San Diego Zoo for Families

We are a family of animal lovers so it was a no-brainer for us to visit the San Diego Zoo, listed in Frommer’s 500 Places to Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up, while we were vacationing in southern California.

Otters at the San Diego Zoo

We began our day along the Lost Forest, an area with shaded winding paths to see one of our favorite animals, the tiger, before following the Hippo Trail to visit another animal that always brings a smile to our faces – the otter.

Although the more traditional San Diego Zoo doesn’t have the wide-open spaces and natural landscapes like its sister zoo, the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, the San Diego Zoo does have one major edge over the Safari Park – Giant Pandas.

The line was already long for the Giant Panda Research Station when we arrived in the late morning, but it moved at a steady slow pace, giving everyone a chance to see these gentle giants.

Giant Pandas at the San Diego Zoo

The zookeepers don’t encourage dawdling after you’ve taken your pictures, so we moved onto the Northern Frontier to visit the hot and sleepy polar bear.

By now it was time for lunch and rather than hike uphill with hungry kids, we hopped on the Skyfari aerial tram, which deposited us back at the main entrance. The San Diego Zoo’s kids’ meals came in a fun souvenir bucket (perfect for playing at the beach) and with our bellies full, we headed to the Outback to catch a glimpse of an animal we hadn’t seen much in our previous zoo experiences – the koala bear.

A sleepy koala at San Diego Zoo

Apparently the Koala, which isn’t a “bear” but a rather cranky marsupial, spends most of its day asleep in its eucalyptus tree. We were lucky, however, and saw the little guy when he woke from his nap, stared at the onlookers for about 2 minutes, and then went back to sleep!

We wound our way back along Center Street to the Asian Passage, a neat one-way escalator that connects to the Elephant Odyssey. I really like this area and how it linked prehistoric animals to their modern counterparts with statues of prehistoric animals like the Columbian mammoth placed next to live exhibits of elephants, as well as the Fossil Portal, with its pit of fake animal bones that filled with gooey tar (or at least something that looked like tar) since we had plans to visit the La Brea Tar Pits later in our vacation. We finished the day in the gift shop with the purchase of yet another stuffed animal for my youngest – “Mick” Jaguar – before heading back to our hotel and the beach at Coronado.

77 Places visited, 423 to go.

Around the USA in One Hour or Less at Legoland

New Orleans at Legoland California

One of the most amazing parts of LEGOLAND California is their mini-version of the United States. In less than an hour, you can walk from the New England coast to Washington, DC, to San Francisco with a stop in New Orleans and Las Vegas on the way.

Rockefeller Center at Legoland California

Rockefeller Center at Legoland California

The details of these scenes are amazing and we easily spent an hour discovering the small items that made each area unique – like a tug sailing near the Golden Gate Bridge . . .

Golden Gate Bridge at Legoland

. . . or the mini palm trees near the Las Vegas Luxor Hotel . . .

Las Vegas Luxor Hotel at Legoland

Everything was just like the original . . .

White House

White House

just smaller . . .

White House Legoland

Seventy-five places down, 425 to go!

Visit more amazing photos at Delicious Baby’s Photo Friday

 

 

Hotel del Coronado – A Lovely Victorian Lady

One of my secret vices is watching NBC’s new drama/musical Smash. For those who don’t follow the show, it’s the story of making a Broadway musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe. So why this digression when today’s post was supposed to be about the Hotel del Coronado? Because the Hotel Del (as locals call it) was also the setting for one of my favorite movies starring Marilyn Monroe – Some Like It Hot and it looks exactly like it did in the movie.

Hotel Del Coronado - San Diego

Hotel Del Coronado

The Hotel Del (as locals call it) occupies prime real estate on San Diego’s Coronado Beach and offers a variety of family-friendly room choices.

Coronado Beach San Diego

Coronado Beach San Diego

Our first night at the Del we stayed in one of its family suites in the historic main section of the hotel. And while the room was lovely and spacious, it overlooked the parking lot and employee entrance – a very noisy place at 4:30 in the morning. When I requested a different room, the management was gracious and immediately placed us in connecting rooms in a significantly quieter, but less charming section of the Hotel Del Coronado – their Ocean Towers. The room was luxurious and large and most importantly – quiet. I’d also suggest their California Cabanas, which are close to the Main Pool.

We enjoyed dining at two of their restaurants – 1500 Ocean (which had a kid’s menu – not always an easy find in upper-end hotels) and Sheerwater, their more casual grill and breakfast area. And their breakfasts?? One word – amazing.

View from Sheerwater Grill

There are plenty of shops contained in the Hotel del Coronado and I had a fun time finding Easter candy for my guys at Spreckels Sweets & Treats, while the boys enjoyed The Blue Octopus, a toy store.

Everything at the Hotel Del, alas, was not perfect . . .

I had arranged for a facial and massage at their spa as a “treat” for me, and while the massage was fine (though nothing special), the woman who gave me the facial was annoying. She kept trying to sell me on their “products” and suggested that the makeup/cleanser/etc I regularly used was inferior and filled with chemicals that were going to ruin my skin! I get that this is how they make extra commissions – but don’t tsk-tsk at me when I tell you that I’m not interested. Just. Move. On.

Would I go back? A definite YES!

Oh and did I mention that while we were there I was treated to some yummy eye-candy in the form of shirtless Navy Seals on a training run along the beach? Definitely a plus in my book!

Old Town San Diego – Visiting Old California

Old Town San Diego

Old Town San Diego

While it’s true that San Diego has tons of kid-friendly activities like SeaWorld, the San Diego Zoo, and nearby LegoLand, our first stop when we arrived in California was Old Town San Diego - a historic area filled with restaurants, shops, and historic sites which just also happened to be in Frommer’s 500 Places to Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up. 

I’ve always been a big fan of these kind of historical areas because they’re an easy way to learn about the past without spending a ton of cash.

Driving the wagon at Old Town San Diego

At Old Town San Diego there was no entrance fee and visits to the historic sites were self-guided, so we were able to peek into the old jail, courthouse, and bank before spending the majority of our time at the Seeley Stables Museum and La Casa de Estudillo, a restored hacienda.

My kids like places like Old Town San Diego because they feel less like a stuffy museum and more like stepping back in time to a different era.

Inside the Seeley Stable Museum

Seventy-four places visited, 426 to go.

 

Walking the Red Carpet at the Academy Awards

Hollywood's Real Red Carpet

It may be hard to believe, but each year the Kodak Hollywood and Highland Theater, located within a high-end mall, is transformed into the entrance to the Academy Awards. Lined with columns listing the names of the Best Picture winners,

Best Picture-Slumdog Millionaire

Hollywood magic is performed and the names of shops are artfully hidden while the red carpet is installed over the permanent red carpeted grand staircase leading up into the theater. According to our guide, the red tile lining the risers of the staircase came from the Wizard of Oz’s yellow brick road (which in the movie has two spirals – one yellow and one red).

Tiles in the red carpet

Somehow it seems fitting that the tiles leading to the wonderful land of Oz was used to create this ultimate “red carpet.”

Congrats to all this year’s nominees!