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USA

See the Miracle Worker performed at Helen Keller’s Ivy Green

Your annual June reminder if you’re anywhere near Tuscumbia in northwest Alabama….

Every summer at Ivy Green, the birthplace of the amazing author, speaker and writer Helen Keller, there is a professional outdoor production of The Miracle Worker, William Gibson’s drama about Keller’s early life and relationship with her teacher, Annie Sullivan.

This year the performance dates are June 4 through July 10, 2010, and tickets are $10 reserved seating and $8.00 general admission.

You may also want to visit during the Helen Keller Festival June 21-27, 2010 at Spring Park in Tuscumbia;  it’s a more city-wide, general event with live music, arts, food, sports and shopping specials.

The Festival is on Facebook, on Twitter and there are cool photos on Flickr as well.

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Tips USA

Helen Keller’s story: the “Miracle Worker” at Ivy Green

Helen Keller water pump at Ivy Green, Tuscumbia, Alabama (photo by Sheila Scarborough)There are only a few days left to see it, if you’re near Tuscumbia in northwest Alabama before July 11….

Every summer at Ivy Green, the birthplace of the amazing author, speaker and writer Helen Keller, there is a professional outdoor production of The Miracle Worker, William Gibson’s drama about Keller’s early life and relationship with her teacher, Annie Sullivan.

For those unfamiliar with the story, Ms. Sullivan (almost blind herself) had a “tough row to hoe” in the Keller household as she tried to teach a spoiled, deaf, blind, mute but brilliant Helen that language could be expressed by hand gestures, or sign language.

To see the two-hour play on the grounds of Helen’s own house is a special experience.

Like a knucklehead, I forgot to put up a post in time to also tell you about Tuscumbia’s annual Helen Keller Festival held in late June, but get it on your calendar for next year.

The state’s tourism Web site has more ideas for northern Alabama travel with kids.

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USA

A one-tank Tennessee and Alabama budget road trip

(This Southeast Bargain Loop post is a guest contribution by budget travel expert Tim Leffel; he’s a Nashville resident when he’s not traveling with his family in Mexico and Belize.)

Friends at the Chattanooga Aquarium (photo courtesy Tim Leffel)In these tight economic times, here’s a one-gas-tank family road trip loop that won’t break the bank.

As the author of the books The World’s Cheapest Destinations and Make Your Travel Dollars Worth a Fortune, I get a lot of calls from reporters and readers asking for cheap family travel ideas. My main advice for domestic travel is to spend time outside the big cities and major tourist draws.

Smaller towns and cities are frequently half the cost when it comes to lodging and attractions.

The following loop takes place around my home town of Nashville, Tennessee, and has some great travel spots with kids.

Start in any of the destinations covered below if arriving by car or plane, or arrive in Atlanta and get out of town, driving the two hours to Chattanooga.

Chattanooga, Tennessee

This is, hands down, one of my favorite small cities in the U.S. for family travel. The revitalized downtown is a case study in how to create a pedestrian-friendly and bike-friendly central core on two sides of a river.

There are quite a few hotels in the thick of things, or stay at the Holiday Inn Chattanooga Choo-choo (where I recently scored a Priceline deal under $50 a night) and take the frequent electric shuttle bus to downtown. The excellent fresh and salt water Tennessee Aquarium here is $22 adults/$15 kids compared to $5 more each at Atlanta’s Georgia Aquarium. Or you can spend a bit more and get a combo ticket with the IMAX theater. Don’t bother printing out the fake coupons on the Chattanooga tourism site though: it’s the same price if you just walk up to the window.

There are plenty of other attractions you can drop money on here, so pick carefully between famous Rock City, Ruby Falls, the Incline Railway, a minor league baseball stadium, and the Children’s Discovery Center. On the north side of the river there’s a great restored carousel (50 cents a ride for kids 12 & under), a theater, an attractive park, funky shops, and reasonable restaurants.

Chattanooga, Tennessee carousel (photo by Tim Leffel)From Chattanooga you can head two hours northwest to Nashville or southwest to the Unclaimed Baggage Center on the way to Huntsville.

Unclaimed Baggage Center, Alabama

Nearly equidistant from Chattanooga and Huntsville, Alabama’s Unclaimed Baggage Center is where homeless bags and their contents end up. Imagine a giant Goodwill store filled with things you actually want to buy. People tend to take their best stuff on vacation, so clothes are often near-new and I bought two shirts that actually still had tags on them. Naturally there are lots of sun hats, snorkels, MP3 players, and suitcases, but also a wide range of other items, from books to golf clubs to unopened cosmetics. I scored about $200 worth of stuff for $60 and I saw some families filling up entire shopping carts.

There’s no cost to look around and there’s a cafe on site if you need to rest up for a second round.

There’s no real reason to stick around this area for the night, so move on to Huntsville, but stop by Cathedral Caverns on the way and take in an impressive cave complex for $10 adults, $5 kids.

Huntsville, AL

Huntsville‘s main claim to fame is the National Space and Rocket Center. At $25 for adults and $20 for kids (combo ticket with a movie), this is not a cheap stop, but the center packs a lot into that admission charge.

Categories
USA

Family Road Trip and Memorial Day Travel: Time’s A’Wasting.

Roadside Fruit Stand, Crystal River, Florida (Scarborough photo)If you’re like me, the weeks simply vaporize into some sort of alternate universe, leaving the real world an unplanned organizational wasteland.

Sorry travelers; for the US readers the Memorial Day weekend May 27-28 is fast approaching.

Do you have a plan? Stay local? Short/long road trip? Fly somewhere?

Time for family travel planning link-o-rama….

First up (to get you in the official road trippin’ mood) is Rolf Potts interviewing Jamie Jensen, the author of the great guidebook “Road Trip USA” about the “Allure of the American Road Trip.” Makes me want to go get into the car despite gas prices. For more ideas, check out Jensen’s book and Web site.

Here are some good suggestions for drives in the Western US.

When you’re cruising the byways and getting hungry, always check out Roadfood for local, sometimes offbeat places to eat. Teresa Plowright at About’s Travel With Kids site has links to steer you to places where kids eat free.

If you’re a BBQ fanatic like me, you’ll enjoy this USA Today article on 10 places to get the good meaty stuff across the USA. (My personal fave, not listed, is Iron Works BBQ in Austin, TX.)

At a loss for ideas? Frommer’s has a few in their list of unique summer festivals (Georgia’s Summer Redneck Games vs Charleston’s Spoleto; they’ve got you covered.) About’s Travel With Kids has a ton of ideas and links tied to Memorial Day.

Combine adventure/outdoors travel with an urban setting — Smarter Travel shows you how & where. Close to my neck of the woods in North Florida is the Florida Folk Festival, headlined this year by Rosanne Cash.

Sing Along at the Alabama Music Hall of Fame (Scarborough photo)

And (have mercy!) if you insist on visiting hot, muggy Orlando this time of year and taking the kids to Disney World, Fodor’s offers a Survival Guide here and some more tips here.

The park is too big to wander through without a plan unless you want to lose your mind.

Remember, park in the morning, hang out at the hotel pool in the afternoon, more park at night. My pick for the least-crazed-with-crowds park is MGM Studios. For me, the one to minimize/avoid is Magic Kingdom; just a freakin’ madhouse.

Finally, when you’re planning a hotel stay, consider one with a large water-play area for everyone to cool down; this article profiles a few.

Have a terrific time, and afterwards come back here to the Family Travel blog to tell us how it went!