Posts Tagged ‘Minnesota’

Mickey’s Diner – A Fun Joint for Families in St. Paul, Minnesota

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Mickey’s has everything a diner should have: greasy food, thick milkshakes, jukebox tunes, and cranky waitresses. Serving up good eats and free downtown parking 24 hours a day since it opened in St. Paul in 1939, this restaurant was designed to resemble the dining railroad cars of its time. I remember coming here as a kid from the Minnesota suburbs and falling for its train-like appearance and neon sign out front. Mickey’s felt almost magical to me, like stepping into an imagined scene from my parents’ childhood. I think it’s why, to this day, I feel compelled to stop into any diner I stumble upon for some simple fare and retro ambiance.

Mickey's Diner St. Paul

Mickey’s Diner in downtown St. Paul, Minnesota

There’s no children’s menu but food is affordable and even picky eaters can find something they like here from hamburgers and B.L.T.s, to eggs and pancakes from their all-day breakfast menu. I found the fried chicken a little bland and dry but the burgers were a big hit with my 15-year-old triplet niece and nephews. My sister wished she could have a second serving of Mickey’s Mulligan stew and while I’m not typically a baked beans kind of a gal, I gobbled up my side of homemade brown-sugared, not-too-mushy legumes. Of course, you’ll want to get a shake or malt. Choose from vanilla, chocolate, banana, raspberry, or strawberry. They’ll even split your choice in half (or thirds) for those with small stomachs or considerable restraint.

Mickey's Diner St. Paul

The “Classic” — Mickey’s cheeseburger with a few hashbrowns & a little Mulligan stew

I’ve got good news and I’ve got bad news. The good news is the mini jukeboxes perched on every table really work and play oldies by artists like Elvis Presley, Hank Williams, and Patsy Cline. The bad news is your 3-year-old (if he’s anything like mine) will be so enthralled with this contraption that he will take only a bite or two of his grilled cheese sandwich; instead he will insist on putting change into the machine again…and again…and again. Luckily, he will like to press the return change button more than actually playing music, so this activity won’t cost much.

Mickey's Diner jukebox

Tabletop jukebox at Mickey’s Diner

Mickey’s Diner might sound familiar to you and I’ll tell you why. This restaurant has appeared on the Food Network’s Unwrapped, Rachel Rays’ Tasty Travels, Alton Brown’s Feasting on Asphalt, and Roker on the Road. It’s also been featured in movies like Jingle All the Way, A Prairie Home Companion, and the Mighty Ducksseries. Or maybe you read about Mickey’s in The Smithsonian, National Geographic, Sports Illustrated, Easy Rider, Playboy and Elle magazines. And now…surely Mickey’s most exciting achievement…here is this story on TravelMamas.com! ;-)

Where is your favorite diner? Tell us in the comments below!

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Why to Visit Minnesota’s Twin Cities with Kids

Why to Visit Minnesota’s Twin Cities with Kids

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Whenever I visit Minnesota, I am struck by how green, green, green the landscape is. Leafy trees and expanses of lush grass as well as lakes both big and small abound. In the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, a myriad of cultural activities like live music and theatre plus kid-friendly attractions galore can keep any family entertained.

minneapolis sculpture garden spoon and cherry
The famous Spoonbridge & Cherry at the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden

Each downtown area has its own feel; hilly St. Paul is filled with charming architecture and historic buildings, while Minneapolis is more modern and has a happening nightlife. Both have an extensive system of skyways for workers and shoppers who want to stay warm during the cities’ snowy winters. Minneapolis’ Uptown neighborhood is youthful and Bohemian, filled with kitschy stores, unique coffee shops, and breakfast joints serving bloody Marys to a somewhat hung-over crowd alongside families munching on eggs and pancakes.

What’s more, a hotel room at a five-star hotel in Downtown Minneapolis, for example, in the middle of summer for a family of four will cost you only about $150 a night! Of course, there are plenty of even more affordable options a little further out or at less fancy-schmancy accommodations.

minnesota lake
Minnesota natives Ryan and Trevor (my nephews) paddling a boat
on one of the more than 10,000 lakes in the state

I spent four years of my childhood in Minnesota before we moved away when I was eight. I returned to visit my big sister every summer before moving back for a few years after college. Then I met a Minnesota boy, got engaged and retreated to the West Coast. Now we’re married and live in San Diego but we make annual treks to the Land of 10,000 Lakes to see our families and revisit where we first fell in love.

Here are five of my favorite family-friendly places to visit in the Twin Cities area:

Chain of Lakes (Minneapolis)
For me, no trip to the Twin Cities is complete without a walk around one of the five main lakes near Uptown. Minnesotans love the outdoors and go out of their way to enjoy each and every sunny day their state gives them! As soon as the snow begins to melt, the paths circling the lakes are filled with bicyclists, walkers, skateboarders and roller-bladers. Rent a canoe, paddle boat, bike or other fun stuff from Wheel Fun Rentals. In winter, go here for ice skating fun instead.

Lake Calhoun is probably the most popular (and crowded) but Lake Harriet is my favorite. It’s fun to make a game of choosing which of the gorgeous Victorian mansions that encircle the lake you’d pick as your own. Enjoy free concerts at this lake’s band shell and then grab an ice cream cone from the concession stand June through Labor Day. The best part is the darling Lake Harriet Rose Garden. I always feel like I’ve stumbled across a secret treasure when I find this garden tucked across the street from Lake Harriet. This sweet-smelling park is free to the public and filled with roses of all colors.

lake harriet band shell in minneapolis
Lake Harriet’s band shell is a beautiful place to listen to live music concerts in the summer

Minnesota Zoo (Apple Valley)
As a five-year annual pass holder to the world famous San Diego Zoo, I have pretty high standards for what makes a zoo worthy of a visit. The Minnesota Zoo is one of the best I have ever visited. The verdant exhibits give animals like caribou, moose, and brown bears plenty of space to roam. On a rainy (or snowy) day, stick to the indoor shark and dolphin exhibits or wander through the Tropics Trail.

minnesota zoo splash area
Splash fountains at the Minnesota Zoo keep kids cool on hot summer days

Minneapolis Sculpture Garden (Minneapolis)
Children adore the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, a grassy park filled with flowers and unusual, modern sculptures. What kid wouldn’t be enthralled by a giant spoon holding a shiny, red cherry?

minneapolis sculpture garden flowers
A flower-filled walkway at the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden

Mall of America (Bloomington)
I used to work 60+ hours per week as a full-time retail clothing store manager and part-time waitress at this massive mall. Believe me; it’s much more fun coming here to shop and play than it is to work! Wear some comfy shoes and plan to walk A LOT. Know that you will not be able to visit all 400 Mall of America stores in one day! There are two huge food courts plus numerous tasty restaurants to choose from. (My favorite is the Italian eatery, Tucci Benucch, with its wide array of pastas that both adults and kids gobble up!) Nickelodeon Universe is a themed amusement park that fills the center of the mall. Promise the kiddies a ride or two for good behavior after shopping, or make a day of it and purchase a wristband for the best all-day savings.

nickelodeon universe ride at mall of america
My daughter, Karissa, with her cousin, Siobhan, aboard a ride
at the Mall of America’s Nickelodeon Universe

Water Parks (Various Locations)
For a place covered in snow nearly half the year, the Twin Cities sure does have its fair share of water parks! Last year we visited Cascade Bay in Eagan with my sister and her family. With three 13-year-olds of varying levels of waterslide bravery, a toddler, a preschooler, and three adults – there were pools, slides, fountains, and a lazy river to keep everyone content. Here’s a list of more than a dozen Minnesota water parks (a few of which are indoors).

minnesota waterpark
Here are Trevor, Siobhan, Leo and Auntie Kay-Kay
floating down Cascade Bay’s lazy river

The Twin Cities is a beautiful, fun-packed, and affordable choice for a summer getaway!

 

Which of these Minnesota attractions would you most like to visit? Tell us in the comments below!

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Minneapolis Family Vacation

The Travel Mama’s Top 3 Hidden Gem Destinations

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Travel bloggers are sharing their three favorite travel secrets in a game of Tripbase Blog Tag. The goal is to eventually compile an amazing list of recommended destinations. I am honored to have been nominated to participate by my friend and fellow travel blogger, Amy at The Q Family Adventure Blogs

Shhh…here are my favorite hidden gem destinations…

Lerici, Italy


Lerici’s harbor

I discovered lovely little Lerici during a Disney Mediterranean Cruise in 2007. Our ship docked at La Spezia, from which most cruisers bus a couple of hours inland to Florence for its renaissance art or to Pisa for its leaning tower. Since we had just tackled Rome in a day, and because my husband and I were traveling with our then two-year-old daughter, Karissa, we avoided the long drive to these popular destinations and instead opted to take a short boat ride to lesser-known Lerici.


Picture-perfect cappuccinos in Lerici

The boat ride to Lerici afforded gorgeous shoreline views of Cinque Terre and Portovenere in the distance. We pulled into Lerici’s darling little harbor with its battalion of toy boats bobbing in the water and a castle perched on a hill overlooking the town. The rain sprinkling from an overcast sky provided the perfect excuse to duck into a café for cappuccinos. When the rain let up, we wandered the quaint cobblestone hillside streets, winding in and out of offbeat Italian clothiers and antique stores.


A tiny park in Lerici

We stopped in what may be the world’s smallest park to let our toddler run free for a bit before resuming our uncharted discovery of the town. We rewarded Karissa for good behavior with a spin on the town’s unassuming carousel before loading up on more cappuccinos and taking another boat to La Spezia for lunch. We could have found our way to the castle, I suppose. But, really, a visit to Lerici is not about seeing sites. It is about walking to where the road leads you and taking a new path as it appears. It is about enjoying the world as it unfolds before you.

Montpellier, France


Montpellier’s main square, La Place de la Comedie

Whenever I tell someone I lived in France during my junior year of college, they assume I lived in Paris. No, mes amis, I lived in Montpellier in the Languedoc region of Southern France. The lan-gue-what?! Not many Americans make a point to visit Languedoc – a region perhaps best known as being the worst for growing wine in all of France.


That’s me in front of the fountain, Les Trois Graces
(The Three Graces), during a return trip to Montpellier in 2004

But here’s what the French know. They know Montpellier is a cosmopolitan town filled with universities to which students from around the world flock. They know Montpellier’s very walk-able downtown is filled with shops with the latest fashions. They know the town’s large center square, La Place de la Comedie, is one of the prettiest you’ll find in all of Europe. The square is surrounced by cafes perfect for people-watching and is flanked by a gorgeous opera house at one end and the tree-lined Esplanade Charles de Gaulle, at the other. In the summer, the beaches just outside of town are filled with French and foreign tourists seeking sun and sand at a more affordable price than what can be found to the East along the French Riviera.


The modern architecture of Montpellier’s Antigone District

If you want art and monuments, go to Paris. If you want history, head to Normandy. For castles, the Loire Valley. For wine, Burgundy or Champagne. Skiing, Grenoble. Posh beaches, Cannes. But if you want to visit a French city with a youthful vibe and an international flair, where old world tradition and architecture collide with modern day…you must go to Montpellier.

The Boundary Waters Canoe Area (BWCA), Minnesota


A misty morning in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area

The Boundary Waters Canoe Area (BWCA) is over 1,000 lakes in a million acres of wilderness located in Northern Minnesota. Motorized boats are not allowed. There are no hotels or indoor plumbing. This is what you do. Get a permit and choose a point of entry. Follow tiny squiggly lines on a map, trying to decipher if that clump of rocks ahead is the island in the picture. Paddle all day long in your canoe, stopping for a lunch of PB&J if you must, or fresh walleye if you’re lucky. Portage from one lake to another, carrying a forty-five pound pack on your back and a canoe on your head, back and forth over land and around un-passable rapids.


A mama moose and her calf in the Boundary Waters

I have seen a wealth of wildlife the few times I have visited the BWCA with my dad. I spied on a mama moose with her calf wading through the water, pausing to take sips from the lake. I paddled past a family of playful otters that popped their heads up and peered at us, as if to say, “Whatcha doin?!” I braved a shower of fluorescent green frogs leaping from mucky black mud and into my canoe. (Have I mentioned that I have a phobia of frogs?) I witnessed a bald eagle soaring above my head, pausing to listen to the “swoosh…swoosh” of wind whipping through its wings. I have seen snakes, mice, bunnies, squirrels, and birds of all kinds. My brother and my dad even had a showdown with a bear once, but that is their story and I’ll leave it for them to tell.


Minnesota’s State Bird, the Common Loon, on one of the many lakes in the BWCA

I have heard the haunting call of loons, which sounds like a cross between a wolf’s howl and a wind flute. It is at once the loneliest and the most beautiful sound in the world. Instead of having hollow bones like most birds, these prehistoric creatures have solid bones. This extra weight restricts their habitat to the large lakes of the North, where I have watched these magnificent black and white speckled birds take off from the water, flapping their wings furiously until their bodies began to slowly rise and skim the water, and finally they soared through the air.

Camping here takes planning. And the right gear (which, if you’re like me, and you don’t camp much, you can rent from an outfitter). And more planning. And some skills – like how to pitch a tent and how to hang up your food pack at night so you don’t attract bears. I have neither of these skills, but I can follow directions like a champ. I suppose I could go car-camping sometime. I could probably manage that. But after camping in the Boundary Waters, it would seem like cheating.


A typical Boundary Waters scene

For me, wilderness does not have cars or electricity or, for the most part, other humans. Camping means miles and miles of still water, trimmed by prickly triangles of pine, jutting up into the sky and back down again into the water’s reflection. It smells like emerald green, mixed with the sweet scent of crisp leaves slowly turning soft and sinking back into the earth. It’s a nighttime so black that the bright twinkling of stars in the sky are literally all that can be seen. There is no noise beyond the gentle lapping of water, the buzz of mosquitoes wishing they could enter your tent, and the footsteps of some woodland creature padding past your campsite, all punctuated by the sweet melancholy sound of loons calling out to each other, looking for reassurance that they are not alone.

 

You can download free TripBase Travel Secrets eBooks packed with hidden gems and travel tips like these from me and other travel writers. My story about Lerici can be found in the Italy Travel eBook (as an EDITORS PICK!), my story about Montpellier, France is in the WorldWide Travel eBook, and the story about the Boundary Waters Canoe Area in Minnesota is featured in the United States Travel eBook (as an EDITORS PICK!). TripBase will donate $1 for every eBook downloaded to CHARITY: WATER to provide clean drinking water to those in developing countries. Plus, the eBooks are FREE! So…what are you waiting for? Download now and make a difference!

What are your favorite secret travel destinations? Have you visited any of my favorite hidden gem locations? Please leave a comment below!

Here are my nominations for five fabulous bloggers to join in fun and share their travel secrets:

• Meryl Pearlstein, creator of Travel & Food Notes and Fodor’s New York author, who writes for Gayot.com and has written for New York Magazine and the Boston Herald.
 • The Vogel Family, authors of A Wayward Journey, a blog about the adventures of a family of four as they peddle their way around the world on bicycles.
• Andrea Fellman, creator of Savvy Sassy Moms, a site that offers tips on travel, navigating motherhood, and more.
• Glennia Campbell, whose blog, The Silent I, is about family travel adventures, both foreign and domestic.
• Lisa Bergren of The World is Calling, a blog that chronicles the travels of the Bergren family.

For more information on this topic see:

Camping & Outdoor Pursuits

How to Travel Like a Local

Learn Travel Secrets & Help Those in Need Get Clean Drinking Water…for Free!

Top 10 Most Popular Travel Mamas Blog Posts – Year One

 

Ely Travel Tips