Best Family Activities

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    Blaine Kern's Mardi Gras World

    Blaine Kern's Mardi Gras World - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 800/362-8213
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 1380 Port of New Orleans Place
    • Next to Convention Center, on the Riverfront
    • New Orleans,LA70130
    • Map

    •  

    Description:

    Few cities can boast a thriving float-making industry. New Orleans can, and no float maker thrives more than Blaine Kern, who makes more than three-quarters of the floats used by the various krewes every Carnival season. Blaine Kern's Mardi Gras World offers tours of its collection of float sculptures and its studios, where you can see floats being made year-round. Yes, they were back at work on the 2006 Mardi Gras, despite losing many already-completed floats, shortly after Katrina. (Nothing can stop the party!) Visitors see sculptors at work, doing everything from making small "sketches" of the figures to creating and painting the enormous sculptures that adorn Mardi Gras floats each year. You can even try on some heavily bejeweled and dazzling costumes (definitely bring your camera!). Although they could do more with this tour, the entire package does add up to a most enjoyable experience, and it is rather nifty to see the floats up close. All tours include King Cake and coffee.

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    Jackson Square

    Jackson Square - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • +1 504 410 2396
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • Decatur Street
    • New Orleans,LA70116
    • Map

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    Our Local Expert Says:

    The street performers and fortune tellers in Jackson Square are great, but if a man asks you to make a bet about where you got your shoes, don’t fall for it! He’ll say “you got your shoes in Jackson Square in New Orleans, Louisiana!”

    Description:

    Jackson Square is a beautiful little park that sits in front of the commanding St. Louis Cathedral, the oldest cathedral in America. Presiding over the park is a statue of Andrew Jackson on his horse, and surrounding the square are artists and street performers, as well as horse-drawn carriages waiting to take you on a tour of the Quarter. Have the fortune tellers look at your palm, or let a local artist draw your caricature. Of course, there are also museums, shops, and restaurants surrounding Jackson Square, including Muriel's, a five-star haunted restaurant where each day the wait-staff sets a table and pours wine for their resident ghost. "We don't know who drinks the wine," they say, "but every morning it's gone." In Jackson Square at night, you really can feel the presence of the ghosts of New Orleans past.  During the Christmas Season, Jackson Square is the spot for nighttime caroling, and in the spring the park blooms with bright flowers. 

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    Audubon Zoo

    Audubon Zoo - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 504 581 4629
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 6500 Magazine Street
    • New Orleans,LA70118
    • Map

    •  

    Description:

    From the critter-filled swamps of Louisiana to the grasslands of Africa, you can explore some of the Earth's most intriguing habitats and the creatures that dwell within them at this world-class zoo. Rated one of the top zoos in the United States, it features two rare white tigers, as well as Komodo dragons. One of the newest exhibits, Jaguar Jungle, focuses on the people and animals of Central America, including the mysterious Mayan culture.

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    Audubon Aquarium of the Americas

    Audubon Aquarium of the Americas - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 800/774-7394
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 1 Canal St
    • At the River
    • New Orleans,LA70163
    • Map

    •  

    Description:

    The world-class Audubon Institute's Aquarium of the Americas was one of the saddest of so many terrible Katrina stories. The facility had superb hurricane contingency plans, not to mention engineering that one only wishes was shared by the levee system, and consequently both building and fishy residents came through the initial storm beautifully. But as the days following the evacuation stretched out, and the staff was forced to leave so that government relief efforts could use the building as a staging area, generators failed, and most of its 10,000 fish died, breaking the hearts of not only the staff who worked so hard to keep their charges healthy and alive, but of just about anyone who had ever visited this lovely place. Survivors included the popular otter pair, the penguins, the leafy and weedy sea dragons, and Midas, the 250-pound sea turtle. The facility's reopening in May 2006 was a cause for rejoicing, not least because those penguins, who memorably were marched out of the aquarium during the post-storm days to take a flight to Oakland for a temporary stay, were flown home from their vacation via a specially designated FedEx flight, marching down the ramp and into the building just like they were auditioning for a certain penguin-specific movie!

    As it gets back up to speed, this will once again be a world-class aquarium, highly entertaining and painlessly educational, with beautifully constructed exhibits. Kids love it, even those too impatient to read the graphics, but adults shouldn't overlook it, if for no other reason than it's a handy refuge from the rain.

    The aquarium is on the banks of the Mississippi River, a very easy walk from the main Quarter action. Five major exhibit areas and dozens of smaller aquariums hold a veritable ocean of aquatic life native to the region (especially the Mississippi River and Gulf of Mexico) and to North, Central, and South Americas. You can walk through the underwater tunnel in the Caribbean Reef exhibit and wave to finny friends swimming all around you, view a shark-filled re-creation of the Gulf of Mexico, or drop in to see the penguin exhibit. We particularly like the walk-through Waters of the Americas, where you wander in rainforests (complete with birds and piranhas) and see what goes on below the surface of swamps; one look will quash any thoughts of a dip in a bayou. Not to be missed are a fine exhibit on frogs, the impossibly cute giant sea otters, and the ongoing drama of the sea horse exhibit. There is also an excellent new interactive play zone for kids. The long-anticipated Insectarium (yep, a museum dedicated to the over 900,000 species of things that creep, crawl, and flutter) sustained a lot of damage, but it should be open sometime in 2008. We can't wait for the termite room, the cooking demonstrations that will insist cookies made with crunchy invertebrates are worth eating, and, of course, the room about New Orleans bugs, including those ginormous thingies the locals insist on calling palmetto bugs, but we know perfectly well are just fancy roaches. The Insectarium will be in the former U.S. Customs House, at 423 Canal St. The IMAX theater shows two or three films at regular intervals. Look for an astonishing Katrina documentary, showing the flooding and the rest of the devastation. The Audubon Institute also runs the city's zoo at Audubon Park uptown. Combination tickets for the aquarium, the IMAX theater, and the zoo via air-conditioned shuttle to the zoo are $31 for adults, $22 for seniors, $21 for children. Zoo and Aquarium combo tickets including shuttle ride are $25 for adults, $14 for children, $9 for seniors. You can also buy tickets for different combinations of the attractions. Round-trip from aquarium to zoo on the steamship John James Audubon with admission to both is $41 for adults and $23 for children.

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    Louisiana Children's Museum

    Louisiana Children's Museum - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 504/523-1357
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 420 Julia St
    • At Tchoupitoulas St
    • New Orleans,LA70130
    • Map

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    Description:

    This popular two-story interactive museum is really a playground in disguise that will keep kids occupied for a good couple of hours. Along with changing exhibits, the museum offers an art shop with regularly scheduled projects, a mini-grocery store, a chance to be a "star anchor" at a simulated television studio, and lots of activities exploring music, fitness, water, and life itself. If you belong to your local science museum, check your membership card for reciprocal entry privileges. Children 15 and under must be accompanied by parent.

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    Audubon Insectarium

    Audubon Insectarium - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 800 774 7394
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 423 Canal St
    • Custom House
    • New Orleans,LA70163
    • Map

    Description:

    Audubon Insectarium showcases the largest group of animals on the planet, insects!  Since prehistoric times, insects have played invaluable roles: pollinating crops, decomposing waste and adding intrigue, color, texture and majesty to our world. Your visit to the one-of-a-kind, interactive Audubon Insectarium will illuminate amazing things about these tiny (and not so tiny!) creatures; you'll never think about them the same way again.

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    Entergy IMAX Theatre

    Entergy IMAX Theatre - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 504 581 4629 / 800 774 7394
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 1 Canal Street
    • New Orleans,LA70130
    • Map

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    Description:

    The Entergy IMAX features the wonders of nature captured in three stories of vivid, in your face, color. These movies, usually an hour long, complement the nature themes introduced by the Aquarium and other Audubon facilities. This IMAX is an entertaining and educational window into the natural world.

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    New Orleans City Park

    New Orleans City Park - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 504 482 4888
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 1 Palm Drive
    • New Orleans,LA70124
    • Map

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    Description:

    Located in Mid-City, near Lake Ponchatrain, is beautiful 1300-acre City Park. City Park is the home of the Botanical Garden and the New Orleans Museum of Art, as well as the Besthof Sculpture Garden, through which visitors can wander for free. Kids can meet life-size replicas of fairy tale characters in Storyland, enjoy rides at the Carousel Gardens Amusement Park, or take a train ride around the entire park. City Park also has tennis courts, walking trails, a golf course and driving range, stables, and paddle boats. If you're looking for something simpler, take a walk around the duck pond or just stroll through the grounds, admiring the bald cypress trees and live oaks. City Park has more live oak trees than anywhere else in the world, some of which are several hundred years old. Although there is a playground, kids might rather explore the low, sweeping branches of these beautiful trees.

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    Jean Lafitte Swamp

    Jean Lafitte Swamp - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 6601 Leo Kerner Lafitte Parkway
    • Marrero,LA70072
    • Map

    Description:

    Only twenty-five minutes from downtown New Orleans is Jean Lafitte Swamp. There are plenty of swamp tours that explore the watery lands by airboat or ferry, including some that provide transportation to the swamp from the city. You can also go to the Barataria Preserve National Park and walk through the swamps for free, either on your own or with a ranger guide. Sometimes the rangers even do moonlight swamp tours by canoe! Jean Lafitte Swamp is beautiful and mysterious with it's cypress trees and winding bayous. It is also home to hundreds of animals, including alligators, egrets, frogs, snakes, and over 300 species of birds.

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    Audubon Park

    Audubon Park - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 6500 St Charles Ave
    • New Orleans,LA70130-3145
    • Map

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    Our Local Expert Says:

    Audubon Park is alive with nature – ducks, geese, egrets, and squirrels. And if you walk from Audubon Park to Riverview Park on the side of the stables, you will be able to see the giraffes inside Audubon Zoo!

    Description:

    Audubon Park is really several parks in one, spanning St. Charles Avenue all the way to the Mississippi River. A fitness trail circles the Audubon Golf Course and runs alongside live oak trees and lush lagoons that are home to ducks, geese, egrets, and turtles. Cross over Magazine Street, and you'll come to the Audubon Zoo and Cascade Stables. Keep walking alongside the zoo, past the Audubon Labyrinth and across the train tracks, until you get to Riverview Park. Known to locals as "the fly," this is a great spot for playing soccer, or just laying in the sun with a daiquiri, admiring the waters of the Mississippi. The park is a great place to play or picnic, and if you don't want to drive there, you can get to the park from the French Quarter on the St. Charles Streetcar or by the John James Audubon ferry boat.

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    St. Charles Streetcar

    St. Charles Streetcar - New Orleans
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    Description:

    Starting at the edge of the French Quarter, the historic St. Charles Streetcar takes you up one of the most beautiful streets in New Orleans. St. Charles Avenue is shaded by live oak trees that still have Mardi Gras beads tangled in their branches, and this stately boulevard is the place to see enormous, breathtaking mansions built around the turn of the 20th century. There are plenty of restaurants and bars along the way, including Voodoo BBQ, Sushi Brothers, and Emeril's Del Monico. You can admire the architecture of the Columns Hotel, or stop there and have a mint julep on their sweeping southern front porch. The streetcar takes you past Audubon Park and Tulane and Loyola Universities. You can get off at the end of St. Charles Avenue and have a daiquiri at New Orleans Original Daiquiris, or keep riding up Carollton Avenue, another beautiful street, until you get to City Park!

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    John James Audubon

    John James Audubon - New Orleans
    • Contact:

    • 504 586 8777
    • visit website
    • Location:

    • 2 Canal Street
    • Suite 2500
    • New Orleans,LA70130
    • Map

    Description:

    This tour takes passengers aboard the Sternwheeler on a tour of the Audubon Zoo and the Aquarium of the Americas. Four daily trips depart from the Riverwalk (in front of the Aquarium) at 10a, noon, 2p and 4p. Return trips leave from the zoo at 11a, 1p, 3p and 5p. Tickets can be purchased for one-way. Or round trip tickets can be purchased with or without aquarium and zoo admission. Combination tickets will save you the most money.



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