Tag: Lancaster County

  • Cherry Crest Adventure Farm

    kids at cherry crest adventure farm

    Why, I’d like nothing better
    than to achieve some bold adventure,
    worthy of our trip.

    -Aristophanes, The Frogs

    So, the second stop on our #visitlancaster tour was the Cherry Crest Adventure Farm, which we’d had a sneak preview of during our train ride on the Strasburg Rail Road. Holy carp, we loved this place. So much so, that we had to return the first chance we got, to hit all the bits we missed the first time around (that’s why you’re going to see my kids in different outfits in these photos). As a happy coincidence, that second trip happened to be the day they were holding their Sweet Corn Festival:

    corny denies jake his high five
    It's Corny! High five DENIED!

    (Obviously, I missed the magic moment here with the high-five, but I think the resulting photo is hilarious.)

    Looking for a full day of old-fashioned, unplugged, outdoor family fun that will delight your kids and COMPLETELY wear them out by bedtime?

    Man oh man, this is the place.

    First and foremost, we need to talk about the Amazing Maize Maze™ with its five acres of corn and 2.5 miles of paths. I had a half dozen ADULTS yell at me when they found out I had done this without them, it’s one of those things you hear about every year and never get around to doing. DO IT. Without the map. The kids love that you are totally on their level, every bit as clueless as they are. There is this thrilling air of “We are never going to get out here” adventure, augmented by the huge flag they give you to carry and wave in case of emergency.

    corn maze cherry crest adventure farm- aerial
    This photo provided by Cherry Crest Adventure Farm.

    They supply you with a placemat sized activity page when you start; there are stations all around the maze where you can claim a small piece of the maze and tape it onto your page (like a jigsaw puzzle. When you’re done you have a complete map). There’s also a crossword puzzle on your page, and answers can be found at various points. Water stations are thankfully scattered around, as are benches and little fun bits like a zipcord run and slides. So even if (ahem) you have no innate sense of direction and get completely lost, you don’t feel like your time was wasted- you just say you were trying to find all the clues and game pieces! At the end you can have your picture taken and added to your page, and the whole shebang laminated as a nice souvenir.

    It took us about an hour to get out- and that was with help (oh yeah, there are also nice worker people in the maze to offer help if you want it). You could easily wander for many hours, I think. The best part is that they do NIGHTTIME MAZES by flashlight Fridays & Saturdays in October & early November. A great Halloween-season activity in my book!

    The farm has all kinds of fun activities for kids that are just as enjoyable for adults. I think the big winner was the “jumping pillows”- think moonbounce only much bigger and not enclosed. I went on this for a few minutes, and let me tell you, what a workout. Holy carp. My calves were burning and I drank about a gallon of water once I stepped off.

    Close runners-up were the giant slingshots and the huge slide (it was a little heartstopping even for me, it’s REALLY LONG!).

    giant pillows bounce

    racing down giant slide at cherry crest adventure farm

    giant slingshot at cherry crest adventure farm

    I got to show off my hoops skillz in an area with football, basketball and baseball play. I don’t have a picture of that, but I just wanted to let you know that watching kids were impressed. Not my kids, who find my pride embarrassing. The more shots I make in a row, the more they pretend they don’t know who I am. WHATEVER. Mama’s still got it.

    There’s also a playground for smaller kids, log cabin building, “mechanical” bulls (you do the bucking yourself to suit the kid), an animatronic chicken show, volleyball with an ENORMOUS fabric ball… what am I forgetting?

    Oh. Jacob was all excited to channel his inner Napoleon Dynamite with some tetherball.

    jake channels his inner napoleon dynamite
    Another photo where I missed the magic moment.

    Every so often the Strasburg train would go by and you’d feel compelled to wave at everyone on the train. I’m not sure why this happens, but it brought a big smile to my face every time.

    strasburg railroad

    Then it was over to the farm proper, where we fed goats and llamas, pigs and sheep. And then cuddled baby chicks. I have never been so tempted to secret something away in my pocket in my life. Baby chicks are CUTE, people.

    cass feeds a sheep

    the sheep is hungry

    cass loves the baby chicks

    While we were there I let Cass Make-A-Friend: an Amish doll (20 bucks). This is an activity with several learning stations. First you choose your doll, an outfit, and a name. Then you do a “lesson” in a corner that resembles an Amish schoolhouse. Cass did a matching activity, but she could have done a calligraphy lesson (she did receive one to take home). It reminded me of elementary school field trips, I guess to Hagley (maybe Winterthur?) where we did the same thing.

    The next step involved learning a quilting stitch, and then we learned about the significance of the different items the Amish wear. It was fun and I really like the doll, it’s hard to find nice soft good-size dolls anymore that don’t cost a fortune. She’s sleeping with it now, as I type this.

    cass outfits her amish doll

    playing school

    If you have little boys, don’t despair: there are wooden trains, tractors and barns to make instead of dolls. (There are also boy dolls.)

    We ended our day with some roasted sweet corn. I don’t know whether it was just really really sweet corn, or whether the roasting process makes it supah tasty, or whether we were just starving, but we were wolfing that stuff down while it was still crazy piping hot.

    roasted corn on the cob


    All in all, the Cherry Crest Adventure Farm was a hugely satisfying experience, and definitely a new tradition for our family.

    Even with two trips, there were some things we didn’t get to- an old-fashioned playground with seesaws and merry-go-round (the ones where you spin your friends sick), shuffleboard, a farm wagon ride, go-karts of some sort. The farm offered a “Boomerang” special this year where, if you purchased admission and had a souvenir photo taken after the maze, those people in the photo could come back as often as they liked through September 18th. It’s a deal we will DEFINITELY take advantage of if they offer it again next year.

    A few tips:

    SUNSCREEN. You need it. Reapply as it sweats off. While there are plenty of places to catch some shade, most of the fun is in the sun.

    WATER. Bring as much as you’re willing to carry. The kids are running around and bouncing and whatnot and it’s dusty. They will drink gallons. While the farm offers a souvenir cup that you can refill at the soda fountain for a decent price, the food court is at the entrance and you’re not going to feel like hiking back and forth. They’re smart and sell drinks at the jumping pillows too, but they are those little bottles of water and the environmentalist in me was just cringing.

    TIME. This is an all-day adventure. Pack a lunch, get there when it opens and plan to close it up. Get your money’s worth. For me it’s not too bad of a drive, but if it’s a hike for you, you’ll want to get it all in without feeling rushed.

    COMPANY. Ask if any of your friends want to go! I kid you not when I say I took a lot of heat for not inviting some of mine. (They can come when we go back for the flashlight maze, the big crybabies.)

    SHOES. Wear sneaks. You’re on your feet a lot, and the corn maze is dusty. Our feet were FILTHY. If your kids insist on sandals or Crocs, there is a rinsing area that we didn’t notice the first time around. You’ll have to look for it because I can’t remember where it was. Close to the maze, I suppose.

    FUDGE. They sell it. You want it. It’s mighty good. I’m telling you right here and now, factor $10 of fudge into your budget. You will not regret it.

    CAMERA. Don’t leave home without it! Fun photo ops abound.

    kids ride sawhorses

    playing conductor

    cherry crest adventure farm

    www.cherrycrestfarm.com

    Full Disclosure:

    Our family received free admission to Cherry Crest Adventure Farm as part of our #visitlancaster Blogger Meetup.  However, all 1,375 words of this post are totally my own glowing opinion.

  • Lancaster County & the Strasburg Rail Road

    Life is not complex. We are complex.

    Life is simple, and the simple thing is the right thing.

    -Oscar Wilde

    We live on the edge of suburbia. The crowded college campus of the University of Delaware is not quite ten minutes away; Wilmington about twenty minutes. That’s if I turn right out of my driveway.

    If I turn left, then I very quickly encounter fields of corn and a farm equipment auction house. Alpacas and longhorns for sale.

    If I keep going, I pass the farm that provides the free-range eggs to the co-op where I shop. Cows and cows and cows, with some horses and sheep thrown in. Windmills.

    lancaster county windmill

    Soon enough, I’m in Lancaster County, perhaps most widely known as Amish Country. Generally I refrain from taking too many pictures in Amish Country; it feels disrespectful as I know some factions don’t like to have their photos taken. I want to be a traveler in these parts, not a tourist, to be appreciative and a part of my surroundings. It’s hard, though. I love to see the tobacco drying in the tobacco houses, the draft horses pulling the plows, and the clotheslines pinned with traditional Amish garb stretching up to the sky.

    There was an Amish brother-sister pair selling homemade root beer that were so flipping cute.

    homemade root beer for sale
    I should mention Jacob took these pictures out the window of a moving vehicle. Be forgiving of their blurriness.

     

    We travel through this stretch of countryside a few times a year, on our way to visit relatives, and Jeff and I often discuss how we’d like to live back here. I imagine it’s a conversation lots of people have while visiting. It’s such a slice of Americana, of how life was and could be: simple, laid back, down to earth, at the pace of nature. It seems honest and clean. But still, close enough to “civilization.” And, apparently, outlet shopping (I’ve never shopped the outlets in Lancaster, but I know plenty of people who have raved about it.)

    What always gets me is how you’ll pass dozens of handmade signs letting you know what each little farm has to offer. “Raw milk for sale.” “Organic watermelon.” “Tomatoes, blueberries, fresh flowers. Honor system, leave $ in jar.” “Free-range eggs.” “Pies after 4:00.” How much more fulfilling would it be to spend an hour picking up milk and eggs and dessert from your neighbors, than to run to the Acme?

    Anyway. A few weeks ago our family was invited to participate in a blogger meet-up in Strasburg; our first stop was at the Strasburg Rail Road. We’d been there once before, when Thomas the Tank Engine chugged in for a visit (this during the absolute heyday of Maverick’s fascination with trains. He had the train table, along with every piece of track and train car that exists on the Island of Sodor). I remembered we got lost along the way- this being before GPS was widely available- so I printed out directions, and thank goodness I did. The GPS on my BlackBerry lost the signal twenty minutes away from my house and didn’t pick up again until we were pulling into the station. (Thanks Sprint!)

    strasburg rail road engine
    This is a group of lovely Philly area blogging ladies. Of which, I suppose, I am one.

     

    Going to the Strasburg Rail Road is like stepping into a storybook. A really pretty, old-timey storybook. There’s such a sense of history: railroads in general are, for me anyway, a source of romance and wonder. (To this day I really, really enjoy picking someone up or seeing someone off at the train station, even though they never wave a hanky out the window for me like I ask. This is probably due to the fact that I am the only person I know who carries hankies.)

    Philadelphia & Reading train passenger car

    I travel not to go anywhere, but to go.

    I travel for travel’s sake.

    The great affair is to move.

    ~Robert Louis Stevenson

    Once upon a time, the only way to get from place to place was by boat, by foot or by horse. Can you imagine? What was it like, laying the line, in the middle of dusty nowhere? Seeing- feeling– the train chug into sight for the first time? How about being at the station when a shipment of fresh fruit came up from Florida in the middle of winter? Or seeing train robbers alongside the train. My mind swoons.

    At the Strasburg I’m flooded with these sorts of thoughts while actually getting to experience the chugging of a steam engine, up close. The thunder, the smoke and the whistle.

    I wonder if people were afraid to step onto these things when they first arrived. Trains are so impressively massive, powerful. The term “Iron Horse” is wonderfully apt.

    close-up black steam engine

    My kids, of course, aren’t carrying around these romantic images from history textbooks and old movies, or mentally singing Midnight Train to Georgia the whole time, either. They are more in love with the mechanics and the bustle, the promise of travel, the “going for a ride.” The “All aboarrrrrd!”

    My olders probably carry around some images of the Hogwarts Express. Or maybe they have this in the back of their mind:

    My very favorite episode of Tom & Jerry, ever.

    In any case, we had a fantabulous morning at the railroad. We took a 45 minute train ride to Paradise, passing picnic grounds and the Cherry Crest Adventure Farm along the way (more on that tomorrow). My daughter took great pride presenting our tickets to the conductor. It was impossible to keep from beaming and waving at those standing and watching the train go by.

    There is something to be said for “slow living.” This summer we also went to Disney, and Hershey Park, and to a number of shows and events where it felt like so much of our time was spent rushing from place to place.

    Sometimes it’s nice to just sit and listen to the rhythm of life. To watch the world go by with your kids.

    Maverick looking out train window
    Maverick is introspective.

     

    This is one of those rare experiences that really are fun for the whole family. Seriously.

    Side note: since our house was built in the 1820s I’m always keeping an eye out for design details somewhat contemporary to that time period. (I spend a lot of time window shopping Restoration Hardware and Rejuvenation.) The earliest timetables suggest the Strasburg train first ran in 1851 or thereabouts, so not quite right, but I still wouldn’t mind a lamp like this one over our dining room table.

    brass light fixtures train passenger car

    The kids were not willing to pose for an old-time photo with me (I’ll wear them down next time) but Cass went for a nice long ride on a miniature steam train and the “cranky cars”- handcranked cars on a mini track. She really seemed to enjoy that. They did pose on an Amish buggy, but they look so hot and sweaty in that photo that I am respecting their wishes to not publish it.

    strasburg miniature steam train

    hand cranked train car

    hand cranked train car
    One of the few shots where she's not flashing her underoos. What a lady, sheesh.

     

    Cassidy also, as you can see, got herself a pink mining cap, as opposed to the engineer’s and conductor’s caps all the other kids opted for. She uses it to read at night. Cassidy is an odd duck.

    Then it was a picnic lunch for all and off to the Cherry Crest Adventure Farm. Since I’m already over a dozen photos and close to 1500 words, I’ll save that for another day.

    ATTENTION THOMAS FANS:

     

    Day out with thomas the tank engine
    Day Out with Thomas, 2004. OMG look how little they are.

    Thomas will be rolling along into the Strasburg Rail Road station September 11th-19th and again November 19th-21st for Day Out with Thomas: The Celebration Tour 2010. Sir Topham Hatt will be on hand for hugs, high-fives and photos, and there’ll be an “Imagination Station” with coloring, arts & crafts and temporary tattoos. If you go over the weekend I VERY HIGHLY SUGGEST giving yourself a good amount of lead time to find parking, and of course mentally budget for some Thomas merch to take home- the gift shops have tons of cool stuff for your little engineer that you don’t find just anywhere.

    If your kids are past the Thomas stage, “The Great Train Robbery” will be taking place on October 23rd (I think we’ll have to do this one). Santa will be on board weekends between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Or, make it a date night and check out the Wine & Cheese Train: first-class accommodations on the Parlor Car and complimentary wine, cheese and crackers.

    Details on Day Out with Thomas and other special events can be found here, along with ticket info.

    Remember the once-in-a-lifetime double header snowstorm we had this past winter? Yeah, I thought you might. Here’s a neat video of the engine, fitted with snow plow, moving all that snow.

    OK, I’m all done talking. For now. It’s your turn!

    Tell me your impression of Amish living (I’m especially interested if you didn’t grow up in the area), and whether your kid went through the Thomas stage!

    On board the Strasburg steam train

    strasburg steam train- family photo