Animals
Spring Has Sprung: Baby Animals
April 28, 2009
Spring is an exciting season on a farm, with all the baby lambs bleating, the baby colts struggling to stand up, and the little chicks peep-peep-peeping out of their shell. Children love baby animals and nothing brings a smile to a preschooler's face like a fluffy yellow chick squirming in his outstretched palm. Here are some places around Silicon Valley where you and your little one can stop by to say, “Hello” to the animal world's newest arrivals -- and maybe even pet or feed a few:
1) All 3 major zoos in the region -- the San Francisco Zoo, Oakland Zoo, and Happy Hollow Park and Zoo in San Jose -- have children's zoos with petting areas featuring gentle farm animals.
2) Ardenwood Farm in Fremont has pigs, sheep, goats, horses, cows and a henhouse with Araucana hens that lay the most beautifully-colored eggs I've ever seen (think Martha Stewart shades of blue and brown). To get up close to all of your farmyard favorites, join us for Afternoon Animal Feeding every Thursday-Sunday at 3:00 pm. Meet at the chicken coop and help check the henhouse for eggs and bring hay to the livestock. You’ll learn all the animals’ favorite foods as you help shut the farm down for the evening.
3) Emma Prusch Farm Park in San Jose has a poultry area and livestock barn. They also have a small animal area where children see their favorite farmyard animals. For a fee of $3.00, they can also help feed the ducks, goats, chickens, rabbits, geese, sheep and miniature pigs one Saturday morning each month (limited to 20 children).
4) Hidden Villa has cows, sheep, horses, goats and pigs. You'll need to join one of their educational guided tours in order enter the pens and pet the animals, but anyone can enter the chicken coop and be surrounded by flocks of hungry, hopeful free-range chickens. And anyone can open up the big green "learning boxes" near each animal's pen containing information about the animal and all the products we get from it.
5) Just one exit south from Hidden Villa on Highway 280, Deer Hollow Farm keeps a stock of chickens, rabbits, goats, sheep, pigs, and a cow. The buildings and pens are closed to the general public, but their last Spring Farm Tour is coming up this May 16. Take advantage of this opportunity to tour the farm from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm, 45-minute tours.
Finally, it's not your typical farm, but Shoreline Lake at Mountain View is once more swamped with ducks and geese and their young hatchlings. Pack up your stale crusts of bread so your preschooler can throw some to the wildlife and find out what it's like to be a celebrity chased by the duckarazzi. Just be prepared to navigate through all their dropping! Not that your children would even notice -- after all, baby animals are baby animals wherever they can find'em!
Enjoying the Oakland Zoo
March 30, 2009
Last Friday, we took advantage of our spring break and the spring weather to pay a visit to the Oakland Zoo. It was our first visit to the zoo, and I was curious as to how it would compare to the other zoos in the area. As much as we love the San Francisco Zoo and San Jose's Happy Hollow Park and Zoo, after spending a day at the Oakland Zoo I'd have to say that it's my favorite of the lot. Unlike the San Francisco Zoo, it's small enough to see practically all the exhibits in one day (barely, I'll admit, especially if you have children who love to linger at exhibits and at the children's playground). Unlike Happy Hollow, it boasts an impressive array of wildlife from all over the world.
Despite the plethora of information and educational programs for adults and older kids, the zoo still pays special attention to the little ones. They have a children's zoo with a petting area featuring the usual farm animals, some cool animal exhibits (the giant tortoise and alligators are fascinating), and fun areas featuring animal sculptures to play on, scattered throughout. I love this zoo's attention to detail. the wildlife safari theme prominently featured at the entrance is echoed throughout the zoo, in the design of each exhibit, fence, restroom and cafe. And the concrete paths have animal tracks stamped onto them, so even walking from one exhibit to another presents an opportunity for discovery.
All in all, the Oakland Zoo gets a big Thumbs Up from me as a place to take your preschooler for the day. In fact, we loved it so much we're thinking of getting a zoo membership so we can come back whenever we want. We hope to see you there! And because it's always nice to get advice from someone who has been there before, here are five tips to help you make the most of your visit:
1) Be prepared for hilly terrain; if your little one is too little to walk the up-and-down paths leading from one exhibit to the next, make sure you bring a stroller (or rent one near the gift shop).
2) Pack your own snacks and lunch. When you're at one end of the zoo, it's a long walk back to the zoo cafe at the entrance -- and at lunchtime, the line goes out the door.
3) The gondola sky ride gives you a great birds' eye view of the zoo, and it's not to be missed -- but it's closed on weekends for most of the year (it's open every day during the summer, call before you go to check).
4) Dress in layers and bring water, sunscreen and hats. The zoo is nestled in the Oakland hills and you'll be walking through the trees, so it can get cool in the mornings, but by mid-day the sun can be burning hot.
5) Adjacent to the zoo, just beside the zoo exit, is a small amusement park with a carousel, train, and several other kiddie rides. It's almost impossible to sneak past this area without your child seeing or hearing the rides, and asking if he or she can catch a ride on one or all of to get on one or all of the attractions; if your time and budget allow for just one ride, I would recommend the train. For $2 per person, you get a fairly long ride on cabs pulled by a cute vintage-style engine, . There are zoo animal statues scattered over half of the route, and the train chugs through a portion of the zoo for the other half of the route.
Read more...99 things you must do with your child in Silicon Valley before they grow up
February 24, 2009
It seems like only yesterday that The Pea was just a little pea. Now she's 7 and there are still so many things we haven't done together. I really have to hurry, because some of the best experiences in the Valley have use-by dates: I want my kids to first experience them while they're young, before the magic fades and they retreat into the solitude of their bedroms and their iPods.
With that in mind, here's a list of must-do activities for parents and kids around Silicon Valley:
Good Eats
1) Taste garlic ice cream at the Gilroy Garlic Festival.
2) Chew on saltwater taffy at the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk.
3) Pick berries at a local farm.
4) Eat fish and chips at Princeton-by-the-Sea.
5) Get a sugar high at the Jelly Belly Factory.
6) Have a pancake breakfast at Hobees.
7) Slurp clam chowder from a sourdough bread bowl at Fisherman's Wharf.
8) Have an ice cream sundae at Ghirardelli Square.
9) Burn your tongue at Palo Alto's annual Chili Cook-off.
10) Enjoy berrylicious treats at Watsonville's Strawberry Festival.
11) Go on a tasting tour -- cheese tasting, that is -- around Napa and Sonoma Valley.
The Animal Kingdom
12) Pat a llama at the Happy Hollow Zoo.
13) Join the Los Altos Pet Parade.
14) Milk a cow and feed chickens at Hidden Villa.
15) Watch for whales at the Point Sur Lighthouse.
16) Feed the ducks at Shoreline Park.
17) Spend the day at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
18) See the Monarch Butterflies in Pacifica.
19) Listen to the sea lions barking at Pier 39.
20) Ride an elephant at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom.
21) Go on safari at Santa Rosa's Safari West.
22) Visit the elephant seals at Ano Nuevo State Reserve.
Events
23) Do the Dragon Dance at San Francisco's Chinese New Year Parade.
24) Welcome springtime at Cupertino's Cherry Blossom Festival.
25) Celebrate Cinco de Mayo at San Jose's annual parade.
26) Watch 4th of July Fireworks from Shoreline Ampitheater.
27) See the Tall Ships and Blue Angels at San Francisco's Fleet Week.
28) See the world's biggest pumpkins at the Half Moon Bay Pumpkin Festival.
29) Go trick or treating at Santana Row.
30) Watch the San Francisco Ballet's Nutcracker.
31) Drive through the Vasona Fantasy of Lights display.
32) Meet Santa Claus at a train station during Caltrains Holiday Train.
33) Enjoy holiday scenes at San Jose's Christmas at the Park.
Sporty Stuff
34) Watch a baseball game at San Francisco's AT&T park.
35) Sail a boat on Shoreline lake.
36) Surf (ok, boogie-board) the waves at San Gregorio State beach.
37) Go rafting on the American River.
38) Ice skate under the stars at Palo Alto's Winter Lodge.
39) Run Bay to Breakers with the little ones in a stroller.
40) Bike the Los Gatos Creek trail.
41) Sink a mini-hole-in-one at Golfland.
42) Take your child for a spin at Redwood City's Malibu Grand Prix.
43) Row, row, row your boat at Vasona Lake County Park.
44) Catch some fish at Ed Levin County Park.
Museums
45) Explore and learn at the Children's Discovery Museum.
46) Scare yourself at the Winchester Mystery House.
47) Play tag amongst the artwork at Stanford University's Rodin Sculpture Garden.
48) Marvel at the California Academy of Science's Living Roof.
49) Count the Pez dispensers at Burlingame's Pez Museum.
50) Walk like an Egyptian at San Jose's Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum.
51) Geek out at the Tech Museum.
52) Take a class at the Palo Alto Junior Museum and Zoo.
53) Play and pretend at Oakland's Habitot Children's Museum.
54) Let your imagination take flight at the Hillier Aviation Museum.
55) Follow the toy trains at the Edward Peterman Museum of Railroad History.
Seein' the Sights
56) Watch an IMAX film at The Tech Museum.
57) See the circus trees at Gilroy Gardens.
58) Enjoy the view from the top of Stanford's Hoover Tower.
59) Watch a space shuttle launch at the NASA Ames Visitor Center.
60) See the stars up close at Lick Observatory.
61) Drive across the Golden Gate Bridge.
62) Check out the local bikers at Alice's Cafe in Woodside.
63) Watch a play, for kids and by kids, at Palo Alto's Hotdog Suppertime Shows.
64) Watch the airplanes bound for San Francisco airport take off and land, from Coyote Point park.
65) See where the San Francisco Bay ends at Palo Alto's Baylands Park.
66) Count as many of the Livermore windmills as you can while driving through Altamont Pass on Highway 580.
Nature
67) Hike through the redwoods at Henry Cowell State Park.
68) Hike up to The Dish at Stanford University.
69) Build a sandcastle at Santa Cruz beach.
70) Find serenity at San Jose's Japanese Friendship Garden.
71) Paint the roses red at San Jose's Heritage Rose Garden.
72) Wade in the creek at Los Altos' Shoup Park.
73) Save the earth on California Coastal Cleanup Day.
74) Pick apples at Gizdich Ranch.
75) Explore the tidepools at the Natural Bridges State Beach.
76) Say hello to the wild turkeys at Deer Hollow Farm.
77) Camp overnight at the Big Basin State Park.
Spend the weekend (or week!) at....
78) ...Yosemite National Park...
79) ...Sequoia National Park...
80) ...Lake Tahoe...
81) ...Napa Valley...
82) ...Sacramento...
83) ...Strawberry...
84) ...Gold Country...
85) ...Carmel-by-the-Sea...
86) ...Big Sur...
87) ...Solvang, or...
88) ...LA
Just Plain Fun
89) Ride the Caltrain up and down the Peninsula.
90) Ride the Billy Jones Wildcat Railroad.
91) Chug through the redwoods on the Roaring Camp Railroad.
92) Catch a cable car on the hills of San Francisco.
93) Hop on the Bill Mason carousel at Oak Meadow Park.
94) Enjoy the rides at Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk.
95) Get stuck on stickers at the Mrs. Grossman's sticker factory.
96) Splash around at the Morgan Hill Aquatics Park.
97) Meet storybook characters at Oakland's Fairyland.
98) Splash through the fountains at the Plaza de Cesar Chavez.
99) Watch a movie at the San Jose's Capitol Drive-In Movie Theater.
My family has done quite a few of these items, but we're nowhere near done. We (and you) had better get cracking on the rest of this list before the kids grow up!
If you have other activities that simply must be on this list, email us at beingsavvysiliconvalley@savvysource.com.
Read more...
Weekend Outlook: January 2nd-4th
December 31, 2008
Happy New Year to All! 2009 is already shaping up to be a great year and it hasn't even started yet. "How can that be?" you ask. And I'm glad you asked, because it gives me a segue into the first Weekend Outlook of 2009 (or the last one of 2008, depending on your point of view). On Friday how about taking the under-3 tot to KidzArt for their "Squiggles to Grins" art class from 10am Read more...
Weekend Outlook: December 19th-21st
December 17, 2008
'Twas the weekend before Christmas, and all through the Peninsula Not a creature was stirring, not even a min...su....la? Sorry kids, your uncle Shawn is seriously lacking in the Holiday Poetry department. But, I do have some things lined up for you to do out of the house this weekend that don't involve going to the mall in any way. Because the mall is going to suck this weekend. Read more...
List Day: Consumable Gifts
December 16, 2008
Today on Savvy Source we're talking about "consumable" gifts. Not "gifts you can eat" but gifts that you use up, like gift certificates and memberships. My favorite gifts as a kid were always bookstore gift certificates, and I think my post-Christmas Certificate-Shopping-Spree kept the local bookstores in business through March. But not everyone is like the nerdy kid I was (am?), so Read more...
Weekend Outlook: December 5th-7th
December 03, 2008
Even if you aren't going to be participating in or enjoying any of the activities and events I talked about yesterday you can still have a great time with your kid(s) this weekend around the Peninsula. And for the sake of variety this will be a concert/theater-free Weekend Outlook. I know you must be played out (that's kind of a pun). This Friday from 3-4pm is the first in Hidden Read more...
Weekend Outlook: November 7th-9th
November 05, 2008
This Election Week Weekend Outlook is brought to you by ME. You know. As usual. What is there to do with your little one this first weekend in November, the month winter begins to close its frosty grip? This Friday Hidden Villa begins its " Preschoolers on the Farm " series of "working the farm" afternoons. The workshop runs from 3-4pm, and is continued on November 14th and November 21st. Read more...
The ABCs of Silicon Valley
November 04, 2008
Today at Savvy Source we're doing the ABCs of Silicon Valley. Do you have the song in your head? Good. A is for Armadillo Willy's Barbecue . B is for the Baby Loves Disco . C is for the Cinco de Mayo Festival. D is for ducks . E is for environmentalism. F is for farmer's markets . G is for the Gilroy Garlic Festival . H is for Hobee's . I is for Ice Skating Read more...
Weekend Outlook: October 10th-12th
October 08, 2008
(to a classic, unnamed sea chanty) What do you do with a bored pre-schooler? What do you do with a bored pre-schooler? What do you do with a bored pre-schooler On Friday, Saturday and Sun-Day? Friday feed the otters in San Mateo Coyote Point Museum in San Mateo Twelve-thirty pm in San Mateo Let's go feed the otters. Saturday there's Fun Fest at St. Lucy's Read more...
Park Day: Central Park (New York)
October 06, 2008
Ah, this is a tricky one, right? See, my wife and I went away for the weekend, leaving our daughter home with grandma. They hit our usual haunts, and from all reports our meticulous list of instructions was both appreciated and totally unnecessary. We missed her more than we realized, and on our weekend trip to New York we found ourselves constantly seeing things that we would love to be Read more...
Butch and Sundance, or at least some non-criminal versions
September 23, 2008
Some of the greatest stories are buddy stories: Butch and Sundance (although their end isn't so great), Bonnie and Clyde (although, well, their end isn't so great), Frank and Jesse James (although their...ok...that's enough of that). Today at Savvy Source we're talking about great buddy stories for pre-schoolers. Well, we're kind of Disney freaks around here (my house), so how about a list Read more...
Park Day: Willow Oaks Park
September 22, 2008
We stayed close to home this weekend, but rather than hit our usual neighborhood park, Seminary Oaks , we went a little farther afield and whiled away some time at Willow Oaks Park . Located between a pre-school and an elementary school on the back edge of one of Palo Alto's northeastern neighborhoods, Willow Oaks Park isn't easily noticed from Willow Road. But it's worth a visit. There are Read more...
Weekend Outlook: September 5-7
September 03, 2008
Heading into this first weekend of what always seems to be the Fall to me my thoughts turn from the beach and pool and cooling off to other great activities for us here in the Valley. Although we'll be hitting the pool many more times before the month is out, it isn't our "go to" move now. So if you are like us and want to get out and do something beyond just soaking your head in the sprinlker Read more...
Pool Games
August 22, 2008
We're heading on down to the pool, and I've been trying to think of a way to switch up the regular pool games kids usually play. For instance, although Marco Polo is a fun game and promotes action in the water rather than simple terrified floating, there seems to be a way to maximize the activity going on beyond the simple calls of "Marco" and "Polo". Counting Polo: Instead of shouting Read more...
The Circus
August 08, 2008
One of my earliest memories is of being put in the co-pilot seat on my mother's bicycle and riding to the circus. I remember the clowns (which still freak me out a little bit) and seeing peanut shells everywhere, and riding on an elephant that seemed as tall as a house. I've always liked the circus. Maybe it's because of that early memory; maybe it's because of seeing Dumbo very young. Read more...
Not the Big Apple, But We're Pretty Good
July 23, 2008
Today at Savvy Source our editors are taking you to New York City. For a long time I lived on the East Coast, around the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes. I've lived in Upstate New York. But I've never been to New York City. London, Paris, Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Munich, Dublin. I've done some metro-traveling. But The Big Apple has remained elusive. Read more...
Extra-pre-school Activities
June 17, 2008
'Tis Tuesday, and Tuesdays around here are List Days. Today our List assignment is to help all of you parents-of-preschoolers find some things for your youngins to do once pre-school ends for the day (or before pre-school starts, or once pre-school is over for the year). Erin is not yet in pre-school, but now that I've been able to think about this for a while I've compiled a list of Read more...
Kelley Park
June 04, 2008
I lived in San Jose in my late teens. I didn't get out much, working swing at a hotel out by the airport. So one of the places that I never knew about until I had a kid was Kelley Park , just south of downtown. The park can be tackled in four different ways; it really just depends on what you are in the mood for doing with your kid that day. As with all big city parks there are Read more...
Lions and Tigers and Bears
May 26, 2008
Ah, Happy Hollow . It's a pre-schooler's paradise. I call it a farmzooment park, and I think that's a pretty good term for it. As you walk in the main gate and cross the tiny bridge you are at once transported into a land of details impossible for pre-schoolers to notice: fraying canopies, dying grass, cobwebs in the corners of the tiny tiny play-buildings. And all of that is Read more...
More of Our Favorite Activities and Things to Do in silicon valley
Creatures & Critters:
Our Urban Jungle
Do, Re, Mi! Places to Hear, Sing & Play a Tune
Artistic Endeavors:
Our Favorite Art Venues
Room to Run:
Run, Jump & Wiggle Outdoors
Rainy & Quiet Days:
Cozy & Crazy Indoor Fun
A Sense of History:
Our City's Stories
Tot's Science Fair:
Science & Nature Sites
Splash, Spray, Play! Local Spots to Get Wet
The Most Fun in Life Is Free!
The Best of... Our Top Can't-Live-Without Spots
The Voice of Being Savvy silicon valley:
Shawn Burns, Bonggamom
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