x x
Our Schools
Health & Wellbeing
Full Plate
Our Community
At Home
Going Places
News to Talk About
Resources & Guides
Seattle's Child Calendar
New Arrival, Stories and Tips for new parents
weekend highlights...
top 5 most read:
1. Rainier Valley 6-Year Old Spearheads Collection Effort for Homeless Families  [Read]
2. Seattle Schools and Teachers Reach a Deal  [Read]
3. Edmonds Rummage Sale to Benefit JazzReach Program  [Read]
4. Ratified Seattle Teacher Contract Vaults into Leadership Position Around Teacher Accountability  [Read]
5. Seattle Teachers Approve Contract and Disapprove of Superintendent  [Read]

ADVERTISEMENT
 
Go to search page
Print This Article  Email This Page facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

PHOTO BY SUZANNE SCHMID/THE HERALD  (click to enlarge)
Daniel Evans, 3, left, of Pocatello and Joshua Raish, 2, of Kirkland laze in the sun on Jetty Island during the summer of 2007.
COURTESY OF FUTURE OF FLIGHT AVIATION CENTER & BOE  (click to enlarge)
A group of kids touring Boeing’s widebody assembly plant in Everett watch as a twin-engine 777 gets built.
COURTESY OF THE IMAGINE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM  (click to enlarge)
Kids can hop in and pretend to drive this Everett Transit bus at the Imagine Children’s Museum.
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Explore the Arboretum: Cool Kits for Kids, Families Help Guide the Way 8/31/09
Riding the Rails 8/25/09
Books to Grow Your Child’s Nature Knowledge 8/17/09
Everett celebrates Lions Park re-opening 8/13/09
Explore a Low Tide 8/6/09
Kids Learn the Art of Magic 7/30/09
A Parent’s Review: REI Passport Program Rewards Kids for Time Spent Outdoors 7/27/09
Family Fun in Gig Harbor 7/27/09
11 Outdoor Pools for Summer Fun 7/14/09
A Parent's Review: Ice Cream Cruise on Lake Union – Aye, Aye, Captain! 7/7/09
Be a Tourist on the Eastside 6/30/09
Be a Tourist in Olympia 6/30/09

 Seattle's Child Calendar Editor
Published: Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Be a Tourist in Everett

By Wenda Reed
 

If you’re taking your vacation days close to home this year, beaches, planes, water playgrounds, dinosaurs and more await you in Everett. In talking with several Everett-area residents with children or grandchildren, I was amazed at how much there is to do for families. Here’s an up-to-date list of attractions for you lucky Snohomish County residents and a good excuse for a day trip or mini-vacation for those of us living farther afield.

Jetty Island

A day on Jetty Island is like an old-fashioned seaside excursion. You ride a free ferry out to the two-mile-long manmade island at the mouth of the Snohomish River. Unlike most of our local beaches, there is soft sand instead of gravel, and warm, shallow water for swimming and paddling (no lifeguards). Children younger than 12 must be accompanied by an adult. Bring your own picnic food, as there are no concessions.

All summer, there are nature walks and programs, crafts, puppet shows, campfires and special events, beginning with the Opening Day Sandblast July 1 with the Pirates of Puget Sound. A sand castle contest will be held July 12.


IF YOU GO
Where: Ferry departs from the 10th Street Boat Launch and Marine Park at 10th Street and W. Marine View Drive in northwest Everett. Pick up boarding passes at the kiosk in the park.
When: Ferries leave every 30 minutes, 10 a.m. to 5:50 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 10 a.m. to 8:50 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and 11 a.m. to 6:50 p.m. Sunday, from July 1 to Sept. 7.
Cost: Free (the city suggests an optional donation of $2 for adults or $1 for children to help defray the ferry’s costs).
Contact: 425-257-8300 (for cancellations due to inclement weather call 425-257-8304); www.everettwa.org – click on “Play” on the home page.


Future of Flight Aviation Center and Boeing Tour

The Boeing tour at the Future of Flight Aviation Center is the only place in the world where you can watch commercial jets being assembled. This year you can see Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner being built, as well as the 747, 767 and 777 in the world’s largest building by volume. Children must be at least 4 feet tall to take the tour.

There’s plenty for people of all ages and sizes in the 28,000-square-foot Aviation Center. You can digitally design and test your own jet, take a ride in the flight simulator and play with dozens of interactive exhibits. On the Strato Deck, you can watch planes take off from neighboring Paine Field and listen to the air traffic controllers talk to the pilots. New additions include a working Rolls Royce engine and a runway simulation – stand on a floor of glass and look down on the runway, watching it fall away as the plane “takes off.” Visitors on the “Shape the Future” tour spend time at the Passenger Experience Research Center, where they give Boeing their opinions on how airline interiors of the future should look and feel.

IF YOU GO
Where: 8415 Paine Field Blvd., Mukilteo
When: 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily; Boeing tours on the hour, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; “Shape the Future” tour, 12:15 p.m.
Cost: Adults $15, children 15 and younger $8 for Aviation Center and Boeing tour; for the Aviation Center only, adults $9, children 6 to 15 $4, and children 5 and younger free; $2.50 additional charge for advance Boeing tour tickets reserved by phone or online – advised during busy summer months.
Contact: 1-800-464-1476; www.futureofflight.org.


Forest Park

You can spend a whole day at Everett’s oldest and largest park and not run out of things to do.

Little ones are delighted by the “little barnyard in the city” with rabbits, ducks, pigs and goats to pet and ponies to ride. There’s a small water play area for toddlers and 16 interactive water features for older kids at the Rotary Centennial Water Playground, opened in 2007. For lap swimming, family swim times and swim lessons, visit the Swim Center. There’s also a playground and lots of wooded trails in the 197-acre park.

IF YOU GO
Where: 802 E. Mukilteo Blvd., Everett
When: Park and Swim Center open daily all year; Animal Farm open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, June 6 to Aug. 16; Water Playground open 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily, May 23 through Sept. 20.
Cost: Free for park, playground and water playground; voluntary $1 to $2 donation for Animal Farm; adults $2.75 and youth 17 and younger $2.25 per session at the Swim Center.
Contact: 425-257-8700; www.everettwa.org.


Thornton A. Sullivan Park at Silver Lake

Wile away a summer day swimming at the lifeguarded lakeside beach or renting a paddle boat or kayak. Find a huge playground with colorful equipment of all shapes and sizes and lots of wooded nature trails. On Friday nights, enjoy free entertainment, followed by family-friendly movies at “Cinema under the Stars” on the open field at Camp Patterson. Coming up this summer are Journey to the Center of the Earth, Iron Giant, Kung Fu Panda, Babe, Wallace and Gromit in the Curse of the Were Rabbit and Bolt.

Attention pet owners: No dogs or any other pets are allowed in this park.

IF YOU GO
Where: 11400 W. Silver Lake Road, Everett
When: Park open daily all year; lifeguarded swimming beach open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, through Labor Day; boat rentals open noon to 4 p.m. Friday through Sunday, through Labor Day; Cinema under the Stars begins with entertainment at 7:30 p.m. and movies at dusk, Fridays, July 17 to Aug. 21.
Cost: All attractions free except boat rentals, which are $10 to $15 per half hour and $15 to $20 per hour, depending on kind of craft.
Contact: 425-257-8700; www.everettwa.org.


Imagine Children’s Museum

It does rain sometimes during Northwest summers, and this multi-award-winning museum is a veritable indoor fantasy land for children to play make-believe. It features a “downtown street,” Italian café, ferry you can walk into, tree house and climbing mountain, farm area with a cow to milk, theater with dress-up clothes and wildlife veterinary clinic with stuffed animal patients. In 2005, the museum opened its Rooftop Exhibit. A giant dinosaur looms over a sandy pit where children can dig for “dinosaur bones” and “fossils.” There’s also a musical stage and enormous wooden climbing structure with slides – along with gorgeous views.

If you haven’t been to the museum in the past year, check out new exhibits that opened in the fall of 2008. Children younger than 5 can play on the fire truck soft sculpture and everyone can get in the driver’s seat of a real Everett Transit bus. In the “World Money News” screening room, children can see themselves reporting the latest financial news on TV. In the Glow Zone, kids can enter a black-light lit room full of florescent glow-in-the-dark pegs and shapes to create designs on tables and in peg boards on the walls.

IF YOU GO
Where: 1507 Wall St., Everett
When: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday; 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday; closed Monday.
Cost: $7; children younger than 12 months free; half price 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Thursdays; free during Friday Night Live, 5:30 to 9 p.m., the third Friday of each month.
Contact: 425-258-1006; www.ImagineCM.org.





 
Online Conversations
Start a new conversation.
To participate in online conversations, you must register and verify your e-mail address at SeattlesChild.com. If you are currently a registered user with HeraldNet.com, EnterpriseNewspapers.com or SCBJ.com your user name and password will work at SeattlesChild.com.

New members, please click here. To read other terms and conditions, click here.