Monday, March 10, 2014

Spring Break Stay-cation in Salt Lake City

As my search for spring break options continues, I wonder what a stay-cation might look like. If I were coming from out of town to Salt Lake City with children in tow, what would I do to fill a week? I distinctly remember visiting Seattle once with two families. My husband and I did not yet have children, and this Seattle trip was our first peek into how our travels would be revolutionized when we did. We were there just three days, but we hit the zoo, every city park, and the huge REI store, among other kid-centric stops. Not once did we dine on the waterfront or sip coffee (well, we drink hot chocolate) downtown.

I admit to wishing we could at least try some great seafood. But one of the kids on this trip would eat nothing but the bun from a hamburger (and by nothing I mean NOTHING) and the other kids seemed mostly interested in mac and cheese. At the time I didn't quite understand it all and felt a teeny bit disappointed that we didn't get fresh calamari.

But I get it now. I have been educated. I see the need to approach a vacation through children's eyes and through children's menus.

So if I were visiting Salt Lake with children, what would I do for a week? The idea of a stay-cation is appealing. We would save on travel expenses and hotels by staying at home (mostly), but if we treat it like a vacation and give ourselves a bit of a budget, we might actually be able to put together a week as fun as any week away.

With that in mind, here's the itinerary I came up with for a spring break stay-cation in the Salt Lake City area:

Day 1:

1) Go out to breakfast at The Original Pancake House in Sugar House. Family friendly and yummy.
2) Spend the morning at Tracey Aviary in Liberty Park.
3) Have a picnic at Liberty Park.
4) Play at a playground in Liberty Park. If it's warm enough, let them play in the Canyons water area or the splash pad -- or both. Remember the sunscreen.
5) Visit nearby London Market and get a some scones with clotted cream and good chocolate from Jolly Old England. (This is mostly for mom.....)
6) Home for dinner.

Day 2:

1) Big, fancy breakfast at home. French toast, scrambled eggs, sausage, fresh fruit.
2) Visit This Is the Place Heritage Park. Baby animals come in the spring! Plus there is tons to do -- horse rides, pioneer games, a petting zoo, train rides, panning for gold, a Native American village, cabins to visit, a playground, etc. We truly could spend several hours here if the weather is nice. It's one of Salt Lake's best-kept secrets.
3) Have lunch in the park. Nothing special -- just a hamburger, but fun for the kids and convenient for me.
4) Movie afternoon -- in an actual movie theater. It's something we never do. We'd even get popcorn and licorice.
5) Home for dinner.

Day 3:

1) Quick breakfast at home, maybe even a sack-lunch breakfast in the car.
2) Day at the Living Planet Aquarium. It's about a 30-minute drive from our house and we'd want to leave early to be there when it opens. It's usually a mad house, so it's best to go early.
3) Lunch at a local restaurant after the aquarium. I'm thinking the family favorite: Chuck-o-Rama.
4) Check into a hotel near our next stop tomorrow, which is only about a 15-minute drive further south of the aquarium. The hotel must have an indoor pool and free breakfast.
5) Let the kids go swimming until they are prunes.
6) Order pizza.
7) Movie night in the hotel room.

Day 4:

1) Breakfast at the hotel/check out.
2) Day at Thanksgiving Point. So many options; an all day affair. Dinosaur museum, farm animals, tulip festival, beautiful gardens and water falls, National Geographic Mammoth Screen Theater, etc. Note: Thanksgiving Point is not a bargain. Search for coupons or plan for it in your budgeting. You typically pay an entrance fee for each section (Farm Country, the gardens, the museum...). Check the price of an annual membership. It might be cheaper!
3) Lunch at Thanksgiving Point.
4) Home for dinner. Probably cereal.

Day 5:

1) Breakfast at home.
2) Day trip to Heber to ride the Heber Valley Railroad. I have always wanted to ride the Heber Valley Railroad. There are so many options year round, including a Polar Express Train, Dinosaur trains, chocolate trains, sunset trains, and your typical ride around the lake and mountain trains. At the time of our spring break there will be an Easter train. Perfect!
3) Lunch at Dairy Keen, of course! Keeping with the railroad theme of the day, Dairy Keen is "Home of the Trains." A model train circles the dining room in a set paying homage to the history and geography of the Heber Valley. Forget the food. The train itself has become a tourist attraction. (But we'll still stay and eat.)
4) Home by dinner. In bed early!

And that takes up five days of spring break without even using the weekends. We could have added Park City, the Hogle Zoo, the Dinosaur Park and Treehouse Museum in Ogden, Discovery Gateway downtown, Temple Square, the Church History Museum's children's area, the Hill Aerospace Museum in Roy, and even hikes on the Shoreline Trail. As I stopped to think about it, it wasn't hard to fill a week in the spring. If it were summer the options would have doubled. Maybe I'll revisit the stay-cation idea again in the summer.

Finally, one family's stay-cation is another family's vacation. I'd love to hear about and share your itineraries for a stay-cation in your city. Please share and I'll post! kidsagogoeditor@gmail.com



7 comments:

  1. Hi Lisa! Have you tried this for discounts? It looks so fun! Love your blog! http://www.visitsaltlake.com/things-to-do/connect-pass/
    Groupon has a deal for this too: http://www.groupon.com/deals/visit-salt-lake-2
    Brigitte

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    1. Brigitte! Excellent suggestions. Thanks for sharing!!

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  2. We visited Dairy Keen for the first time this year. The children were so entranced with the train and lego tables that it was ALMOST like being on a date night with just my husband.

    I've never been to London Market - adding that to my list! Thanks for the ideas!

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  3. These are awesome ideas!! Love it!!!

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  4. We spent our spring vacation locally--in Alpine. We stayed with my aunt and uncle there. Their home is a vacation in itself. But on Monday we ventured out to Thanksgiving Point. I have an awesome pass that I bought before leaving Idaho. We have a membership to the Discovery Center there, which is a member of ASTC, an organization of museums, etc. across the company. My $40 membership from Idaho paid for itself there and has more than quadrupled its value here in Utah. For free, we visited the farm and dinosaur museum at Thanksgiving Point. We have also visited The Leonardo, the Museum of Natural History at the U, and the Planetarium. What's the catch? You have to use the membership at locations at least 80 miles from your home. Unfortunately, my pass expires this month, and we're sad that all our free visits are going away. But if you have family out of state or you want to visit museums out of state, Google ASTC and get a membership with one of their organizations. For instance, if you join Thanksgiving Point's family membership for $175, you'll have access to all their stuff plus every other ASTC organization in the US. Hope this makes sense. My friend has used her Idaho pass for all sorts of stuff in So Cal, where she's originally from. So if you do it right, you can extend the value of a local membership when you travel.

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  5. In my above comment, it should say "across the country," not "company."

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    1. Kerry!! Thank you for the fantastic tip! I might use this as a blog post because it's something I think people would love to know about. Is that o.k. with you?

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