Sometimes it’s hard enough to figure out where you’re going for family vacation this year, let alone what you’ll do once you get there. Luckily Tripadvisor just released the 2021 Travelers’ Choice “Best of the Best” Things to Do Awards and for the first time there’s a whole family-friendly category!

If you’re headed to the Smoky Mountains area, make sure to look up Smoky Mountain Outdoors Rafting. The company’s Upper Pigeon Smoky Mountains rafting trip is the number one ranked family activity worldwide, with 395 glowing reviews. Family members eight and up can take on Class III and Class IV rapids, but the activity is billed safe for beginners! The most recent comment? “A 10/10 experience.”

Here’s the Top-10 list of family-friendly fun:

  1. Exciting Upper Pigeon Smoky Mountains Rafting Trip, Hartford, Tenn.
  2. Whale Watching Trips to Stellwagen Bank Marine Sanctuary, Gloucester, Mass.
  3. 2-Hour Strasbourg Euro Tour by Segway, Strasbourg, France
  4. Elijah Mountain Gem Mine plus On-Site Goat Farm, Asheville, NC
  5. Private, luxury, custom charters to Stingray City, Snorkeling & More, Grand Cayman Islands
  6. Athabasca River Mile 5, Jasper, Alberta
  7. Natural History Walk: ONLY YOUR SOCIAL BUBBLE (private tour), Monteverde, Costa Rica
  8. Ada’s Tours – Pompeii, Pompeii, Italy
  9. Abu Dhabi City Tour Including Ferrari World Tickets Guided Tour from Dubai, Dubai, UAE
  10. Amber Cove Shore Excursion: 27 Waterfalls of Damajagua / Cruise Ship Passengers, Puerto Plata, DR

Whether you decide to whale watch, mine for gems or raft the rivers, you’re in for a real treat. For even more recommendations from Tripadvisor, check out the full Traveler’s Choice lists for 2021. Happy travels!

––Sarah Shebek

Featured image courtesy of SMO Rafting and TripAdvisor 

 

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Bye-bye Brenda. Fox recently announced the Beverly Hills 90210 reboot, BH90201, will not come back for a second season.

Last summer’s much-anticipated return of the ’90s fave brought original show stars Tori Spelling, Jennie Garth, Jason Priestley, Shannon Doherty, Ian Ziering, Gabrielle Carteris and Brian Austin Green back to the small screen. Even though the series was Fox’s highest-rated summer debut, it looks like BH90210 is the last time we’ll see the Peach Pit gang back together—at least on TV.

In a statement made to Entertainment Tonight, Fox said, “We are so proud to have reunited in a very special summer event one of the network’s legacy series and casts with 90210 fans across the country.” The statement continued, “Profound thanks to and respect for Brian, Gabrielle, Ian, Jason, Jennie, Shannen and Tori, who, along with the entire crew and everyone at Fox and CBS Television Studios, poured their hearts and souls into this truly inventive and nostalgic revival.”

90210′s David, actor Brian Austin Green, wrote on Instagram, “What a fun trip back. Thanks to the fans.” Green added, “When Fox picked up the show it was always billed as a summer event. Thanks to Fox we did 306 episodes of 90210 (9021bro can fact check that number) if the show gets picked up somewhere else we will talk about making more but thank you to all the fans that kept the dream alive and supported us for so long.”

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Courtesy of 90210 Productions/FOX

 

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Nothing ruins a good beach day like a pesky, preventable sunburn. After all, you’ve got sandcastles to build and little sea creatures to find! From the latest styles to total SPF coverage, keep those precious noggins out of the sun with our picks for the best functional and stylish sun hats. Scroll down to see our favorites.

Noggins Sun Hats

Noggins

These hats are not only made of UPF 50+ fabric, they offer lightweight and effective coverage for the face and necks of your little sun-soakers. Billed as "the sun hat that will stay on" they have an adjustable chin strap with a safety release buckle as well as an adjustable feature to make it fit just right. There's a mesh lining, too, to help kiddos stay cool. 

$19.95. Available in blue camo and pink butterfly, at veyokids.com 

Wallaroo Bucket Hat in Maui

Wallaroo Hats

Who says sun hats have to be monochrome? The Wallaroo Hat Company makes an array of hats that fit kids as young as 3 mos., up to 5 years. They are UPF 50+ and made to block 97% of UV rays, and have the Skin Cancer Foundation Seal of Approval. Add to that some serious style and variety and you've got a great choice for the under six crowd. We love this Hawaiian inspired print! 

Get one at wallaroohats.com,  $20

 

Sunday Afternoons Kids Play Hat in Reptile

Sunday Afternoons

Sunday Afternoons are meant to be spent at the beach, right? We love all their styles, but this reptile print hat might be our fave. With a wide brim keep rays at bay, a comfy sweat wicking liner that will withstand any type of excitement and an adjustable strap to keep everything in place, plus UPF 50+ material! They come in a ton of other patterns, too! 

Available at Sunday Afternoons, $26.

Kids Ribbon Fedora from the Gap

GAP

Get your dapper dude (or dudette) ready for a sunny day out with this stylish fedora from Gap. It's lightweight (100% paper) and will keep their heads cool while deflecting the glare. There's no UPF in this hat so it's better for being out-and-about than a day at the beach. 

Find it at gap.com, $19.95

Handmade Bucket Hat

Designed by a mom for a friend whose son just can’t keep his hat on, this reversible, denim topper is kid-tested and mother approved. We love the measurements of this sunshade---the brim lands right above eye-sight---so kiddos can be protected and still see all!

Available at Etsy, $30.

Floppy Sun Hat by Flap Happy in Red Dot

Flap Happy

Pair this cheerful topper with a picnic in the sun. It’s UPF 50+, and the generous brim provides protection for her sensitive ears and neck.

Available at Flap Happy, $16.95.

Reversible Baby Bucket Hat from Patagonia

Patagonia

This reversible sun bucket hat from Patagonia is UPF 50+ and made to stay right on that little sweet head to prevent sunburn and overexposure. The fabric is wind and water resistant and dries quickly, plus it packs small so you can aways keep it on hand. The chin-strap is adjustable and the brim protects head, face and neck. 

Get it patagonia.com, $29

Coolibar Kid's Surfs Up All Sport Hat

For serious sun coverage, keep them shielded in these All Sport toppers that are rated UPF 50+ and come with an attached drape to protect the neck. It’s travel friendly, meaning you can crush it up in your beach bag when it’s time to go.

Available at Coolibar, $22.

UV SKinz Girls Ribbon Hat

VSkinz

For the little ladies up to age 5, this hat shades eyes, ears and necks. The ruffled ribbon design will make your girlie-girl happy while the SPF 50+ coverage gives Mom and Dad confidence that  their sun-loving kiddo has complete coverage. We love the added bonus of a bendable brim, making for easy on-the-go storage.

Available at UV Skinz, 23.95.

— Amber Guetebier & Emily Warman

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What would it have been like to attend a certain school of magic while a certain bespectacled student was there stealing the limelight? Move over Gryffindor, this is the story of The Puffs — the seemingly dud house at Hogwarts where the students’ loftiest ambition is to take home third prize, if they’re lucky. (It’s an HP-inspired show. Here’s our review!)

Hogwarts on its Head
The play originally opened for a grown-up audience at New York’s Peoples Improv Theater and had an extended midtown run before its latest open-ended production at New World Stages.  The weekend performances are billed as appropriate for all ages — but we’re suggesting 8 and up.  (Turns out puberty can be just as awkward in wizard school as grade school!)

The play races through an edited version of the seven Harry Potter books but it’s another orphaned wizard, Wayne, raised by his uncle in New Mexico, who is the central character of Puffs. Geeky and paunchy, Wayne has to come to terms with his own failures in magic school in order to find out where the real power is: in friendship.

Know Your Potter
If the Potter fans in your life have devoured the entire Hogwarts feast in book or movie form and know the difference between a house elf and a hurling hex, you are ready for Puffs (you can get away without having seen The Cursed Child).

If you can’t remember where Sirius fits in or if Slytherin’s a character or not, you might be better off booking the Gazillion Bubble Show on Stage 2 on the floor above.

The belly laughs come when the Potter story we already know surfaces in the lives of Wayne and his friends, although kids will love some of the physical and visual comedy in the form of spells that don’t work and Mr. Voldy’s mishaps with his megaphone.

Quick Fire Jokes and Costume Changes
With Harry’s triumvirate reduced to a mop and a wig, Wayne and his closest friends — a goth and a math nerd — are given the chance to shine and they nicely mirror the famous trio.

A series of lightning quick on and off-stage costume changes enable the 11 cast members to play the full range of students, teachers, beasts, ghosts and baddies from JK Rowling’s imagination and with a fast paced wit, bring to life seven years of being an underdog Puff while the overachievers win the prizes. Wayne and his team find themselves battling their own demons and, in sticking up for one another, learn some life lessons of their own.

True to the Last
Towards the end, the play teeters comically into a place that threatens to rewrite the original story, but the creators know their Potter audience too well, and while the show spins off the Hogwart’s world, it doesn’t offer an alternative ending. Wayne ends up back where he belongs, firmly in Harry’s shadow, but all the more powerful for discovering love is the greatest magic of all. (Awww.)

Need to Know
The show is an hour and 45 minutes without an intermission and does contain some strobe lighting, darkness, and dry ice effects, but it’s all about getting the laughs so there’s always some humor juxtaposed with anything eerie. (And if you know your Potter, you’ll know where the plot is headed.)

New World Stages is made up of five theatres and Puffs plays in an intimate setting on Stage 5. You can take drinks into the auditorium and the lounge is set up with Hogwarts style mirror frames for some pre-show photo ops.

PUFFS or: Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic & Magic
Tickets: $67 – $87
New World Stages,
340 West 50th St.
Midtown West
646-871-1730
Family-friendly performances:  Sat 2 p. m.  and 8 p. m. Sun 3 p. m  and 7.30 p. m.
Online: puffstheplay.com

Have you seen Puffs: Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

-Emily Myers

all photos courtesy of Hunter Canning

Yes, it’s a thing, and lucky us, the Museum of Ice Cream is coming to New York City’s Meatpacking District. The (genius) invention of a group of “ice cream-obsessed” designers, artists and friends, this sweet celebration of everyone’s favorite summer treat will welcome visitors from July 29 to August 31. Read on to get the scoop!

photo: TheCulinaryGeek via Flickr

I scream, you scream…etc.
Billed as a “lick-able, likeable, sharable ice-cream-centric experience” (and, no doubt, a star of Instagram feeds everywhere next month), the Museum of Ice Cream seems to skew more arty and fun immersive ice cream-inspired happening than chronicler of the frosty desert’s history. That is, you’re more likely to swim in a giant pool of (faux) rainbow-colored sprinkles than read about the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair, where the ice cream cone was born. We have no problem with that.

You’ll find the pop-up museum steps from the Whitney Museum of American Art as well as the Gansevoort Street entrance to the High Line, so you can plan a veritable arty/groovy/tasty outing for the family if you so choose.

photo: Sweet Flour Bake Shop via Flickr

Did you say, “giant pool of rainbow colored sprinkles?”
Yes — and that’s just the tip of the ice cream cone. Organizers also promise “edible balloons”, an immersive chocolate room and a collaborative massive ice cream sundae.

In addition, visitors can swing on an ice cream sandwich for two, seesaw on an ice cream scooper and engage in some kind of ice cream matchmaking via a custom app in Tinder Land.

Plus, 20 renowned NYC artists will contribute presumably ice cream-inspired visual designs to the space.

photo: Shari’s Berries via Flickr

Real ice cream included
It would be kind of a cruel joke to open a Museum of Ice Cream and not serve any; visitors to the pop-up will get to enjoy two customs takes on the frozen treat.

“Food futurist” and founder of the Future Food Studio Dr. Irwin Adam will be cooking up inventive flavors exclusive to the museum that will be available for tasting, and celebrated ice cream purveyors such as Black Tap and OddFellows Ice Cream Co. will serve the featured Scoop of the Week. (Tastings are included in the price of admission.)

How to get in — and get free ice cream
So excited you can’t stand it? Visitors who arrive between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. on opening day July 29 get free admission and ice cream! (We’re guessing the lines will be…long.)

Admission all other times will be $18/person, or $30/couple.

Museum of Ice Cream
July 29-Aug. 31
Sun., 11 a.m. 8 p.m.; Mon. & Wed. – Sat., 11 a.m. – 9 p.m. (Closed Tues.)
100 Gansevoort St.
Meatpacking District
Online: museumoficecream.com

Will your family be heading to the Museum of Ice Cream? Let us know in the comments below!

—Mimi O’Connor

 

The holidays are here, and we all have places to go and people to see (Grandma, for starters!). If you plan to fly, you know that getting to the airport with kids is half the journey. Instead of trying your luck with a cab, book a car service that caters to families. We did the legwork for you and found those that go out of their way to accommodate little travelers.

Going Green Limousine
When a limo rolls up to your house, your kid’s eyes will light up. And yours will too once you see how family friendly Going Green Limousine is. Drivers do pickups and drop-offs in Chicago and the ‘burbs, as well as Northwest Indiana and the Milwaukee area. The fleet is mainly hybrid and flex-fuel vehicles because this company strives to reduce its carbon footprint. Another big plus? No charge for additional passengers, late-night or early-morning runs.  The company offers several types of seats for kiddos: backless boosters ($5), high back boosters ($7) and five-point-harness car seats (rear facing, convertible and forward facing for $10) — all pre-installed before you get picked up. You can get a vehicle with a DVD player by request. Newspapers are also available upon request and are complimentary. Rates start at $55 for sedan service; be prepared to factor in a required 20% gratuity.
773-295-5959 or goinggreenlimousine.com

Chicago Sedan & MiniBus Service
Choose your mode of transport: This service offers sedans, limos, vans and buses. No strangers at making airport runs, they do it at a flat rate or as an hourly charter service. Most larger vehicles have DVD players and can be requested at the time your reservation is made. They offer car seats free of charge, but only carry forward-facing ones. Rates start at $52 for sedan service and a 15% gratuity is added, along with a $6 gas surcharge.
866-967-5612 or chicago-sedan-service-a1.com

Uncrabby Cabby
No need to put on your grumpy pants before riding with these guys. The family-friendly small business is known for friendliness and efficiency. It serves Chicago and several surrounding suburbs (check the website for the full list). One thing families appreciate is that last-minute transportation requests can often be accommodated. Uncrabby Cabby offers a flat rate for each service, starting at $75, not including driver gratuity. They have infant seats, forward-facing toddler seats and boosters, and charge an additional $10 for the use of them.
877-202-8294 or uncrabbycabby.com

Chicago’s Finest Limo
This sleek fleet is a bit pricey when compared to the other options, but they offer something special: They’ll monitor your flight status and will change your pick-up/drop-off accordingly. Look to them for sedans, limos, SUV and shuttles. Vehicles with DVD players are available upon request. Car seats — infant, toddler, rear and forward-facing — cost $25 extra. Rates start at $68 for airport service in a sedan; service to the ‘burbs has a slightly higher rate (check website for details). Gratuity is not included.
866-696-0222 or chicagosfinestlimo.com

Ride In Bliss
Minivans are a big part of what makes this company go. Additionally, it has limos, sedans and SUVs. Car seats are available for use at no extra charge (there are infant seats, boosters and forward-facing toddler seats). Very reasonable flat rates from airports to all suburbs and the Loop start at $90. All other rates are billed per distance and time (the hourly rate is between $65-$150 depending on the vehicle). DVD players are available upon request. Ride In Bliss has an easy online reservation system and often offers a 10% discount to new customers for registering and paying online.
847-845-1151 or rideinbliss.com

Have you ever used a car service with the family? Tell us about it in the Comments section below.

— Angie Berthelsen

x
Photos: Scott Woods-Fehr and Jencu on Flickr Creative Commons, Ride In Bliss

It was once the private estate of John and Lilla Leach; world-travelers, botanists, and all around cool Oregonians who called their expansive garden and manor home Sleepy Hollow. Rad. They collected flowers and plants from all over the globe then gave them a home here. The Leaches bequeathed their estate to the City of Portland and the public was able to come traipsing through starting in 1983 thanks to a partnership with Friends of Leach and Portland Parks & Rec. Wait until you see this place. What an aptly-named gem it is – simply because you cannot help but relax and be inspired at the same time. Urban oasis anyone?

Sleepy Hollow err…Leach Botanical Garden boasts lots of room wander, explore, uncover and discover. It’s never crowded, consistently lovely and always free. With almost seventeen acres of awesomeness waiting, get ready for creek-side mosey-ing, winding trail exploring, native and unique plant, succulent and flower sniffing and stone step skipping. It’s such a magical place, it’s easy to forget how close to home(s) you are.    

The Johnson Creek Footbridge is open and awesome. This bridge isn’t always available to cross, but now in Spring it is open for all the joy you can muster. Yahoo! Kiddos and grownups will love walking on (right over the) water. Be sure to pause and take in the scene from here. It is a gorgeous place to be and like every bridge over bubbled water–it leads to some hidden delights on the other side like:

A very stop-and-play-worthy stone cabin, perfect for young ramblers to claim as their own. Ninja house? Hansel and Gretel’s lair? Princess or fairy cabin? Whatevs! The stone cabin is the perfect spot for a picnic or snack break and some good ol’ fashioned imaginary play.  

You can hug a dinosaur! Yup, you can. He loves hugs. But you can’t ride him. He’s not quite that strong. See if you can find this extinct garden delight and when you do get those arms around him. Stat! And be sure to say hello to the plant pot people, too. You’ll know ‘em when you see ‘em. 

Honeybee Hikes, summer camps and other classes keep it real. Really amazing that is! There seems to always be something cool happening for the kiddos here. Especially when school is out. Keep the learning and adventuring going strong with a few hours, days or a week of guided learning and discovery. The Leach Botanical Garden web site is a bevy of info about their award winning summer programs and their partnership with Audubon means you never know who (or should we say hoo-hoo) might be stopping by.


The Children’s Nature Fair is coming soon! Last but oh-so-far-from-least, mark your calendar for this annual collaboration with Johnson Creek Watershed Council, Zenger Farms, Portland Parks EE, Audubon Society of Portland and EEAO.  Blooming on Saturday, May 18 from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm, this year’s Children’s Nature Fair theme is Nature Explodes! and will feature volcanoes, oozy geology, arts & crafts, slug races, 25 cent mini ice cream cones, live music, ladybug walks, worm activities and something billed as the Mad Science’s Fire & Ice Show. Ok, sold. See ya there!

Leach Botanical Garden is free (donations welcome) and open Tuesday – Saturday 9:00 am – 4:00 pm and Sunday 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm.

6704 SE 122nd Ave
Portland, OR
503-823-9503

–Liz Overson

What did you do on your last visit to Leach Botanical Garden?

Photos courtesy of Leach Botanical Garden Facebook page and Liz Overson

Jews are known to have a joke for any occasion. And many of those jokes deal with the fact that, when it comes to the so-called High Holidays, Rosh HaShana (September 16, 2012) and Yom Kippur (September 25, 2012), tickets to services are expensive and, if you’re not already a synagogue member, very difficult to get. Not to mention, the services tend to be long, and not particularly child-friendly. Really how much atoning does the average pre-schooler have to do?

This year, though, the joke is on them, as Red Tricycle reveals a list of NYC places that offer meaningful services just right for kids – and at no cost, to boot!

Chabad
Various NYC locations
This ultra-Orthodox international organization makes no secret of the fact that their goal is to make secular Jews more observant. And, by more observant, they mean observant their way. That aside, they are usually incredibly tolerant of all levels of observance, and even welcome curious drop-bys. This year brings not only free, family friendly services at thirty-six different locations around New York City, but also their Second Annual Shofar in the Park at the Central Park Bandshell, where you can hear some real pros demonstrate how that ram’s horn should be blown!

Beit Simcha Torah Congregation
Jacob Javits Convention Center
655 West 34th Street
This LGBT Synagogue has been offering free services for thirty-nine years, becoming so popular along the way due to their inclusive – and cost free – policy that, in 1992, they moved to the Javits Center, welcoming close to 4000 worshippers each day. Families of absolutely every kind are accepted here, and no test (or proof) of sexual orientation is required.

Ansche Chesed
251 West 100th Street
Family Services at this Conservative synagogue don’t require membership, tickets, or reservations. Children are grouped by age, 3 and under, 4-7, and 8 and above, and parents are welcome to attend as well, also at no charge. Programs are lead by students from the nearby Jewish Theological Seminary. Though all are invited for the ceremonial walk to Riverside Dive and the Hudson River for Tashlich, the casting of bread – and sins – upon the waters, youngsters have been known to shortcut the process via a bucket on the temple’s roof.

Rodeph Sholom
7 West 83rd Street
This Reform congregation offers main sanctuary tickets for members but, on Tuesday, September 18, the second day of Rosh HaShana, they are inviting the entire community, members and non-members alike, to a service for families with special needs. Expect music, interactive learning, Torah, apples and honey, and an American Sign Language interpreter.  The program will finish in time to join the rest of Rodeph Sholom for Tashlich in Central Park.

Kol Haneshama
805 Columbus Avenue at 100th Street
Since 2008, this Center for Jewish Life and Enrichment has been focused on enhancing the spiritual selves of Jews not affiliated with a particular movement of Judaism, with an emphasis on families. Free services will be available during the High Holidays for adults, and a separate one for children. Knowledge of Hebrew isn’t required, but reservations are.

Union Temple
Park Slope Jewish Center
1320 8th Avenue
Brooklyn
It’s a Brownstone Brooklyn Service with free tickets for all who make a reservation, and not just childcare, but also designated programs broken down by age, 1-6, 6-12, and a Youth Group Study Program for Teens is included. Seats are first come/first served, so an early arrival is advised.

Best High Holyday Services
1157 Lexington Avenue between 79th and 80th Streets
Would the website address lie to you? Billed as Best High Holyday Services, this not particularly modest organization has been providing free Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur services for 29 years in a stated attempt to attract more members to their East Side Synagogue.  Anybody whether single, empty-nesters, young families/couples, intermarried, the interfaith dating, beginners, people interested in Judaism, seniors, students, Russian Jews, Reform, Conservative (though, by implication, not Orthodox) are welcome without ticket or reservation. Though donations are very strongly encouraged. We daresay, they are forcefully insisted upon.

Meanwhile, in a bit of fun irony this holiday season, The Wall Street Synagogue is offering open, free seating for all. Workman’s Circle, proudly socialist since 1900, is charging.

To find more High Holiday services near you, visit: http://nomembershiprequired.com/

May you all have a Sweet New Year!

— Alina Adams

photo credit: Alina Adams & Alan Kotok via Flickr