Still time left to celebrate Halloween at Sesame Place

By far Sesame Place is one of our favorite places to visit.  In the summer time we love the water attractions.  In the fall we have a blast getting dressed up in our costumes and going to the Halloween Spooktacular.   In the winter we like to get in the holiday spirit via the Very Furry Christmas.

I have three children ages 2, 5 and 7.  They all were so excited to go to Sesame Place, especially since they got to wear their Halloween costumes. Their excitement began from  the moment they were told that they were going to Sesame Place and lasted throughout the whole day.  They have trick-or-treat stations set up throughout the park and we collected lots of treats.

Their favorite parts of the day were the character themed mazes and the Neighborhood Halloween Parade.  All of the Sesame Place characters were dressed in costumes.  The park offered hayrides with the characters and Halloween shows.

hayride

You can do a hay ride with the characters.

Throughout the day there were multiple opportunities to see my children’s favorite characters.  My 7 year old son had a great time doing the rides.  My 5 year old enjoyed the mazes the most.  My 2 year old was star struck with seeing all of the characters and was dancing all day long.

zoe, sesame place

My 2-year-old loves Zoe!

The Halloween Spooktacular will be going on at Sesame Place until October 28th. I highly recommend that families attend this event as there is something for all of your children to enjoy regardless of their ages.

bert and ernie

Also be on the lookout for the upcoming Very Furry Christmas!

This was a guest post by Diane B.

Get ready for #GivingTuesday, November 27, 2012

“The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.”~Mahatma Gandhi

 

Have you heard about Giving Tuesday?

Everyone has heard of Black Friday, the official start of the holiday shopping season–designed to get everyone to shop in stores and malls. And of course in recent years, we’ve had Cyber Monday, the day that retailers band together and encourage you to shop online.

Well, meet Giving Tuesday–a better idea than either Black Friday or Cyber Monday….because it’s encouraging America to give back. So just like retailers and businesses have a call to action and encourage you to shop, the groups behind Giving Tuesday are putting out a call to action to encourage you to give back.

So what is Giving Tuesday? Well, it’s an idea….it’s not a charity. This will be an annual event–a day when our entire nation gives back. Dozens of groups like the 92nd Street Y, the UNFoundation, Microsofty, Groupon, Discover and City of Hope are behind the effort and you can be too.

Giving Tuesday!

“How can I be useful, of what service can I be? There is something inside me, what can it be?”~Vincent van Gogh

The Giving Tuesday website has dozens of ideas of how you can get involved, either as a business or as your family. Spread the word with your family and friends, that you and your family are going to give back on Giving Tuesday. Donate to a food pantry or donate clothing to a women’s shelter. Talk to your employer about doing donation matching–even if just for one day. Then rally your coworkers to donate on that day. Have a bake sale at school or at church. Donate toys to toy drives. Find a 5k fun run or walk that benefits a charity you love and enter. Have a silent auction at work. Ask your employer to give people the day or half-day off to do a day of service. Consider taking your kids with you, as age appropriate.

But most importantly…….do something! Remember, the holidays aren’t just about giving…..they’re also about giving back.

Leave us a comment and tell us what you’re going to do for #GivingTuesday. Here is their kit, which has tons of great ideas, as does their website.

“Remember that the happiest people are not those who are getting more, but those who are giving more.” ~H. Jackson Brown Jr.

#GivingTuesday Social Media tookit

5 Tips & Tricks for the {frugal} travelista~making the most of travel during the peak season

I’m a huge fan of traveling in the off-season or shoulder-season of popular destinations. Peak season is unfortunately when crowds and prices are at their peak, which is why I dislike it. We even pulled our kid out of school to do so, but not everyone is comfortable with that. Sometimes when you have school-aged children, you just have to travel when everyone else is traveling. I am amazed at how much having two little people who don’t weigh 100lbs combined can impact our budget while on vacation! We went to one restaurant where a kids’ meal was $7.95 each, not including drinks. By the time we added a drink and tax and tip on that….that’s easily an extra $25 added on to every restaurant meal. Wow!

Here are five tips and tricks to help you maximize your time and your money while traveling in the peak season.

1. Use off-peak days and times~Tuesdays and Wednesdays tend to be the slowest days at restaurants and shops. Many places even offer specials to try to drive more traffic in on these days. Want to try the popular restaurant that everyone raves about? Go on a Tuesday, when your wait time will be much less than it would be on a weekend. There’s a legendary and popular episode of Seinfeld that pokes fun at senior citizens eating dinner at 4:00 in the afternoon. But, there’s a reason that restaurants offer early-bird specials in the late afternoon, no one is in there! Dining at 7 or 8 at night may be more fashionable, but in our household with kids, it’s also a recipe for disaster. Not only is your wait time for a table likely to be longer, your wait for food and everything else will be too. Not to mention asking children who normally dine at 5 or 6 to wait until 8 or 9, no wonder they act up!

2. Use coupons-Coupon use is at an all-time high. Once you get to your destination, look in the lobbies of local hotels and grocery stores for coupons and booklets. Go to the daily deal sites and sign up for the city that you’re visiting, as soon as you make plans to go. Then keep your eyes on your email for daily deal offers for restaurants and venues you want to visit. Make your dinner plans around places where you can save money.

3. Visit things backwards or in reverse-If you are visiting a zoo, amusement park or other similar venue, start at the back if possible and move through it in reverse. Some attractions require that you walk through it in a designated pattern, but if they don’t, start at the back. This way you won’t be moving through the attraction with a mob of people, such as if everyone starts at the admission gate at the same time when it opens. At beach towns, everyone goes to the beach during the day and the boardwalks at night. Do the opposite-go to the boardwalk in the morning and go to the beach in the late afternoon and you’ll have the place to yourself.

4. Upgrade your room-That’s right, I said upgrade. But how is upgrading going to save you money? Easy. You’re already paying a room premium to be at the beach in August or the ski resort in February. Upgrade to a room with a kitchenette and save on some meals. If a bigger room costs an extra $15 or $20 per night, that is savings you can often get back by skipping one family breakfast in a restaurant.

5. Make a budget for extras and stick to it-This often is where vacation budgets go awry. As is appropriate, explain to your kids that this is what their budget or allotment for extras is, either in a dollar amount or by item such as “1 toy/1 shirt/1 hat.” This will not only help your vacation budget to remain intact, but will help teach them good money skills, decision making and learn to value items. Every year, we save our pocket change all year long and then we dig out the quarters before we go to the beach and use them in the arcade. My son knows that’s it-once those quarters are gone, he doesn’t get any more.

ferris wheel, ocean city nj

Use these tips to keep your frustration levels and vacation budgets from going sky high!

Trick~or~Treat for UNICEF and help children worldwide

I have something very exciting to share with you. First, I want to thank you for being a reader. I have toiled away at this blog for over four years, and it’s exciting to be able to say that I have thousands of people who click to read me every month. With that has come some pretty fun stuff, but at the same time, some responsibility and some opportunities to do greater good. Since thousands of people read this every month, I have to be careful with what I put out there, right?

Well, I was recently invited to apply and was accepted, to be a part of The Global Team of 200, a highly specialized group of members of Mom Bloggers for Social Good that concentrates on issues involving women and girls, children, world hunger and maternal health. It’s exciting that you, me and 199 other bloggers and their audiences are going to change the world.

Really, we are!

So welcome to my first blog post as a part of that project. It’s about Trick or Treat for UNICEF and I was just THRILLED when I saw this was one of our projects. See, way back in the day….back in the 1970s, I did this! I remember it very clearly. Our neighborhood newsletter came out and they invited children to Trick or Treat for UNICEF. I have no idea why I had such a philanthropic spirit at such a young age, but I did. So I signed up–me and my BFF at the time Brandy. I *can’t wait* to tag her on Facebook with this post and see if she remembers doing this.

Anyway, we got our little cardboard boxes, we went door to door, which you were allowed to do in those days. Today, you have Mom or Dad set up your own web page to collect donations. My, how times change! We collected our donations, we turned them in, and we got a Thank You note with our names in print in the next neighborhood newsletter. If anyone has the archives or old copies of the Ancient Oaks (Macungie, PA) Women’s Association Newsletter, I will fall out of my chair, really! But I distinctly remember seeing only our two names and thinking “Why didn’t more people want to do this?”

Well, for as disappointed as I was that more people didn’t help, lots of others have.

  • Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF is one of the longest-running youth volunteer initiatives in America. For 62 years, it has helped motivate kids to become active global citizens while teaching the fundamental value of helping others.
  • Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF encourages kids of all ages to help raise funds for their peers in developing countries by going door-to-door on Halloween night or participating in other festive fundraising activities.
  • Through Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF, more than $167 million has been raised, providing children in 190 countries and territories with much-needed health care and immunizations, clean water and sanitation, nutrition, education, emergency relief and more.

So now it is my mission to recruit more people to do this. While it’s easy to get caught up in the problems in our country, we have to remember that there are children in other countries with many more challenges.In some countries, more than half of the children are hungry, every day. Some countries have an astronomically high orphan rate. They have challenges and live lives we can’t even begin to comprehend. Here is the story of one child who is helped by UNICEF:

There are many ways you can participate. You can collect at work, at school, online and more. View all of those here: Trick or Treat for UNICEF. If Trick or Treating isn’t your thing, there are art contests for children and other online donation options. Visit the UNICEF Youth website for more information.

Please consider helping. If nothing else, please share this post on your Facebook page, tweet it or Pin it. Here are their social media links so you can be a part and follow the progress. Thanks!

trick-or-treat-for-unicef-