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

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

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.

Video of the week: Colonial Williamsburg

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Earlier this year we took a family press trip to Virginia’s “Historic Triangle” (Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown and Yorktown) and our tourguides gave us a disposable digital video camera to play with.

The CVS disposable costs about US$30 and then another US$12-13 to develop, but it did motivate me to film without my usual over-analyzing and artistic angst. Once I show you the good clips from it, I’m going to start using the video mode on my Kodak digital camera, for better video quality.

I’ve never had a video camera, so I made all of the usual newbie mistakes: panning/moving the camera too fast so that the resulting video induces vomiting, simply forgetting that I had the thing in my purse, and then not getting around to getting the clips off of the camera and onto my computer.

With great fanfare, I’d like to announce that in addition to filming a little video clip of me with a laptop camera, I actually drove over to my local CVS pharmacy yesterday and got the contents of the camera onto a DVD. I popped the DVD into my laptop and voila — a whole lot of “OMG, I forgot I filmed that!”

So, here is my first attempt at doing a little travel video work for Family Travel’s Photo/Video of the Week — it’s a short narrated clip from July 2007, taken on Duke of Gloucester Street in front of the King’s Arms Tavern in Colonial Williamsburg.

(1/12/08 - The original video seems to have somehow disappeared, so here is a link to it on YouTube in case it drops out again….)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uAza9uCLKM

Colonial Williamsburg: a homeschooler report

Friday, October 26th, 2007
Last month I put up a post announcing Home Educator Week in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia, and one of our homeschooling readers seized the opportunity to take her two kids and immerse themselves in Colonial America for ... [Continue reading this entry]

It’s Home Educator Week in Colonial Williamsburg

Saturday, September 15th, 2007
                       Colored yarns at the weaver's, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia (Scarborough photo)  For those of my readers who homeschool, ... [Continue reading this entry]

Explore before you go with travel video

Monday, July 16th, 2007
Get it on film (courtesy Dom Dada on Flickr's Creative Commons)[Continue reading this entry]

George Washington Fought Here: Yorktown

Saturday, July 14th, 2007
Yorktown Victory Center Colonial Army encampment (Scarborough photo)I'm going a little bit out of order here as ... [Continue reading this entry]

Who’s on first in Jamestown?

Wednesday, July 11th, 2007
Commemorative statue of Pocahontas at Historic Jamestowne (Scarborough photo)
Thirteen years before the Pilgrims ... [Continue reading this entry]

Forsooth, the blogging is light in Virginia

Monday, July 9th, 2007

We’re heading to Virginia

Tuesday, July 3rd, 2007
Colonial Williamsburg at night (courtesy VisitWilliamsburg)
When I wrote a post about [Continue reading this entry]

Virginia’s Three-Cornered Hat: History, Water Park, Roller Coaster

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
You have a friend in the history booksIf you're looking for a great combination of living U.S. history combined with theme park fun, consider ... [Continue reading this entry]