Well, happy holidays GoMomGo readers!What are some of your December must-do's in Lane County? My troupe always heads to the "Snowfall" at 5th Street Market and sees the Hosanna Holiday Adventures production of Narnia. Mingled in with some cookie exchanges, caroling, Advent traditions, and more, Oregon is a quintessential place to spend the holidays. And this year we were invited to start a new tradition in Cottage Grove! The Village Green Resort is a hotel and meeting venue just 25 miles south of Eugene. They host public events throughout the year and are a popular choice for wedding and corporate events. But at Christmas time, they take it up a notch! A 14-acre garden adorned with over 300,000 lights. Take your own photos with Santa with a very minimal (if any) line. Ambience complete with strolling carolers, fire pits, and holiday music. German food to comfort and gluhwein, cocoa, or cider to sip. I really appreciated the special touches throughout the resort. If the cold became too much to bare at any point, the Village Green offers a Family Loft within the hotel to play games, write letters to Santa, and sip on a hot beverage. And be sure to check out the artisan market with local vendors! My favorite things were exploring the tunnel of lights with my family... ...and taking in the talented choir! Here they are inside the Village Green lobby. The best deal is to make a night of it and purchase one of their overnight packages which includes event tickets for all, food and beverage, keepsake mugs, and breakfast. Starts at $84. The hotel features a restaurant and lounge too! The lights are open through December 31. Be sure to check out their calendar for this year's hours and dates, and to save money by purchasing advance tickets. Tickets start at $5 depending on the evening you go, and children age 4 and under are always free!
0 Comments
Okay, so we covered RePlay & The Dancing Weasel (so fun!). Let's head over to... Eugene Toy and Hobby 32 E. 11th Ave. Eugene, OR 97401 I don't have any idea how I've lived in Eugene for ten years without visiting this landmark spot (it's been owned and operated by one local family for over 80 years!), but somehow my trip last week was my first. It won't be my last. I fully plan on taking my nearly five year old back just to check out all of the electric train stuff and model airplanes. Whoa. Here's what I found: Lots of these tiny little sticker/coloring/activity books. These are awesome for just sticking in your purse to have...just in case. Stickers. So many stickers. Also an excellent purse selection. (I could probably feed, diaper, and entertain my littles for an entire day based entirely on what I have in my purse. I know I'm not the only one.) Ummm how cool are these shaped felt coloring posters? I reeeeaalllly want one. Like, for me. So do you see those two white packages in the middle of the picture below? Okay. A few friends and I were playing at a park once and a dad was there with his kiddos and one of these toys. Within a few minutes it had drawn all the kids off the playground and had them completely transfixed for at least 15 minutes. It is super simple - it slingshots a little plastic helicopter up into the air and then the kids run and chase it. Basically fetch for human children. I visited three toy stores in one afternoon to research this post and this toy was the single thing I bought. Go get one and thank me later. Actually, thank that dad at the park that one day. You might regret this later, like ten minutes after it's opened later, but...check out these fun instruments. You could become the next family band, like Hansen or something. Okay, here's my big find for kiddos in the teenage/engineering crowd: these are 3D laser cut models. You put them together and they stand up and look pretty cool. There are approximately 54643 choices. In case you're still not convinced that you can joyfully, affordably, and awesome-ly (is that a word?) fill your family's stockings, I'll just leave this here for you: Boom. An entire wall of little trinkets which will help support a local family when you purchase them. The trinkets, not the family. And not all of them. That would be excessive. Please leave some for me.
I know there are other amazing local toy stores in the area - but today I just covered three to get you started. How do you stuff the stockings in your house? Please share in the comments! Happy Adventuring! *Super Stocking Stuffer Giveaway* Eugene Toy & Hobby is giving away a $20 gift card just in time! Use it to get great stuff or put the card itself in the stocking & let your kiddo pick out something fun! To be entered comment here (or on Facebook) with how you're doing today, happy anxious, just plain bad. Let it out! Drawing will be Monday night at 9pm. Thanks Eugene Toy & Hobby! Gah! Christmas is nearly upon us! Well, that's what the stores would have us believe at least. Don't fret. There's still plenty of time to visit some locally owned stores to find some super fun stocking stuffers that will knock your kid's socks right off. So. You guys. Let's talk about the thing sitting on everyone's to-do list this month: Presents. Buying allllll the presents. I am always curious to learn about how different families handle holiday gifting. There are so many unique traditions out there. Today I want to talk about stockings in particular. I LOVE the stockings. Such a fun chance to surprise your littles with tiny little treats. Here's how it works in my house, at least for stockings: I collect small things throughout the year that I think my boys would enjoy in a stocking. I look mostly at thrift stores and garage sales. This works for me because that way I'm not stuck in December paying a ton of cash out of pocket. I also always stick in some candy - the good stuff, like the Reese's Trees and the Candy Cane Kisses - oh my word. During December my body weight is probably half sugar. Other fun things that always go into stockings are a new toothbrush, some special sparkly toothpaste (Crest makes it - it's a treat), and a super fun box of Band-Aids. The Band-Aid brand always has a ton of licensed characters and designs to choose from. I pick that stuff up when I notice it go on sale at Target. So that's kind of it! Pretty simple! This year I decided to check out what sort of options for small stocking stuffers are out there at our local toy stores. And I was so, so, so impressed! Turns out Eugene is full of fun little treats that kiddos will LOVE. I visited the following three stores in a single afternoon - they're all pretty close to each other. Today I'm starting with Replay. RePlay Toys 255 E. 18th Ave. Eugene, OR 97401 So this place is owned by a toy ninja named Shane. He is an expert on all things PlayMobil, vintage, collectible, and most importantly, Lego. His shop sells both new and preowned toys. While RePlay has plenty of fun toys that would totally be awesome for a kiddo's stocking, here's what I'm planning on doing and am super pumped about: Side note of nostalgia: RePlay also has a great selection of the wooden-ish puzzles that I had when I was little. Maybe you played with them too? They're reasonably priced from about $4-6, and would be a super great stocking stuffer if your kid had a giant sized stocking.
*Super Stocking Stuffer Giveaway* RePlay is giving away a $20 gift card just in time! Use it to get great stuff or put the card itself in the stocking & let your kiddo pick out something fun! To be entered comment here (or on Facebook) with your favorite toy as kid. (I think maybe we've done this question before but let's just got for it!) Drawing will be Tuesday night at 9pm. Thanks RePlay! Christmas. To many of us, it’s so much more than a day. And it’s more than the collective joke among our nation that “Christmas arrives earlier every year!” just because a department store decorated or black Friday sales are earlier than ever. Yes, I do enjoy the American holiday traditions that still run deep this time of year. While it can be exhausting and ridden with consumerism, I can’t help but pause every so often in December and appreciate our society’s shared attempt at peace, tradition and meaning - but usually, it just results in dollar upon dollar being thrown at an ever-moving target. The “more” I’m referring to is a season of expectation. In my home, we celebrate Advent. While it might sound too church-y or traditional, it’s actually a concept you can celebrate every day of December leading up to Christmas in your own home. Advent derives from the Latin word that simply means “coming.” While there are liturgical (traditional) ways of practicing Advent, in our family we are less concerned about doing Advent “properly” and instead focused on simply finding ways to daily acknowledge Advent’s core truth…that Jesus is coming, and that changes everything. These are the three essentials that help us do that: a daily reading plan, a homemade Advent log and a personalized Advent calendar. You can start with just one of the items described below and add/customize more with each passing year. 1) Daily Readings and Making a Jesse Tree This book. Unwrapping the Greatest Gift by Ann Voskamp We do have a few Christmas-y, Santa-ish books at my house that I have picked up second-hand. They’re fun. But if you’re going to spend real dollars on any book that has to do with Christmas, buy this one (or enter the GoMomGo giveaway below!). Here’s how Voskamp introduces her book: “If you open these pages every day of December…and read each story of Jesus’ family tree, and you hang the ornaments from each story on a little tree of your own, you’ll have a Jesse Tree – a picture of Jesus’ own family tree! And you’ll begin the unwrapping of the greatest Gift, the most astonishing Gift that your heart really wants the most! God doesn’t cut off all the big cheaters, bad liars, weaselly sneakers, battling brothers, fighting families and brokenhearted from His family tree – He makes families just like these perfectly His! He adopts all the messy and broken and imperfect people into His tree and His story and His heart, and He gives us His family name. He gives us His absolute perfectness and makes us alive and fully free.” Voskamp will then guide you through Advent each day, helping us further understand the perfect gift of Jesus. It is appropriate and scalable for every family member. She provides basic instructions on how to build your Jesse Tree (different than your Christmas tree) and includes a special password to the (free) Jesse Tree ornaments that your family can print out and decorate before hanging on the tree each day. Visit Ann Voskamp’s website here 2) Make an Advent Log I grew up on an island surrounded by the waters of the Puget Sound, so we chose a piece of driftwood for our log. Drill a couple holes to fit seven tapered candles (pick up great candles at Trader Joe’s or World Market – and don’t worry about colors, pick what you like). This is how we use it: In our home, we do Voskamp’s daily Advent reading. Then, on four of those days we light candles right before we start our reading time. Traditionally it is the four Sundays leading up to Christmas, but just do whatever four nights work for your family. The first night, we light the two outer candles, the next time we light all four outer candles, and so on. By the time you get to Christmas Eve (the day you light the center candle), you have naturally created a beautiful triangular arc with one bright candle gleaming in the middle. I love our lit Advent log – it invites us to pause and share a rare silence as we anticipate in awe, together, how a lit candle can do so much. On her website Voskamp describes it as: “The house fills with the scent of more and the light dances up the wall and I’m lit: It’s impossible for all the darkness in the world to smother out the light of a single candle in the hand.You can’t snuff out hope, you can’t smother out hope, you can’t stamp out hope — because He is Coming.” You can also sing a Christmas song during this time. Whatever you like. Remember to light your candles before the reading so they get to burn and make their shape during the 10-15 minutes it takes to have your Advent time together. We close with prayers and then blow out the candles. 3) Create a Daily Advent Calendar For the last couple of years, we made our own daily Advent calendar, which includes Voskamp’s daily family activity, and also any local events/activities we plan to enjoy together that year. We wrote out a daily activity on separate 5x7 cards, then hole-punched them and strung a ribbon through. It hung near our mantle. While, it has worked great, this year our oldest child is helping me make a keepsake we can display and re-use every year. And it’s SO simple. Check out the tutorial here. I do encourage you to use her suggestion of sticky notes and to take a photo of your completed Advent calendar each year for memories. This is why: I scribble notes in the margins of each day’s sticky note about what that day was like for us that particular year…things my kids said, discovered...then I will take the sticky notes and transfer them all to our family Memory Journal later.
Here’s a link to my family’s 2014 Advent Calendar if you’re interested. *Giveaway* GoMomGo has partnered with William K. Jensen literary agency and Tyndale Publishers to give away TWO copies of Unwrapping the Greatest Gift! Enter to win: Leave us a comment with your favorite holiday tradition (Advent or otherwise) & then like or share this post to spread the love. Do you celebrate advent? We would love to know what you do to make it special for your family. Tell us in the comments & spread the love! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Christy Rice is a mom to two great boys. They love to explore all that Lane County has to offer. Christy is a superstar at researching & finding awesome picks & deals for GoMomGo! “Ride choo-choo twain, pease, Mommy?” Whenever my two year-old hears Eugene’s trusty train whistle, he poses this innocent question to me. He gazes at me expectantly with his baby blues and my heart meeeelts. I love how his developing little mind has figured out that he wants to ride a train -- as his only exposure to trains are in books, a couple of Thomas the Train toy engines, and of course, that whistle. Somehow my dear, sweet one knows in his heart of hearts that he wants to board a train with his mommy. Well, o-kay. So I looked up the Polar Express out of Hood River. For my family of four, that would be $96 for standard seating. Not to mention the three-hour drive from Eugene. And, the reviews online are inconsistent. That’s when I came across the Holiday Express in Southeast Portland. “The Holiday Express is a special opportunity for families to experience the bygone era of steam power,” says Ed Immel, Vice President of Oregon Rail Heritage Foundation (ORHF). “It is the only holiday train ride in Oregon featuring a full-size steam locomotive.” This year, the steam engine pulling the Holiday Train is The Spokane, Portland & Seattle #700 (SP&S 700). ![]() I personally have seen this steam engine and the immense scale of the SP&S 700 is hard to miss; it weighs 440 tons and is over 100 feet long. The drive wheels alone will dwarf all but the tallest of humans. Everyone in the family will be impressed! For several weekends throughout November and December, the SP&S 700 will pull out of Oaks Park Station, hissing and billowing steam. As the vintage train runs on the Oregon Pacific Railroad along the Willamette River, it won’t take long for the hypnotic movement of the clickety-clack to transport riders to places once visited or imagined. The train ride also includes a Santa visit on the train and lots of Christmas goodies at the station. The prices are nearly half the cost of The Polar Express (starting at $9.50 each)-- but of course, being the resourceful mom I am, I called and begged for a discount for our GoMomGo readers. What I discovered is that they truly are a nonprofit and that the Holiday Express is actually a fundraiser for the volunteer-run ORHF museum. Any proceeds are used to continue to restore the beautiful steam engines. They also have no difficulty selling out their trains, so whip out your calendar, pick out a date and buy your Holiday Express tickets today! For more information and tickets, visit ORHF or TicketsWest GoMomGo Tips:
Stay tuned for Part 2 of the series where GoMomGo will bring you an exclusive discount on a local tree farm! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Christy Rice is a mom to two great boys. They love to explore all that Lane County has to offer. Christy is a superstar at researching & finding awesome picks & deals for GoMomGo! |
Categories
All
|