join the next cyberspace press trip, too, while I’m at it.)

OK, so Brandy and I did geek out after that….we both opened another tab on our computer and went over to the chat/microblogging site Twitter and starting talking over there – she’s @hondagrrl and I’m @SheilaS.

There is a Second Life for teens (ages 13-17) so I’m going to see if my daughter wants to do some virtual traveling.

I’m hoping she rolls her eyes and says, “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.”

Categories
Texas USA

Fun at the Children’s Museum of Houston

Front entrance, Children’s Museum of Houston, Texas (Scarborough photo)Many major US cities have opened interactive “Children’s Museums.”

Unlike stodgier institutions, these special museums are built so that kids can run around, blow off steam, grab and poke things with abandon and learn new things in the process.

The boomtown city of Houston, Texas is no exception.

We visited the Children’s Museum of Houston recently and my 8-year-old son spent two full hours going from one fun exhibit to another.

The big winner for him was the How Does It Work room.

It featured “communications ping-pong balls” zipping through pneumatic tubes, unique telephone stations, a giant spring to show wave technology and a massive robot-ish character built out of old telephones.

Future engineer? Getting the ball to the bottom, Houston Children’s Museum (Scarborough photo)

The My Home Planet Earth room was a winner, too, mostly because of the pinball-ish machine that kids could play on and prevent “pollution balls” from moving into the “pond.”

We also watched tiny chicks breaking free from their eggs in a hatchery, then watched them run around and be adorable in the nearby brooder.

There is also a kid’s TV station with pint-sized cameras, a Tot Spot for toddlers and babies, a mini grocery store, a Mexican market from the Yucatan and a few outdoor exhibits involving the wonders of messy sand and water (these were less popular on a hot summer day.)

The chick hatchery, Children’s Museum of Houston (Scarborough photo)

The Museum has a full schedule of special programs in their auditorium, and special Science Stations manned by helpful staffers to let kids get their curious hands on items that demonstrated concepts like optical illusions, liquid crystals and how classic toys work.

There is a cafe with fairly healthy cuisine inside the Museum (the only cafe open in Houston’s Museum District on a Monday, we discovered) and a small gift shop.

A multi-story parking garage is across the street and costs $5-$7.

Houston Children’s Museum phone guy (Scarborough photo)

Other nearby Museum District attractions include the excellent Houston Museum of Natural Science (where I spent a rather restless night on the floor awhile back during a Cub Scout “Night at the Museum” outing,)   the unique Buffalo Soldiers National Museum (many African-American soldiers served on the Texas frontier) and the Houston Zoo in Hermann Park.

The METRO light rail is also handy for getting around.

(The Children’s Museum of Houston, 1500 Binz, Houston, TX 77004. Phone (713) 522-1138)

Categories
Photos Texas USA

Photo of the Week: Czech Goodies in Texas

Kolaches at Weikel’s Bakery, La Grange, Texas (Scarborough photo)

This photo was taken at Weikel’s Bakery (“We Gotcha Kolache”) in La Grange – it’s a Czech stronghold in central Texas.

Many Czechs and Germans settled in this part of the state starting in the 1840s and 1850s; that’s why sausage is a big deal with our BBQ,  Spoetzl Brewery’s Shiner beer is popular, there are active Texas polka radio stations and you can find kolaches (a fruit or cheese-filled Czech pastry) in a small town between Austin and Houston.

At the bakery, each of us had a pig-in-a-blanket (a sausage wrapped in bread) that was quite yummy, then everyone picked out a pastry choice.  I regret not grabbing one of the delish-looking pecan bars while I had a chance, though my pecan-studded Rice Krispie treat was just fine.

Many of you may remember the town of La Grange from both the ZZ Top song and because it was the home of the Chicken Ranch brothel, subject of the musical “Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.”

My teen and I laughed over that story, but I didn’t share it with my 8-year-old son.

The Texas Czech Heritage and Cultural Center is in La Grange, and there is a Czech heritage celebration every May that closes with a polka Mass.

Categories
Tips USA

Family-Friendly Pennsylvania

Mountain Craft Days in September, Somerset Historical Center (courtesy LaurelHighlands.org)Today, the 4th of July, seems an appropriate time to post some highlights from my article on Education.com about taking the kids to Pennsylvania.

You can’t lose with the home of the Liberty Bell, Ben Franklin and the Philadelphia Art Museum (remember Rocky running up those steps in the movie?)

The article is titled “Plan on Pennsylvania for Family Fun and Learning,” and here are four of the eighteen places and events I featured:

  • Little League Museum – Batter up! Organized baseball for young boys started in 1939 in Williamsport, PA and the Little League World Series is still played here at the hallowed ball field behind the Museum, which also includes softball exhibits. There are displays about the history of the game, including uniforms, equipment and famous players who started in Little League. Batting and pitching areas with instant replay allow swing analysis and the ever-satisfying crack of a ball against a bat.
  • Laurel Highlands – Southeast of Pittsburgh, this pretty part of PA has attractions that run the gamut from the three miles of natural passages in the state’s largest cave, Laurel Caverns, to Frank Lloyd Wright’s iconic home built over a creek, Fallingwater (plus two other Wright homes in the region.) There are numerous covered bridges using a variety of construction techniques, several historic roads including part of the first transcontinental highway, the Fort Necessity National Battlefield from the French and Indian Wars, the Johnstown Flood (1889) Museum and the Mountain Playhouse, which is the state’s oldest professional resident summer theater and performs in a 200 year-old grist mill.
  • Washington Crosses the Delaware – Every year on Christmas Day (and also for a dress rehearsal on the second Sunday in December) Revolutionary War uniformed reenactors cross the Delaware River in wooden boats to boldly attack Hessian troops. Washington Crossing Historic Park also has numerous Family Programs year-round, cooking programs, farm demonstrations and a summer history camp.
  • Mütter Museum – Housed in the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, this highly unusual collection of medical artifacts is not for the particularly squeamish (its tagline is “Disturbingly Informative”) but it will be a huge hit for any future doctors or biologists in your house. Over 20,000 anatomic and pathological objects have been collected here since 1858, to educate future physicians about all manner of human body phenomena. Plaster casts of the original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng (and their conjoined livers) and a tumor that was secretly removed from President Grover Cleveland are just a few of the highlights.

Reenactors at Fort Ligonier, Pennsylvania (courtesy LaurelHighlands.org)

Did I miss any good ones?

I know I have at least one reader who lived in PA with three kids for many years….and yeah, I should have called her for input. 🙂

Check out the article on Education.com and leave a comment, either on their site or this one, or both – thanks!