Here's the final installment of Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day. For those of you who are new around here, it's my little experiment where I try to find fun and cheap things for my daughter and I to do this summer.
Lesson Five: The Best Of The Rest
I figured I needed to wrap this crap up before summer actually ends (posting a Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation article in September would be really lame). So here is the final batch of cheap things you can do with your kids this summer:- Summer movie programs
We're lucky enough to have two theaters in our area that show children's movies on certain days of the week at a heavily discounted price. One of the theaters charges $3 (but you also get a small Coke & a small popcorn) and the other one charges $1 (sneak in your own treats!). While there's a good chance you may already own the featured movie on DVD, it gets you out of the house for a few hours and there's no substitute for the moviegoing experience. - Summer memberships
Some museums, zoos, children's centers, and aquariums offer summer-only memberships. Once school kicks back in, you don't have any time to visit these places anymore, so why pay the extra money? - Bookstores
Many bookstores have special story times during the week. We hit one that has a story, milk and cookies, a game, a freebie, and an art project. It lasts about ninety minutes and is totally worth the price of admission (FREE!). And once you're done, you can browse the shelves for interesting books to check out at the library at a later date. - Parks
I load my daughter's bicycle in the trunk of the car and we hit the nearby park while Zed is in school. She plays on the playground for awhile and then hits the trails with her bike. And hell, I even manage to get some exercise walking beside her. - Vacation Bible School
Not my cup of tea, but I figured this might interest some of you.
Did I miss anything? If you have any ideas I'm not aware of, please let me know in the comments.
Song of the day: World Shut Your Mouth by Julian Cope

