ENJOY WINE (NOT WHINE) COUNTRY WITH THE KIDS.Byline: Audrey Ramsay Prest Staff Writer PETALUMA -- Vacation with kids in California's wine country? Sure. There are lots of activities that appeal to families. This past June I took my two grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16. -- Cierra, 10, and Connor, 6 -- to visit family in Sonoma County and looked for activities that were inexpensive, not too time-consuming and suited to their ages and interests. I'd say we mostly succeeded. A favorite of everyone was a visit to Mrs. Grossman's Sticker Factory in Petaluma. While not aware of brand names, both kids are big fans of stickers. It fit the criteria for price ($3 each), time (just over an hour) and kid-friendliness (what child doesn't like stickers?) The actual tour of the sticker-printing facility, unfortunately, did not hold the interest of this 6-year-old boy, who was not inclined to obey the rules of staying within the factory's safety lines. His mom had to take him out to wait in the lobby. What did capture his and his sister's interest and imagination was the sticker-art room, where each visitor is handed a packet of stickers and a postcard and encouraged to be creative. Leftover stickers were taken with us and ended up adorning more artwork -- plus a hat and even the inside of the ice chest, I later discovered. As scrapbook A Macintosh disk file that holds frequently used text and graphics objects, such as a company letterhead. Contrast with "clipboard," which is reserved memory that holds data only for the current session. enthusiasts, my daughter and I took advantage of the discount ($3 off a $20 purchase) in the factory store, buying for ourselves as well as for the kids. Also playing to Cierra and Connor's artistic bent was our visit to the Charles M. Schulz Noun 1. Charles M. Schulz - United States cartoonist whose comic strip included the beagle Snoopy (1922-2000) Charles Munroe Schulz, Charles Schulz, Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa Santa Rosa, city, Argentina Santa Rosa, city (1991 pop. 80,629), capital of La Pampa prov., central Argentina. It is a modern city and road junction surrounded by a rich agricultural and cattle-raising area. , a celebration of the life and work of the cartoonist who published "Peanuts pea·nut n. 1. A prostrate southern Brazilian plant (Arachis hypogaea) widely cultivated in tropical and warm temperate regions, having yellow flowers on stalks that bend over so that the seed pods ripen underground. 2. " cartoons from 1950 to 2000. I figured every child likes Snoopy Snoopy world’s most famous beagle. [Comics: “Peanuts” in Horn, 542] See : Dogs Snoopy imaginative dog. [Comics: “Peanuts” in Horn, 542–543] See : Illusion and the other "Peanuts" characters, right? Well, to be honest, this was a little less successful, as a 6-year-old has minimal interest in strolling through exhibits and reading cartoons. For Connor, it only became fun when we reached the museum's Education Room, where he could unleash his own creativity with crayons and a large stack of paper. Cierra got more out of the museum, absorbing the how-to-draw lessons and adding her own rendition ren·di·tion n. 1. The act of rendering. 2. An interpretation of a musical score or a dramatic piece. 3. A performance of a musical or dramatic work. 4. A translation, often interpretive. of Woodstock to a hand-out coloring page. She, her mom and I enjoyed posting our artwork on the wall there, along with those of other visitors. It was nice to learn that it all would be saved in large notebooks that docents compile for the museum. Cierra also enjoyed browsing through scrapbooks of letters to Schulz from famous people and seeing personal memorabilia such as items from his studio. And, outside in the museum courtyard, it was fun to spot the "kite-eating tree The Kite-Eating Tree is a fictional tree featured in the comic strip Peanuts created by Charles M. Schulz. The Kite-Eating Tree is a deciduous tree of indeterminate type. ." Not surprisingly, the little gift shop in the museum and the much, much larger one across the road, next to the Redwood Empire Ice Arena The Redwood Empire Ice Arena (commonly known as Snoopy's Home Ice) is a popular Northern California indoor ice rink located in Santa Rosa, California. It was owned by Peanuts cartoonist Charles M. Schulz when it opened on April 28, 1969. , caught both children's attention. I shouldn't have been surprised at that. Merchandise ranges from pencils, erasers and other trinkets to T-shirts, sketchbooks and videos to $3,000 lithographs --and, of course, stuffed Snoopys in many sizes. If you're really pressed for time, you could just stop by to snap some photos of the large statues of Snoopy, Charlie Brown and other characters. They're outside the museum and the ice rink, and posing with them doesn't cost a cent. One very inexpensive afternoon was spent at Spring Lake Park Spring Lake Park is the name of some places in the United States of America:
domestic geese which were derived from the wild goose Anser anser. There are many other species in this genus and in the other genus of geese, the Branta spp. of which Branta canadensis is typical. , and played with the four dogs that accompanied our group of 11 adults and three kids. The 320-acre park is open daily in the summer and offers picnic areas, hiking and bike trails, a swimming lagoon lagoon Area of relatively shallow, quiet water with access to the sea but separated from it by sandbars, barrier islands, or coral reefs. Coastal lagoons have low to moderate tides and constitute about 13% of the world's coastline. and boat ramp at the 72-acre lake. For more water activities, there are ocean beaches a short drive away along the coast, and the Russian River has its own beaches and canoe and kayak kayak (kī`ăk), Eskimo canoe, originally made of sealskin stretched over a framework of whalebone or driftwood. It is completely covered except for the opening in which the paddler sits. rentals. We've taken Cierra and Connor to both on previous trips. The local kayak owners we know say they prefer the lake, as the paddling pad·dling n. 1. The act of moving a boat by means of a paddle. 2. A spanking or beating with a paddle. Paddling of ducks: a company of ducks on water—Lipton, 1970. is smoother and easier there. Weighed against my two measures of post-travel analysis -- would I go back and was the time there too short? -- I'd say this was a successful trip. And I will be back. audrey.prest@dailynews.com (818) 713-3643 WANT TO GO? MRS. GROSSMAN'S STICKER FACTORY: 3810 Cypress Drive, Petaluma. Tours are given Monday through Friday in summer from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., by appointment only (limited hours the rest of the year). www.mrsgrossmans.com; (800) 429-4549. CHARLES M. SCHULZ MUSEUM: 2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa. In summer, open Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $8 for adults, $5 for ages 4 to 18, seniors 62 and up, and college students with ID. www.schulzmuseum.org; (707) 579-4452. REDWOOD EMPIRE ICE ARENA: "Snoopy's Home Ice," 1667 W. Steele Lane (across the street from the Charles M. Schulz Museum). www.snoopyshomeice.com; (707) 546-7147. SPRING LAKE PARK: 391 Violetta Drive, Santa Rosa. www.sonoma-county.org/parks; (707) 565-2041. INFORMATION: Sonoma County Tourism Bureau: www.sonomacounty.com; (800) 576-6662, (707) 522-5800. Santa Rosa Convention and Visitors Bureau: www.visitsantarosa.com; (800) 404-7673. CAPTION(S): 2 photos Photo: (1 -- 2 -- color) Cierra West works on her sticker project at Mrs. Grossman's Sticker Factory in Petaluma, above. Ducks and geese, right, keep Connor West company at Spring Lake Park. Box: WANT TO GO? (see text) |
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