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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.

Categories
USA

Forsooth, the blogging is light in Virginia

John, our costumed interpreter, leads the prospective apprentices at Colonial Williamsburg (Scarborough photo)

We are in Virginia’s Williamsburg area for a jam-packed press trip that includes my entire family, and I’m rapidly discovering that there are only 24 hours in the day.

I’m not the fastest blogger in the West, and by the time we straggle back to our lodgings at night I’m not able to post as often as I’d planned about our adventures in tri-cornered hats. 

Suffice it to say that today was half a “living history event” in Colonial Williamsburg and half a “screaming event” on various roller coasters at the Busch Gardens Europe theme park. 

In the morning, the kids in our group learned about the apprentice trades in the 1700s and visited a working weaver, brickmakers and a silversmith on an Apprentice Tour, one of many special visitor programs.  They had a great time, but temperatures were in the 90s F and a heat index above 100 degrees F, so there were some pretty wilted apprentices (and parents.)

At Busch Gardens, all of us except our too-young son had a chance to check out the new floorless dive coaster Griffon; plunging 205 feet, 90 degrees straight down, at up to 70 miles an hour. 

Just at the beginning of the ride. 

Yes, of course we loved it!

We will roll out and hit it hard again early tomorrow with the Jamestown Settlement, the first permanent English settlement in America and better known as home to Pocahontas and John Smith.

I hope to have a little break in the action tomorrow afternoon and write up some more posts for you.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia

Categories
USA

We’re heading to Virginia

Colonial Williamsburg at night (courtesy VisitWilliamsburg)

When I wrote a post about Colonial Williamsburg and the historic triangle last month, I had no idea that our family would travel there again anytime soon.

Yeah, verily, put on your powdered wig/buckled shoes and call up the fife and drums, because a press trip has fallen into my lap and all of us are getting on a plane this coming Friday to fly to Virginia. 

I’ll be blogging all during the trip about our experiences:  visiting the live-action story of democracy at Williamsburg’s Revolutionary City,  seeing what the archaeologists are digging up at historic Jamestown, a re-created Continental Army encampment with historical interpreters at Yorktown, and oh, yes, partying like it’s 1776 at Busch Gardens and Water Country USA.

Sainted Husband and young son also plan to try out some golf at the Kingsmill resort.

I have never been on an organized press trip/media tour, and this one came to me courtesy of the communications/PR folks at VisitWilliamsburg, who like this blog and want to reach all of you bloggy family travel enthusiasts out there and show you what they can offer.  Since I’ve visited the area several times on personal travel, I think I can give you a well-rounded, honest view of all aspects of a family vacation in one of the birthplaces of the U.S. 

More to follow….our first stop is flying into Norfolk, Virginia.

Technorati tags:  travel, family travel, Williamsburg, Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown, Yorktown, Virginia