Save on admission, snag free parking, and find all the budget-friendly food

One of the most beloved summer traditions since launching in 1880—the San Diego County Fair is back and better than ever on June 7-July 4! This year’s Fair theme, “Get Out There!”, inspires your family’s sense of outdoor adventure with everything from Ferris wheel rides with ocean views, fabulous concerts, and animal shows to homemade crafts, festive farm fun, and mouthwatering food. If you’re ready to let the good times roll while staying on budget, we have ways to save you money on everything from admission and food to rides and parking. After all, you should leave the fair with full hearts, not empty wallets.

How to Save on Admission Tickets to the San Diego County Fair

Save big on admission with these free and discount deals on tickets. While it’s easier for most families to purchase tickets online for the date they want to attend, tickets will also be available at the gate. Please note that the fair has moved to a cashless experience for admission and parking to help avoid wait times at the gate. There will only be 60,000 tickets for sale per fair day and certain days can sell out, so be sure to plan ahead.

Midweek:
Tickets are less expensive if you visit during the week from Wed.-Thurs. They’re more expensive on Fri.-Sun. (The fair is closed Mon. & Tues. in June.)

Kids Day:
Kids 12 and under are free every Friday! Ages 5 and under are free every day.

Discounts:
In early May, Vons and Albertsons stores are featuring $3 discount codes off adult tickets, good for any day of the fair. Available in-store only.

O’Reilly Auto Parts is offering a special promotional code for $5 off two midweek admission tickets. Available in-store only.

Teachers, Military, First Responders and Government Employees can get discounted tickets through GovX.

Cost:
Wed., Thurs., and Jul. 3: $15 for adults, $12 for seniors 62+, and $12 for youth ages 6-12

Fri-Sun and Jul. 4: $20 for adults, $17 for seniors 62+; $17 for youth ages 6-12 on Sat. and Sun. but free on Fri.

Buy tickets online here.

How to Save on Ride Passes to the San Diego County Fair

From the carousel and Ferris wheel to roller coasters and slides, there’s no shortage of thrills with the wide variety of rides at the fair. The Fun Zone features 39 exciting rides and is geared more towards older kids and adults while the Kids Zone features more than 40 age-appropriate rides designed for toddlers and younger children. Whatever your comfort level, there’s something for everyone.

BlastPass Ticket Packages:
The earlier you buy, the more ride tickets you’ll get. If you buy from April 22 – May 14, you’ll get 50% more, or from May 15-June 6, you’ll get 25% more. If you buy tickets after June 7, you’ll pay the regular rate. Click here for ride packages.

Unlimited Rides Deal:
Ride lovers will dig this deal with unlimited rides in the Fun Zone and Kids Zone for one price. “Pay-One-Price Ride Days” are only valid on Wed. and Thurs. from 11 am-8 pm. Wristbands cost $45 if you purchase them by June 6 or $49 after June 7. Purchase this deal in advance here or at the fair. 

7-Eleven Deal:
Save $5 off “Pay-One-Price Ride Days” by picking up a discount coupon when you buy any two 20-ounce Pepsi bottles at any San Diego 7-Eleven.

Tip:
Littles who don’t meet height requirements must be accompanied by a paying adult—so make sure you buy enough tickets!

Participation Rewards

This year, there are two one-day contests open to anyone who’d like to enter and receive free admission to the fair in return. Pint-sized (and adult) chefs are invited to whip up their best granola bars and bring them to the fair for judging on June 15 or if you’re more the artist type, you can compete in the Nature Found Objects Art Contest on June 29. Click here for entry forms and requirements.

Delicious Savings on Food

The fair has more than enough healthy eating options, but let’s be real—what you really came here for is a mind-blowing day of indulgence. From fried Oreos and fried Twinkies to funnel cakes and cheese fries, there’s infinite deliciousness to be had. We have a feeling with this year’s great outdoors theme, there may be some fried s’mores in your future as well. And no visit would be complete without a stop by Chicken Charlie’s—one of the most popular vendors at the fair. Whatever your pleasure, all that food can cost some serious cha-ching, so we have a couple of swell ideas to help you save.

Passport to Savings:
Buy a Passport to Savings coupon book for $5 to get more than $1,000 in savings on food, rides, games, and souvenirs. Click here to purchase.

BYO:
With six picnic areas located inside the fairgrounds, you are welcome to bring your own food, but drinks must be in a factory-sealed container, and alcohol is strictly prohibited.

How to Save on Parking Passes

The decision of where to park never seems more important than it does at the end of a long fair day when you have tired kiddos who must hike to the car. Luckily, the fair has several options for on-site, up-close parking for a fee as well as off-site parking for free. To save moolah, you can park at nearby Torrey Pines High School free of charge and catch a shuttle to the fair entrance. Please note that parking is subject to availability so it’s highly recommended to purchase your parking in advance.

Parking Cost: 
$20 on-site or $15 when you buy online for General Parking (Main Gate or Solana Gate); $50 for Preferred Parking (closest to main entrance); $10 for Horsepark Parking (two miles east of the fairgrounds) with free shuttles that take you to the main entrance; or free at Torrey Pines High School with shuttles that take you to the main entrance. Click here to purchase parking in advance.

Uber or Lyft:
Rideshare drop-offs and pick-ups are welcome. Look for the purple flags past the Main Gate and you will be directed to the Rideshare Lot.

Fair Hours:
The fair will be closed Mon. and Tues. in June. Open Wed.-Thurs. and Sun. from 11 am-10 pm and Fri. and Sat. from 11 am-11 pm

San Diego County Fair
2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd.
Del Mar Fairgrounds
Online: sdfair.com

OK, that’s an exaggeration…she didn’t really almost ruin my marriage, but she did make me very twitchy and short-tempered with my husband for a few weeks.

It started out innocently enough: One morning, my perennially messy husband began bemoaning the state of his dresser, as he tried in vain to locate an undershirt without pit stains or holes in it from within a tangled wad of old t-shirts.

“You should read that tidying up book,” I said sarcastically. To which my husband replied, “What are you talking about?”

After I explained the basic premise of Marie Kondo’s “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up” which was so hugely popular a few years back, I noticed a foreboding twinkle in my husband’s eye. Next thing I knew, he’d downloaded the audiobook and was listening to it every morning as he got ready for work.

His obsession began slowly, presenting itself in his innocent yet sweeping suggestions of how Kondo would handle my ongoing fight against the after-school clutter that my children amass—with graded papers spilling out over the dining room table and squished school snacks littering the bottoms of backpacks. At first, it was kind of endearing that he was noticing what I struggle with on a daily basis and offering sympathy and advice (albeit unsolicited advice).

Then, a week or so later, my husband quietly observed me tussling with our Tupperware cabinet. As I tried to find just the right storage container with matching lid for leftovers, he said, “Have you ever considered holding each of those storage containers in your hand and asking yourself, ‘Does this bring me joy?’” This was the first of many times in the coming weeks that my eyes rolled violently back in my head and I cursed the day that I ever uttered the words “Marie Kondo” to my oblivious husband.

But the straw that broke the camel’s back was the day that he suggested that “we” (meaning I) change the way that “we” (I) fold our laundry to better facilitate the ease with which we can find what we’re looking for in our dresser. I’d had enough.

You see, I’m the laundress (if you will) in our house. I’m the one who pre-treats stains, washes, dries, folds and hangs our laundry. It’s a job that I actually (mostly) enjoy—I find it meditative to quietly fold clothes and I enjoy the scent of fresh laundry—call me crazy. Also, I have it down to a science. I have a certain way that I do things. Certain days I launder bed linens and towels. Certain ways I sort delicates from denim and certain ways I fold t-shirts, socks and towels. Don’t question my madness and please don’t accuse me of proliferating a 1950s housewife stereotype because I’ve already done all of this myself. But this is what works for our family. And so it is.

So, you can imagine the offense that I took when my husband, who has maybe used the washing machine once in our marriage—and, in spite of holding a degree in technology, still seems wholly unable to figure out how it works—suggested that I was doing the laundry wrong. That’s when my head just about exploded. But I humored him and let him earnestly teach me the “roll technique,” while fully planning to go about folding the clothes my own damn way as soon as he’d left the room.

But then, something unexpected happened: I started working at perfecting “the roll” and I figured it out. I began to see the value in it. I found that I was easily able to fit more shirts in our drawers and was able to find just the shirt that I needed without upending the whole drawer in the process. Rather quickly and unexpectedly, Kondo’s method of rolling t-shirts turned our drawers into organized, easily navigable laundry holders. Maybe Kondo—and my husband—were onto something here… grumble, grumble.

As the weeks passed, the verve with which my husband initially embraced the “KonMari” lifest‌yle began to wane. While he has steadily kept up the momentum of many of the ideas and organizational tips that the author explains in her book, he has let go of some of the more rigid habits (for instance, he’s finally stopped uttering the words, “Does that bring you joy?” and I’m forever grateful because that was annoying as all hell).

And I’ve actually continued to implement the roll method of laundry folding. I think it’s safe to say that I am not only a believer now, but also a proponent of the whole idea (but don’t tell my husband this).  Another good thing to come from this journey is that now my husband often helps me fold laundry, so that’s an improvement in our previous division of the laundry labor.

All in all, I like the ideas that Kondo presents in her book. Nothing that she writes is particularly earth-shattering, but she does offer a fresh perspective on organization. What challenged me most was my husband reading one book on organization and thereby declaring himself the resident expert on de-cluttering and laundry. Ultimately, though, the KonMari method effected change in our home and I think that my husband has a new appreciation for what I do on a daily basis to keep our home functioning. Also, I’ve learned to be more judicious with my self-help book suggestions from now on. Be careful for you wish for…

Originally published May 2017.

RELATED LINKS
My House Is a Disaster & I Couldn’t Love It More
How to Clear the Clutter from Your Kids’ Rooms for Good
Dear Husband: I Need More Help from You

I'm Jenny, a married, sober mother to two kids and a whole gaggle of pets. I've lived in Texas my whole life and am the by-product of two dyed-in-the-wool Southern families. As a result, I can write a phenomenal, heart-felt thank you note and never wear white shoes after Labor Day.

What could make Taco Tuesdays even more magical than they already are? A unicorn taco holder, of course!

Whether your kiddo is all about tacos, totally into unicorns or loves them both equally, Amazon has a stand that holds two tacos—and it’s a pink unicorn.

photo: Amazon

The unicorn taco holder sells for just under $19, is dishwasher safe and is 100 percent BPA-free. Don’t worry if your finicky eater suddenly shuns tacos. According to the product description, the unicorn awesomeness can hold toast or sandwiches too.

Along with the unique unicorn, Amazon also sells a camel taco holder ($14.79). Both the unicorn and camel taco holders come in packs of two. If you want a variety, Amazon also has a multi-pack (one Ultrasaurus and one Triceratops) for just under $19.

—Erica Loop

 

RELATED STORIES

Unicorn Christmas Trees Are the Most Magical New Trend of the Season

There’s a Llama Cereal & It’s Hitting the Shelves Now

10 Unicorn Foods the Kids Will Flip Over

Photo: Jamie Johnson via Hashtag Momfail

Over the course of the last few weeks, my four-year-old has developed a horrible new habit. He gets out of bed multiple times a night, begins screaming, “MAMA” at the top of his lungs, and moves into the bedroom, still screaming, until I sit up and have a conversation with him about why he is screaming for me.

I cannot tell a lie, it completely and totally sucks. There is nothing like being jarred from sleep by a four-year-old with a blood-curdling scream. The first time it happened, I was terrified. I thought he had fallen out of his bed and broken his leg or that something equally as terrifying had happened.

But no. That is and never has been the case.

All I have to do is ask him what’s wrong and he will calm down after about 30 seconds and say something along the lines of, “My big toe itches. Will you scratch it?” through snot and tears. So I scratch his toe or rub his back, or get him “this much” to drink.

As a person that truly loves sleep and needs at least eight hours a night to function, I have developed a habit where I lie in bed all night anticipating that blood-curdling scream. So needless to say, I have not been getting the best sleep lately.

This morning, I got a blood-curdling scream and thought about how much I miss the little things, like being able to sleep and having alone time.

Disclaimer: Yes, I love my children more than life itself. I would step in front of a train for them. But becoming a parent has taught me that some things are non-negotiable. So don’t comment that I’m a bad mom, Lisa, the internet troll.

Here are 11 things you must love —or learn to love—if you want to become a parent.

1. Being woken up in the middle of the night by a blood curdling scream or by its equally terrifying counterpart, the tiny person staring at you while you sleep.

2. Poop. Cleaning poop. Picking up poop. Finding poop in odd places. Teaching your kid to poop in the potty. Watching them poop in the backyard like the dog. That last one might just be me.

3. Never being alone. The minute you have kids, you will never have alone time again. They will always find you. You could hide in the crawl space under your house and a tiny little hand would find its way under a crack to ask what you’re doing.

4. Fart jokes. Maybe this is just because I’m a boy mom, but my kid is in the “fart, poop, laugh” phase and it’s killing me. Every sentence ends with the word poop, fart, toilet or underpants.

5. Bad knock-knock jokes. Henry just learned what knock-knock jokes are and I have said, “Poop who” at least 500 times in the last 5 days.

6. Crumbs. I don’t care what my kids are eating, they will somehow make a massive amount of crumbs from it. They could eat ice cream in a bowl and somehow develop crumbs. My advice is to get a dog to lick up the crumbs.

7. Someone completely defying societal norms. Having a kid is like one big sociology project. They will stand in the elevator facing the wrong way. They will tickle the back of a random person’s neck while at church. They will scream, “Is that a BUTT?” at someone in Target. And yes, Lisa, I have told my child we don’t say butt, but he has not complied.

8. Tantrums. Wrong color bowl for eggs? Lay on the ground screaming. Wrong superhero cartoon? More screaming. Ask if they had a good day at preschool? Screaming and crying. Taking them to a place they asked to go? Screaming and crying.

9. Doing things that gross you out. I rode a freaking camel at the zoo the other day. Enough said.

10. Teeny tiny toys. Damn the inventor of Tsum Tsums and Shopkins. I know they are tiny so you can sell more and pay less to make them, but I have spent so many hours on my hands and knees searching the backyard for a 3 cm sword that goes to a teeny tiny pirate.

11. Ryan’s Toy Review. So annoying. Props to Ryan for creating a virtual empire, but does he go to school? How does he find time to make all these videos?

So if you are about to have kids, or are thinking about trying, just remember that they are adorable little minions that smell like fresh baby powder for a few days, months or a year if you are lucky. But you will then learn that you won’t sleep until they are 18, your coffee will always be cold and they will repeat the bad words you say.

So don’t yell, “Use your blinker, you as*hole!” in a fit of rage on an Interstate somewhere.

Until next time,

Jamie

This post originally appeared on Hashtag MomFail.

I am a full time working mom with two little boys, Henry and Simon. I write about real life and real life gets messy. Contributor for Motherly, HuffPost Parents, Scary Mommy, Today Parents, Love What Matters and Her View From Home. 

School’s back in session for big bro and big sis and your tiny tots/preschoolers are yearning to do some learning of their own. Corral those curious creatures, make your way to these enriching classes and watch their world expand. Flip through our slideshow to find the best brain candy from feeding miniature cows to singing in español.

Pony Land

This family owned ranch offers a fine selection of western activities for toddlers. Pony Land's Baby and Me Toddler Time is getting a makeover and the revamped offerings will debut shortly after Labor Day. As before, the clucking of chickens and sweet smell of hay will appease their senses, but their curriculum is being fine tuned for an optimum mini farmhand experience. Your Future Farmer of America will engage in lighthearted art and music studies as you gush over how sweet they look in their new dusty stomping grounds. In addition to art and music, they'll learn early animal husbandry with activities like camel and miniature cow feeding and time in the corral. The toddler time will occur specific days from 10 a.m.-noon, so stay tuned to Pony Land for the official release of these boot stomping new classes.

2606 Hollister St.
San Diego, Ca
619-947-3152
Online: ponylandsandiego.com

Photo: Pony Land via Facebook

Where’s your favorite class for your little one? Share in the comments.

––Jeannette Swanson

While people on your Facebook feed argue about the upcoming elections, we decided to present you with more uplifting important news.

Photo: Lincoln Park Zoo via Facebook

Meet Alexander Camelton! That’s what the awesome caregivers at the Lincoln Park Zoo named this baby Bactrian camel, born at the Chicago facility this summer. Alexander Camelton made his public debut as the first Bactrian camel born at the zoo since 1998. The zoo announced the camel’s name on social media.

If YOU had a camel, what would you name it? Let us know in the comments below!

 

Got a budding Jacques Cousteau or Shark Week enthusiast? Luckily, you don’t have to venture to the ocean to get up close and personal with these toothy friends. At Sharkmania, Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium’s latest exhibit, landlubbers can touch real live sharks, learn about buzz saw sharks, and walk through a life-size replica of a megalodon jaw. But for the real adventurous ones in your crew, it’s the Eye-to-Eye Shark Cage Dive that’s the main attraction. Read on for the scoop on this heart-pumping thrill—no experience needed.

Helen Walker Green

A School of Sharks
Before taking the plunge, it’s time for shark school at the Dive Center. Your instructor will give you a talk on the rules of the cage dive and an introduction to the sharks you’ll meet (all 17 of them!). The rules are easy to follow, and the whole experience is carefully coordinated and safety-conscious. Psst! The instructors are brimming with shark facts and even have a way of keeping energetic 8-year-olds engaged.

Helen Walker Green

Shark Fact: Sharks have been around for 400 million years. They were here before the dinosaurs!

Getting Suited Up
After your get the important shark deets, the instructors will help you put on your dry suit, dive boots, and goggles. (Be forewarned: Letting the air out of the suits will cause much laughter). No need to worry about packing a swimsuit for this journey. The dry suit zips up over your clothes – the only things you’ll need to take off are your shoes and socks. Good to know: Your head, hands and feet will get wet during the dive.

Helen Walker Green

Shark Fact: Sharks have a sixth sense called electroreception. They can sense electricity in other living things (this comes in handy when they’re looking for their next snack).

Davy Jones’s Locker
When it’s time to head into the dive cage, your instructor will show you how to breathe through your scuba mouthpiece as well as add weights to your suit (to make sure you sink!). When everyone in your crew masters breathing like Darth Vader, it’s time to climb down the ladders and into the cage with the instructors by your side. Psst! If you don’t want your mouthpiece to fill with water, don’t smile on your way down – glug!

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Kris Sherman

Shark Fact: Sharks lose thousands of teeth in their lifetime! Bet they make a fortune from the Tooth Fairy!

Shark-Infested Waters
Plunging into the cage is an exhilarating experience for kids and grown-ups alike. Not only will you come face-to-face with these fascinating fish but you will get a shark’s-eye view of the aquarium – with friends and family looking at you through the glass. Don’t be surprised if the lemon shark playfully buzzes your cage a few times or the nurse sharks bask in a pile right by you. This is a great opportunity to try to spot the different sharks—can you see the blacktip reef shark with its signature blacktipped fin, and the unusual-looking Japanese wobbegong?

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Kris Sherman

The dive team will take video of your cage dive and will get a shot of each person waving to the camera (you can buy a copy on a shark-shaped USB drive). The cage dive lasts about 20 minutes, with the entire experience lasting an hour. Good to know: The instructors will continually check on you during the dive and can easily send you back up if you feel uncomfortable.

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Dive Staff

Shark Fact: Shark babies are called pups.

Save the Sharks! 
When you’re back on dry land, you will have the opportunity to find out even more about sharks and how important they are to our oceans. The dive instructors love sharks and they want you to love them too!

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Dive Staff

Good to Know
1. You don’t have to cage dive with your kids, but you are welcome to attend the pre and post dive talks with them.

2. Friends and family can watch the cage dive in the South Pacific Aquarium.

3. Although the shark tank is heated to 75 degrees, it can be chilly standing in the cage. The aquarium has fleece under-layers to loan divers – or you can bring your own.

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Dive Staff

4. Everyone gets a free souvenir towel. T-shirts, baseball caps, and a video of your dive are also available for purchase at the Dive Center.

5. Certified PADI divers age 15 & up can go on a scuba dive with the sharks.

6. Allow time to enjoy all that Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium has to offer – there are many wonderful animals to see, including polar bears, red wolves, Sumatran tigers, and elephants. You can also take a camel ride during the summer months and during the holiday season (that’s if you’re energetic enough to handle riding a camel and cage diving with sharks all in one day!).

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium
5400 N. Pearl St.
Tacoma, Wa 98407
253-591-5337
Online: pdza.org/sharkmania
Reservations: pdza.org/dive (online reservations are required)

Rates
Members: $60
Non-members: $75
(Includes admission to Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium and souvenir towel)

Ages
8 and up

Cage Dive Times
Daily, 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 2 p.m. & 3:30 p.m.

Would your kids like to go cage diving with the sharks? Let us know in a comment below.

— Helen Walker Green

You already know kids are curious by nature. But did you know there is a new exhibit in town that not only embraces their curiosity, but also encourages it? Get ready to enter the world of strange, exciting, and never before seen as the largest and most astonishing exhibit, based on Ripley’s Believe It Or Not, embarks on the Pacific Science Center. From a life-size model of a prehistoric snake to a portrait of Einstein made of toast, explore the real science behind the extraordinary at this mind-boggling exhibit.

Photo: Pacific Science Center

All About Robert Ripley
Ripley was an American cartoonist, entrepreneur, and anthropologist who loved oddities, different cultures, and studying the world. He traveled the globe searching for the rare, unexplained, and exotic. He spent his life collecting artifacts gathered from all over and created a place where they could be displayed in all their glory, enter the sideshow Ripley’s Believe It Or Not. What once started out as a comic strip, a radio show, then a TV show has now been transformed into the most popular exhibit the world has ever seen. In the words of Ripley, “I have traveled in 201 countries and the strangest thing I saw was man.”

Photo: Pacific Science Center

Explore The Unexpected
If your littles think science is boring, prove them wrong by exploring all the cool, and we’ll admit it, sometimes gross, items displayed in the show. Where else can you see portraits made out of toast, keyboard keys, candy, and postage stamps? How about a place where you can stand next to the world’s tallest man? Here you’ll not only see shrunken heads, but learn how they are made, something we hope our little scientists don’t try to recreate. Also located throughout the exhibit are computer screens which let your science enthusiasts get a behind-the-scenes look at how things work. They’ll get up close and personal, an awesome thing, because we all know the best way to learn is through hands-on play and exploration. Find all this and so much more at this extraordinary exhibit where you’ll learn the physics behind some of the world’s greatest phenomenons.

Photo: Pacific Science Center

Oddities Not To Miss
While the entire exhibit is not to be missed, there are definitely parts that are must-sees. Take a seat in the world’s largest chair, touch a cow hairball (disgusting or not, we can’t help but be intrigued), take a selfie in the mouth of a snake, look for your kiddos’ favorite play things in the camel statue made completely out of discarded toys, examine tiny sculptures that are no bigger than a grain of sand, see a two-headed cow, and a four-legged chicken. Examine the Benjamin Franklin portrait made completely out of keyboard keys. Psst….look closely to see his famous findings spelled out in the keys. And definitely do not miss the Robert Wadlow exhibit! The life-like statue is not only fun to watch, but a perfect way to see how you measure up to the world’s tallest man who was 8 feet, 11 inches.

Another surefire hit with the littles will be turning themselves into a work of art. Here, they can bust a move, run, jump, twirl, and watch the vibrant colors on the screen take shape. If your adventurists have a thing for dinosaurs, don’t miss the dino exhibits where you can see (and touch) dino dung and view full-scale models, bones, fossils and everything prehistoric. With two levels of exploration waiting, there is no limit to what your little explorers will see and learn.

Photo: Pacific Science Center

The Details
Ripley’s Believe It Or Not is open to the public at the awesome Pacific Science Center and runs through Jan. 4, 2015. Admission to the exhibit is included in the general admission and is free for members. Make a day of it by exploring the grounds, the exhibits at Pacific Science Center, and now the wonderful, magical world of Ripley’s Believe It Or Not. With so much learning to do, the best time to start is now!

Photo: Pacific Science Center

Pacific Science Center
200 Second Ave. N.
Seattle, Wa 98109
206-443-2001
Online: pacificsciencecenter.org/Exhibits/ripleys-believe-it-or-not

Exhibit dates: Now through Jan. 4, 2015
Hours: Mon.-Fri., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sat.-Sun., 10 a.m-6 p.m.
Cost: $19.50/adult; $14.50/youth (6-15); $11.50/child (3-5); Free for members

Does your kiddo love the extraordinary? Will you be exploring the new Ripley’s Believe It Or Not exhibit? Let us know in a comment below. 

–Allison Rasmussen

There’s no shortage of outdoor activities in San Diego. But did you know some of the best spots are hidden? You just have to know where to look! Take some time out with your kids to travel off the beaten path and discover the only cave  in La Jolla only reachable by land and a topiary garden in the middle of Mission Hills.

Photo credit: Kristen H. via Yelp

Topiary Garden
Kids will get a kick out of the huge shapes and animals that make up this Edward Scissorhands-style topiary garden in Mission Hills. This landscape wonderland is located on a hillside front yard at a private residence. You are not permitted to actually enter the garden, but you can feel free to get out of the car and delight in the artful creations. The owners have taken inspiration from their many travels to create the unique topiaries found in the garden.

Tip: Have your kids look carefully and see how many shapes you can find. Then see if they can spot a camel, a peacock and even Mickey Mouse!

3549 Union St.
San Diego, Ca 92103
Online: http://www.yelp.com/biz/harpers-topiary-garden-san-diego

Photo credit: Angela I. via Yelp

Hidden Garden of Ocean Beach
The entrance to this whimsical, magical world is tucked away in an unassuming location behind a small house in Ocean Beach. Resembling a fairy garden, this peaceful backyard is free and open to the public. Eclectic treasures and antiques are plentiful. Kids can expect to see anything from a charming rusted ore bucket and an old cement mixer, to beautiful plants, colorful flowers, serene streams and sometimes the resident cat. This neighborhood gem is a wonderful place for kiddos to explore all the treasures of the garden and to exercise their imagination. The best part is that it’s constantly changing and transforming so you will see something new each time you go.

Photo credit: Marissa Mullen

Tip: First, stop at nearby Olive Tree Marketplace and order some yummy sandwiches to go. Then take a short stroll to the Hidden Garden and enjoy a peaceful picnic while you take in the surrounding beauty.

4973 Niagara Ave.
San Diego, Ca 92107

Olive Tree Marketplace
4805 Narragansett Ave.
Online: olivetreemarket.com

Photo credit: Marissa Mullen

Sunny Jim Cave
Sunny Jim Cave is a the only cave in La Jolla that is reachable by land. Named by L. Frank Baum of Wizard of Oz fame, Sunny Jim was a cartoon cereal box mascot in the 1920s. Entrance to the cave is through the gift shop, and all kids get a cute plastic sea creature. For a nominal fee, you can enter the man-made tunnel and descend down 145 steps to a cool, scenic view at the bottom. When you’re done, leave the gift shop, turn right, and walk the bluffs to the lookout point for some spectacular ocean views.

Photo credit: Marissa Mullen

Tips: You’ll want to make sure your kiddo is able to walk down all the steps, as it’s a little dark and slightly slippery. Wear closed-toe shoes and bring a jacket, as it can get chilly at the bottom. Also, keep in mind that there is no restroom, so make sure the kids go before!

1325 Cave St.
La Jolla, CA 92037
Online: cavestore.com

Photo credit: Marissa Mullen

Do you have a favorite San Diego secret spot? Tell us in the comments!

-Written by Marissa Mullen