Book Recommendations |
![]() – Fun with the Family in Georgia: Hundreds of Ideas for Day Trips with the Kids – Fodor’s Around Atlanta With Kids: 60 Great Things to Do Together – Zagat Atlanta – Frommer’s Atlanta – Quick Escapes Atlanta: 27 Weekend Getaways from the Gateway to the South – 147 Fun Things to do in Atlanta – Free brochure from the Atlanta Convention & Visitors Bureau |
amazon.com |
Zoo Atlanta |
Zoo Atlanta is compact but full of great exhibits and animals. It’s a bit pricey at $19 per adult (Spring 2011), kids are $16 (2011) and babies 2 and under get in free. An annual family membership starts at $99 (2011). The zoo is crowded, even on cloudy winter days, so it’s a bit rough navigating a stroller around. There’s a playground and carousel for kids when you’re ready to take a break. We were most impressed by the gorillas and orangutans, which have regular feeding times posted so you can stop and watch. The panda exhibit is also pretty cool. Another good (free) zoo (technically an animal rehabilitation center) in the area is Noah’s Ark in Locust Grove. It’s actually a home for abandoned children where the kids help take care of the animals. They open the animal habitat portion up to the public for several hours a day. |
Info: (404) 624-5600 | Grant Park, 800 Cherokee Avenue S.E., Atlanta GA 30315 www.zooatlanta.org |
Centennial Olympic Park |
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centennialpark.com |
CNN Tour |
We thought this one was going to be boring, but it was actually pretty cool. The tour lasts about 45 minutes. You need to get tickets in advance because lines can be long. They are $15 (2011) and you can plan on another few bucks for parking. Much of the tour is marketing, but you get to learn how the newscasters know their lines while looking straight into the camera, how the weather maps appear behind the meteorologist and you can get a bird’s eye view of the news room.Be sure to stop by the gift shop after the tour to buy a videotape of your own mock newscast.
This is across the street from the Centennial Olympic Park. |
Recorded info: (404) 827-2300 | Daily, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. www.cnn.com/tour/atlanta/ |
Coca-Cola Museum |
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www.worldofcoca-cola.com |
The King Center |
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www.thekingcenter.org |
Georgia Aquarium |
I haven’t been to the new aquarium in Atlanta yet, but we got some free tickets from a time share presentation (no, we didn’t buy – yes, we are that cheap) so I’ll be going soon. I’ll let you know what I think of it. So far I’ve heard, basically, that it’s pretty cool but it’s not twice as cool as aquariums that cost half as much.Update Jan 07 – Okay, we went to the aquarium the day after Christmas. It’s pretty amazing. It’s also amazingly expensive. It would have been $110 for the whole family (5 of us) plus another $10 for parking (we grabbed a place for $5 a block away). I heard some others complaining about the long wait and long walk for the “official” parking so our lot worked out well. I really like how the place is organized: there are five main areas around a central food court area. Ocean Voyager takes you on a moving sidewalk through a glass tunnel where all sorts of fish, including 4 impressive whale sharks, swim overhead. The kids liked the divers who were wiping debris off the glass. Tropical Diver has all the colorful fish, including some Dori and Nemo look-alikes. Georgia Explorer has the touch pools (my big complaint here is that even adults had to bend down pretty far to reach anything. Parents were dangling their kids by their feet so they could reach the rays.) There’s also a slide down a plastic whale’s throat and a fun play area that the kids spent 30 minutes in. Coldwater Quest has 5 (4 this week) dreamy beluga whales who apparently prefer new age music. They were very cool, but the kids were getting tired by then. We practically ran through the River Scout area because the kids had run out of steam. It has pirrhanas, otters, and lots of creative aquarium windows above and around you as you walk through, including a slightly claustrophobic tunnel you can crawl through for an underwater feel. There’s also a $5.50 3-D movie we skipped and a $50 behind-the-scenes tour we couldn’t afford. We did enjoy a large pretzel in the Oceans Ballroom where you can get a close (and uncrowded) view of the Ocean Voyager and Beluga whale tanks.
So, it was a great day. We lasted about 3 hours with 3 young kids. The place was so crowded by about 12:30 that we were glad to be done. It will be a while before we go back, though, because I can think of a lot of other fun things to do with $115. |
www.georgiaaquarium.com |
The New American Shakespeare Tavern |
We saw Twelfth Night during the 2003 season. It was one of the best performances of Shakespeare I’ve seen! Feste in particular was hilarious and did a great job of making the dialogue interesting to even the Shakespeare-phobe. Also went to Dickens’ A Christmas Carol in December 2003, which was excellent.Tickets were about $20 each ($10 for students and preview nights) and dinner (British pub food) was $7 – $10 a plate. Be sure to get the apple crisp and ice cream at intermission ($5). |
499 Peachtree Street NE, Atlanta, GA 30308 | (404) 874-5299 shakespearetavern.com |
High Museum of Art |
It’s been a few years since we last visited the High Museum of Art. We were there for a Norman Rockwell exhibit. The place has changed quite a bit since then with three new buildings designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano. We’ll need to visit at some point during the next three years since they’re hosting works of art from the Louvre (see www.louvreatlanta.org) |
www.high.org |
The Georgia Renaissance Festival |
![]() 2) My favorite parts of Shakespeare’s plays are the scatalogical humor and sexual innuendo. 3) I’m comfortable around people dressed up as medieval peasants trying to carry on a serious conversation with me interspersed with “thee”, “thou”, and “Welcome, good gentles”. 4) I think sword swallowing, juggling, mud wrestling, jousting, dueling, birds of prey, and overpriced sodas and legs of turkey are pretty cool. ![]() ![]() |
Fairburn, Georgia (30 minutes south of Atlanta) www.garenfest.com |
The Underground |
A bunch of shopping and eating and people-watching. I like to take visitors here once but it’s not the kind of place you go back to again and again |
www.underground-atlanta.com |
Your Dekalb Farmers’ Market |
Plan on spending an entire afternoon here. The place is huge and has a great selection of fresh produce (much of it exotic), international food, herbs and spices, and all manner of meat and fish. My kids spent 30 minutes just watching people select live blue crabs with tongs. I was delighted to find crème fraîche (French version of sour cream — excellent for making a sauce with pasta and bacon (lardons fumés) and Petit Ecolier (chocolate and graham) crackers there, but I still can’t find the Chocolate Cruesli cereal I long for. We bought two shrink-wrapped packages of pain au chocolat pastries. They didn’t really taste all that French, but they were still very good. They also have a cafeteria with a gigantic salad bar, but I was too full from pains au chocolat. |
Your Dekalb Farmers’ Market – 3000 E Ponce de Leon Ave, Decatur, GA |
Shopping |
Lenox Square The Town Center at Cobb Mall of Georgia |
Boring. . . |
Sports |
Atlanta Braves![]() ![]() Atlanta Hawks |
TicketMaster (800) 326-4000 or (404) 249-6400 atlantabraves.com |
Gone With The Wind sites |
Road to Tara Museum, JonesboroMargaret Mitchell House and Museum, Atlanta |
www.visitscarlett.com |
Stone Mountain |
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www.stonemountainpark.com |
Six Flags Over Georgia |
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Info: (770) 948-9290 | 7561 Six Flags Road SW at I-20 West, 12 miles west of Atlanta www.sixflags.com |
Civil War Sites |
Kennesaw Mountain![]() Cyclorama (not done with this part yet) |
Pine Mountain |
Attractions:![]() Wild Animal Safari – we haven’t done this yet, but some friends enjoyed it. You drive through the park with your own automobile while animals paw at your doors to get food. They said a giraffe reached its head through the passenger window to grab the food in the driver’s lap.Callaway Gardens – we attended during one of their free days (it’s normally a bit pricey) and enjoyed the “beach” and the butterfly pavilion. Warm Springs – home to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Little White House and some quaint shops. |
About an hour south of Atlanta www.pinemountain.org |
Historic Newnan |
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45 minutes south of Atlanta, Coweta County www.cityofnewnan.com |
Hollonville Opry House |
Despite falling under the average age of the audience by about 55 years, we had a great time here. There’s a show most Saturday nights (6:30pm) with four bands playing bluegrass, gospel, and country music. We were both surprised at how talented the line-up was. In the audience there’s a 94-year-old woman who makes it most Saturday nights — she sits up front and rings a cowbell when she likes the music and hollers or gets up to dance when it’s really good. The emcee tells corny jokes between bands (“a skeleton walked into a bar and ordered a beer and a mop”), there are fresh baked goods for sale, and it’s an all-around good time. Admission is free, donations are encouraged. Try to catch Mark Hall & Filmore House Band. |
South of Atlanta, Pike County www.hollonvilleopry.com |
Book Recommendations |
![]() – Fun with the Family in Georgia: Hundreds of Ideas for Day Trips with the Kids – Fodor’s Around Atlanta With Kids: 60 Great Things to Do Together – Zagat Atlanta – Frommer’s Atlanta – Quick Escapes Atlanta: 27 Weekend Getaways from the Gateway to the South – 147 Fun Things to do in Atlanta – Free brochure from the Atlanta Convention & Visitors Bureau |
amazon.com |