Santa at the Holly TrolleyThough Jack and Peter are well past the age of needing to make an annual visit to the Jolly Old Elf, I still get excited this time of year to see that he’s back in town. And though there are a good many respectable imitation Santas around, I’m pretty sure that I know three places he’ll really show up in the Twin Cities in coming days. These also happen to be great Santa stops around which to build an outing, so if you want to make a day out of visiting Santa, these are well worth investigating!

Holly Trolley, November 25, 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM

Every year, the Como-Harriet Streetcar Line puts on a jolly ride from Lake Harriet to Lake Calhoun and back on its antique streetcars. The cars are decked out with wreaths and ribbons, there are carolers on the platform and in the trolley, and the best passenger of all is Santa Claus! After your ride, you can enjoy a peaceful (if chilly) stroll around Lake Harriet, or head up the hill to Creative Kidstuff (4313 Upton Ave. S.) and Wild Rumpus Books (2720 West 43rd Street), the wildest kids’ bookstore in town.

And if you’re feeling a bit peckish, visit the Scouts of Troop 1, who will be selling hot dogs, ‘smores, and hot apple cider to help replenish their tent fund (full disclosure: I’ll be there until 2:00 PM helping the Scouts).

Mother Earth Gardens, December 1, 10:00 AM to noon and 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM

Mother Earth Gardens, 3738 42nd Avenue South, is a local garden shop that goes all out for Christmas. Their lot is filled with trees, wreaths, and garlands, the shop is stuffed with gifts for gardeners, and all that pine scent attracts Santa Claus to hold court every year. While you’re in the neighborhood, take in a show at the historic Riverview Theater (I’m not sure what will be showing; “Brave”, “Wimpy Kid: Dog Days”, and “Hotel Transylvania” have been on the marquee this weekend, so it’s a good bet for a kid-friendly movie), grab a treat at the Riverview Cafe, or enjoy a tasty lunch at Turtle Bread. This is also a great neighborhood for some light hiking if the weather is nice: the river road is only a few blocks away, and Minnehaha Falls is about a mile to the south.

Choo Choo Bob, December 2 and December 9, 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM

What could be more iconic than Santa Claus sitting among model trains? Choo Choo Bob’s Train Store, 2050 Marshall Avenue, St. Paul, is hosting Santa Claus twice this year. Your young train fans will love this place, with all its rumbling freight cars and clanging bells! Make it a night out with a visit to Trotter’s Cafe or Izzy’s Ice Cream.

Do you have a favorite place to visit Santa? What holiday outings do you make a family tradition? Share your ideas in the comments or at the Facebook page!

Winter has had a slow start around here–we’ve managed three skating trips and just one (rather disappointing) outing to the sledding hill. But there’s still just enough winter weather worth celebrating, and the Twin Cities sure know how to make the best of what snow and ice we have!

The big celebration, of course, is the St. Paul Winter Carnival, which kicked off Thursday evening with a torch light parade and continues through next week with ice sculptures, races, and lots more. A great way to get a taste of Winter Carnival is to visit Rice Park in downtown St. Paul, where the ice sculptures are being carved and the Vulcan Crew is likely to make an appearance with their antique fire truck. You can grab a hot chocolate at the St. Paul Hotel, or try out one of the food trucks the carnival has added this year.

If your tastes lean more toward the funky and homemade, be sure to visit the Powderhorn Park Art Sled Rally. The 5th annual neighborhood get-together starts at 2:00 PM today, January 28, on the hill on the west side of Powderhorn Park. You’ll see all manner of downhill contraptions–past events have featured everything from sledding beds to mosquitoes on skis–and cheer on the general zaniness of it all. If you’re a fan of the Heart of the Beast Mayday Parade or Leonardo’s Basement, this is the event for you!

And speaking of Leonardo’s Basement, the science and art education program is presenting a family Ice and Snow Festival at Griggs Park in St. Paul, 1:00 PM Saturday, February 4. Put on by the Studio Bricolage team, the festival will including skating, sledding, homemade hot air balloons, and doubtless a few Rube Goldberg contraptions to make marshmallow toasting especially complicated.

The apple-picking season is upon us, which also means the apple-pressing, pumpkin-picking, haywagon-riding, and corn-maze-wandering seasons are here, too!

Minnesota is a leading apple-producing region, due in no small part to the research efforts of the University of Minnesota. Popular varieties like the Honeycrisp and Haralson, and new varieties like Frostbite and SnowSweet, have come out of the U’s research into cold-weather hardy fruit. What this means for us is lots of apple orchards!

Many orchards in the area have pick-your-own opportunities, as well as pre-picked apples in case that’s the sort of thing you want to leave up to the experts. And many turn into harvest festivals during the apple season, with hay rides, petting zoos, and corn mazes to help you celebrate fall. You can buy pies, jams, and cider, too–there are so many ways to eat your apples!

Our favorite orchard is Afton Apple Orchard in the Hastings area: they have an incredible maze, cider pressing demonstrations, and a fun tractor pull ride. But no matter which side of the Twin Cities you live you, you’re sure to find an orchard you’ll love:

Do you have a favorite?

The State Fair is over, the streets are full of big yellow school buses, and there’s an autumnal chill in the air: summer has come to an end, and with it the long lazy days of exploring the Twin Cities without homework and early bed times to get in the way of the fun.

That doesn’t mean, though, that the adventures have to come to an end! It may take a little more planning to squeeze in the excursions, but a Minnesota fall is full of fun, both indoors and out. Dad’s Eye View is organized by season (though many of the adventures are great for any season!); here are a few places to try as the weather cools:

  • Highland Park Water Tower: Mark your calendars! On October 9 and 10, the Highland Park Water Tower will be open for fall-color viewing from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. From the top of the tower, you can see the urban forest of the Twin Cities in all its autumn glory.
  • Mississippi River Gorge: Cooler weather is ideal for hiking, and the dryer weather we usually get in the fall means that the trails along the Mississippi River are a lot less muddy. Some of our favorite Twin Cities hikes include Shadow Falls, Bridal Veil Falls, and the confluence of Minnehaha Creek and the Mississippi River.
  • Jackson Street Roundhouse: it’s OK to head indoors when there’s a little bit of a chill in the air, and the Jackson Street Roundhouse is a great museum to check out. There are exhibits outside too: be sure not to miss the roundtable!

The start of school is also a great time to reinforce the things kids are learning with some fun activities, like the interactive displays at the Science Museum of Minnesota and Minnesota History Center. We get great inspiration for our shoebox dioramas and science fair projects at our favorite museums. (And if you haven’t checked out the Big Back Yard at the Science Museum yet, this is your chance! It’s only open through September 18, and the museum is closed for a tune-up from September 12 to 15!)

Bruce Feiler makes the case for taking advantage of digital resources while on vacation in Our Plugged-in Summer:

I concocted a scheme. During weekends this summer, I would pursue the opposite of an unplugged vacation: I would check screens whenever I could. Not in the service of work, but in the service of play. I would crowd-source new ideas for car games and YouTube my picnic recipes. I would test the prevailing wisdom that the Internet spoils all the fun.

It’s a hard balance to strike. On the one hand, the digital world offers lots of great resources to help you with your adventure: maps, apps, web sites galore, all just a click or a tap away! But on the other hand, the screen can be a distraction from the moment, a barrier between you and the fun in the real world that your kids are engaging.

Feiler’s struggle in his summer of digitally-enhanced fun was to keep work from creeping in. When your e-mail is just a click away from the app that identifies trees from photos of leaves, when the latest news is so easy to check when you look up the map to that great donut shop you heard about, it’s easy to drift away from vacation. Using your computer or phone to orchestrate your adventure may actually require more discipline than just turning off the Internet while on vacation.

I admit to being a digital junky while on adventures. Without Twitter, I would never have found the Powderhorn Park Art Sled Rally, and I love trading adventure tips on Facebook. I even post pictures of ‘smores while at Scout camp (which has actually been a pretty good recruiting tool for new Scouts). It’s great to be able to check the hours of a museum while on the run, or to find a slice of pizza in an unfamiliar area when your kids are on the verge of hunger-induced meltdown. But I also recognize that there’s a lot of fun in going with the flow, letting serendipity guide your discoveries, and it’s hard to be surprised when you’ve scanned the environs with Google Maps, Foursquare, and Yelp!, and know the lay of the land as well as a native.

Fortunately, Dad’s Eye View comes in both a wired and non-wired version, both of which are geared toward serendipity and surprise. For the traditionalist, there’s the book, which fits easily in your adventure bag and is there to send you in the right direction without getting in the way. I think of it as like my old Boy Scout Field Guide: always in my bag in case I need to look something up, but mostly out of the way. And there’s the iPhone app for the connected-on-the-go Dad who wants to check the map for nearby locations, browse for an adventure while out and about, or maybe crowdsource the fun with a quick Facebook or Twitter post. (That digital Dad could also upload pictures of their adventure to the Dad’s Eye View Flickr group while on the run).

How about you? Plugged in, or unplugged?

A couple weeks ago I heard National Geographic reporter Keith Bellows on Science Friday talking about Niagara Falls, Mammoth Caves, the Grand Canyon, and other great science-related vacation spots. He’s the author of the forthcoming 100 Places That Will Change Your Child’s Life, a book which is very much on my wish list.

The book doesn’t come out until February, and his website is still a little incomplete, but you can see a partial list of the places that are included. I consider myself pretty well-traveled, but I’ve only visited ten of the forty-one in the teaser list; Jack and Peter have visited three. And while I’m certainly daring enough to bring kids along on the sorts of globe-trotting journeys Bellows documents, the cost of jetting off to Machu Pichu or the Galapagos Islands is a little prohibitive.

While I don’t doubt that the Taj Mahal would, indeed, change my child’s life, I’m also confident that there are some life-changing excursions closer to home. Indeed, framed in the right way, a visit to any of the 52 places in Dad’s Eye View can open up a world of wonder to any child (or adult): you don’t have to go far to be transformed.

Here are a few exotic and exciting places you can find right here in the Twin Cities:

Hmongtown Marketplace: the markets of Bangkok and Phnom Penh require quite a trek to get to, but the Hmongtown Market is within sight of the Minnesota capitol building, though it feels like it’s a world away. There are brightly-colored fabrics and fragrant herbs and vegetables for sale, Southeast Asian music in the air, and a food court where you can sample noodles, curries, and banh mi sandwiches.

Mississippi River Gorge: though it certainly doesn’t compare to the scale of the Grand Canyon, the gorge carved by the Mississippi River between St. Anthony Falls and Lock and Dam #1 is a geological wonder in its own right. Hike Winchell Trail, explore the oak savanna on West River Parkway, and search out the hidden Shadow Falls between Marshall Avenue and Summit Avenue in St. Paul. You may be lucky enough to spot bald eagles, foxes, and wild turkeys in this urban wilderness.

Chain of Lakes: Wordsworth was inspired by England’s Lake District; you can also find some poetic inspiration on the lakes in Minneapolis, which form the historic core of the city’s park system. There are peaceful sunsets, canoe trips past islands full of birds, and trails to hike and bike.

Mill Ruins Park: though not as ancient and mysterious as Machu Pichu or the Great Pyramids, but the ruins of the old Washburn flour mill in Minneapolis offer a glimpse into an otherwise hidden past. After strolling through the tail races and sluiceways that brought water power to the mills, head up to the Mill City Museum for hands-on exploration of how the mills worked. Or take the Stone Arch Bridge across to Nicollet Island and Old Main Street, where more Minneapolis history is hidden in plain sight.

The North Shore: this one is a little more exotic, requiring a day trip north from the Twin Cities, but it’s a wonderland well within reach. If you’ve ever wondered what the wild places of Maine and Nova Scotia look like, head an hour north of Duluth and you’ll see something much like Acadia National Park on a small scale: mountain streams and waterfalls perfect for wading and splashing, the big water of Lake Superior (not quite as large as the Atlantic Ocean, but the beaches are strewn with stones that seem custom-made for skipping), and historic lighthouses are within striking distance of Highway 61.

Approached with wonder and curiosity, these places (and many more in the Twin Cities) are bound to change your kids’ lives, and probably yours as well!

The best birthday gift I ever received was a coupon book my parents gave me when I turned ten. It wasn’t just any old coupon book: it was a treasure trove of adventures. My mother had written out my favorite places to visit–museums, parks, and playgrounds near our home in Aschaffenburg, Germany–on slips of paper and stapled them into a booklet. I could turn in a coupon each weekend and go on the outing of my choice–what could be better?

While working on the Dad’s Eye View project, I came across a nice variation on this idea from a few different sources. Instead of putting the coupons into a booklet, put them into one of four jars, labeled for the season. Then, when you’re looking for an adventure, just go to the right jar and pull one out!

As my birthday gift to you, here are some printable sheets to get you started on your own adventure jars. The 52 Dad’s Eye View adventure are included, along with plenty of blank spaces for you to add your own. Just click to download, print, and off you go! (Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader.)

Not sure why you should visit the Midtown Global Market or Rice Park? Wondering what the Bell Museum or Milwaukee Avenue hold in store? You can pick up a copy of the book at bookstores and gift shops around the Twin Cities (including the Mill City Museum and History Center gift shops, now that they’ve finally reopened!), or download the free iPhone app!

Happy exploring!

The heat wave is breaking up at the same time that the state of Minnesota is opening up again. Most of the Minnesota Historical Society sites (excluding the Oliver Kelley Farm and Forest History Center) will reopen tomorrow, July 22; the remaining sites reopen on Saturday.

And the music series at the Mill City and History Center museums is back on track, too! Though 9 Nights has been truncated to 6 this year, that’s still lots of dancing on the patio; and the lineup for the Mill City series in the mill ruins amphitheater looks great, starting tonight with the legendary “Spider” John Koerner.

Details on the music from this morning’s MHS member e-mail:

>> Mill City Live returns with a lineup of bands representing five decades of Minneapolis music history, guest curated by rock critic and musician Jim Walsh. Thursdays in July & August at Mill City Museum. $5 (includes museum admission.)

July 21 “Spider” John Koerner & Tony Glover
July 28 Molly Maher & Her Disbelievers
Aug. 4 The Hypstrz / Mighty Mofos
Aug. 11 Adam Levy & Friends
Aug. 18 Curtiss A and the Jerks of Fate

>> 9 Nights of Music presents the rich and vibrant rhythms and sounds of Minnesota’s multi-cultural community. Tuesdays in July & August at the Minnesota History Center. FREE.

July 26 Trailer Trash
Aug. 2 Uncensored (A Rockin’ National Night Out)
Aug. 9 O’Rourke’s Feast
Aug. 16 Café Accordion Orchestra
Aug. 23 New Riverside Ramblers
Aug. 30 The Revolution 5

It sounds like we have at least two more days of the Amazon jungle heat and humidity; with three days of it behind us already, I’m sure there are more than a few people getting mid-summer cabin fever (if they’re lucky enough to have air conditioning). While it’s possible to face this heat–I’m still doing my daily bike commute, though I pack a lot more water than usual–it’s not very pleasant.

How can you keep cool and still have fun?

Outdoor adventures are made bearable–even enjoyable–with a little water. We’ve mentioned before the regional parks in the Dakota County and Three Rivers systems: lots of beaches and boats help you cool off and have fun. We’ve also mentioned the great outdoor pools in the Twin Cities, especially the Highland Park Aquatic Center in St. Paul and the Jim Lupient Water Park in Minneapolis. The great thing about swimming when the dew point is hovering in the low 80s? No goose bumps when you get out of the water! There’s simply no space left in the air for more water to evaporate into!

If you’re looking for something more on the inside, check out Edinborough Park in Edina: space for kids to run and climb and shout, with air conditioning! Or on the northwest side, check out Maple Maze in Maple Grove, with a big climbing structure for older kids and a special toddler space too. You can use your outdoor voice indoors! (File these away for winter, too, when cabin fever will surely strike again.)

Museums are always cool as well, in more ways than one. You can easily burn off some energy and learn a little, too, at the Science Museum, or explore the kid-sized ant hill and block-moving factory at the Children’s Museum. Or why not venture off the beaten path a little, with a trip to the Pavek Museum of Broadcasting, a sure hit with the budding broadcaster in your house?

Keep cool and beat the heat!

It is HOT out there!

And when it’s hot, my thoughts turn to — ICE CREAM!

We’ve got some great ice cream shops in the Twin Cities. From soft serve to hard-pack, from chocolate and vanilla to more esoteric flavors (a little cayenne pepper in your ice cream, perhaps?), there’s something for every taste. Do you have a favorite?

Here are a few of the places we like to hit on a hot summer day:

  • Conny’s Creamy Cone, located at 1197 N. Dale in St. Paul: this is the real deal–soft serve cones and sundaes, and a favorite of Tommy Mischke, which is the best endorsement I can imagine for any St. Paul spot
  • Grand Ole Creamery, located at 750 Grand in St. Paul and 4737 Cedar Ave. S. in Minneapolis: scoops of classic ice cream goodness in fresh waffle cones
  • Sebastian Joes, located at 4321 Upton and 1007 Franklin in Minneapolis: the Pavorati is our family fave
  • Izzy’s, located at 2034 Marshall in St. Paul: can’t decide between all the flavors? Pick a new one for your “izzy”, an extra mini scoop that’s perched on top of your cone!
  • Sonny’s Ice Cream, located at 3403 Lyndale Ave S. in Minneapolis: sweet corn or chocolate cabernet, anyone?
  • Franklin Freeze, located at 2328 E. Franklin in Minneapolis: lots of soft serve flavors in a great little shack (the German chocolate is my favorite for a break from a Greenway bike ride)
  • Dairy Queen: the big kahuna of ice cream stands is based in Edina, and has locations all over the Twin Cities; my local spot is at East Lake and 44th Avenue, and they turn out a great Peanut Buster Parfait every time

I’m sure I’ve overlooked more than couple of great ice cream spots; do you have a favorite place to get a creamy cone?

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