Touring Boston – What to Know About Attending a Boston Ghost & Graveyard Tour

One of the first things we did when we moved here was attend a ghost and graveyard tour through Boston.  The tour was a blast, the stories were really fun, and there was something incredibly exciting about walking through locked graveyards late at night.  Unfortunately for us half way through our tour it started pouring rain… not just a trickle, but an honest Boston down pour which made the last part of the tour a bit difficult both to hear and enjoy.

Things to Note:

1) Price
There are two different companies that do Ghost and Graveyard tours in downtown Boston, one is a walking tour that is $18/adult and $13/youth (under 16) you can find out more about them at Haunted Boston Ghost Tours.  

The one that we went on was the Ghost and Graveyard Tour which had spookily dressed up actress/actors as guides and was partly walking tour partly a trolley ride as we went to different, further spaced out graveyards.  Those tickets ran $36/adult and $23/Children (ages 6-12), those are the online ticket prices, I think they are a bit more if you buy them at the box office.

2) Child Friendliness
This tour is certainly geared toward adults as many of the stories are dark and end with death.  Children as young as 6 are allowed, but I wouldn’t suggest bringing anyone that young…

3) Walk-ability
There is a far amount of walking involved, even with the trolley tour.  We took the trolley to the entrance of the first couple graveyards, but toward the end we needed to walk a couple of blocks between grave yards.  In hind sight it might not have been that far of a walk, but the rain was coming down in sheets the night of our tour, so it felt fairly long…

Okay, I just double checked on the website, there are two different 20 minute walking portions.  These are stop and go as you’ll pause to hear the history of the areas your walking past, but you will be walking.

4) The Tour
The tour itself is 90 minutes.  You’ll be riding some of the time on trolley carts decorated in Halloween style and your tour guides switch off at different portions of the tour.  The tours start at 8PM and runs rain or shine (I guess at night they run rain or not rain, in our case it was heavy rain).  You’ll be walking through locked graveyard by candle light and hear all sorts of interesting, true, and spooky stories about Boston’s past.

5) Getting There
The tours start near Boston Harbor and through there are parking garages in the area I would highly suggest taking the “T” to get there.  The “Aquarium” stop is a thirty second walk form the tour location and taking the “T” saves you both the hassle and expense of parking down town.

Summary and Rating ★★★★☆

Four Stars.  We loved the tour.  We loved the stories and it was nice to be able to get on and off the trolley so that we could cover more ground in a short period of time.  I think the tour is quite expensive (we were able to get discounted tickets through my husbands school) and having half our tour more or less washed out by the rain was lame.  The tour guides were a blast and this was a really fun way to learn more about Boston’s history, especially if you like seeing the dark side of things.  (If you’re not as into the dark side you should check out the walking historical tours which happen during day light hours, are also lead by a dressed up actor/actress, and are also amazing).

Have you been here before?  If so I’d love to know more about your experience and any tips or tricks you have in the comments section below. 

Boston Ghost & Graveyard Tours
Atlantic Ave
Boston, MA 02110

Phone: 866.754.9136
Website: http://www.ghostsandgravestones.com/boston/
Hours: Tours start at 8PM

Family Friendly Boston – What to Know About Attending the Annual Frog Pond Pumpkin Float with Kids

Each year the Frog Pond in Boston Common has a Halloween festival a few weeks before Halloween where you can bring a small carved pumpkin and they will put a light in it and float it on the frog pond.  Hundreds of people show up to this event and it’s pretty magical to see all the pumpkins glowing on the pond, and even more fun when you can point out yours adding to the light.

We had the opportunity to go last year and we loved it.  It was super easy to get to, we could wonder around wherever our son wanted to go and we had a blast kicking off the Halloween season with such a fun festival.

Things to Note:

1) Bring a Carved Pumpkin
Your pumpkin should be smallish, they recommend 8″ pumpkins and it’s a lot more fun to have a carved pumpkin because you can see it when it’s out on the water (ours was a bit last minute and it was painted).  They will provide the light for you and it’s really fun to see all the pumpkins together lighting up the water. (When the festival is over all the pumpkins are donated to a compost company.)

2) Snacks
There are bunch of booths set up circling the pond giving out free stuff or having activities for children.  We walked away with some granola bar samples, cheese, fruit rolls, flavored water and more.

3) Crafts & Fun
There are also a bunch of crafts set up around the Frog Pond.  We made paper bag luminaries (again the lights were provided for us) and got to see our bag set up around the Frog Pond.   There were also magic tricks and scary stories being told at different places.

4) Parade
Children are encouraged to dress up and midway through the night they will be instructed to line up, music will start playing and they can march around the Frog Pond.  (Also, this is about the time that free glow sticks were handed out to all the children).

5) Crowds and Strollers
There were tons of people here and I was so glad that we didn’t bring our stroller.  There were a few people that had them and watching them trying to make their way through the thick masses of people looked super stressful.  If you have children that can walk this is one of the instances where I would suggest leaving the stroller behind, it’s a super short walk from the “T” and the stroller is likely going to cause more stress than it’s going to absolve.

6) Getting There &/or Parking
I would highly suggest taking the “T” to get here as the “Park Street” stop from both the red and green lines drop off literally at the park, giving you a thirty second walk to the pond.  If you must drive there is a parking garage with a limited amount of parking at Boston Common as well.

Summary & Rating ★★★☆☆

Three stars.  We had a lot of fun going and being able to add our pumpkin to the other pumpkins floating on the water, however the crows were crazy!  Trying to get around the pond to see the different vendors took some fancy footwork and if you want to float your pumpkin your best bet is to get there when it starts because toward the middle/end of the event the line to hand off pumpkins was quite long.  We enjoyed going, and I’m glad we tried it at least once but there are so many fun things going on around the city at this time of year that I think we’ll check out some new, less overwhelming, options next time around.

Have you been here before?  If so I’d love to know more about your experience and any tips or tricks you have in the comments section below. 

Frog Pond Pumpkin Float
Frog Pond
Boston, MA 02108

Phone: 617.635.2120
Website: http://bostonfrogpond.com/2015/03/pumpkin-festival/

Touring Boston – What to Know About Visiting Salem During October

Salem is a fantastic place, and if you’re planning a visit there I would highly suggest going in the month of October because that’s when the town really comes to life, though it has fun stuff going on all year, you can find out more at http://salemweb.com/guide/tosee.php.  It’s got all sorts of scary history with the Salem Witch Trials and they also claim their are a number of haunted houses there, not to mention plenty of Halloween movies were filmed in the little town, perhaps mostly notably Hocus Pocus and Bewitched.

We went the second week of October and started out by walking the town and checking out the vendors.  There were about 100 Tarot Card readers, and though I’ve never had a reading and don’t know that I believe in them I was tempted to get one just to see what it was and because if I were ever to get one it seems like Salem would be the right place for it.  In the end it was $30 for a 15 minute reading and I realized I am too cheap to pay for something I think is more hokey than anything… I would rather have a new pair of shoes, but the cards look cool.

Already there were quite a few people in the town dressed up for Halloween and a lot of related events going on such as dance parties, Halloween vendors, haunted tours and the like.  We visited the memorial for those accused and sentenced during the Salem Witch Trials and visited more shops while we waited for our evening haunted tour.

At 8 we met up with our tour guide/group and were lead through the streets of Salem and told about the ghost stories and strange occurrences that have a happened there.  The Witch House that is right next to the monument had really creepy murder stories and apparently is the most haunted place in Salem. People claim to see lights in the attic or catch glimpses of people in the windows and such, after hearing all that we were happy to move on. *Note, if your going with kids you might not want to attend a haunted tour since a lot of stories were really dark.

Things to Note

1) If you want to visit in October go early in the month
If you’re going to go to Salem during the month of October and you don’t want to get clobbered by crowds go in the first few weeks of the month, the closer the date get to Halloween the more crazy and packed Halloween town gets.

2) Limited Parking
If you plan on going in October you should also know that parking will be limited.  Another fun option is to take the commuter rail there saving you the headache of parking.  

3) Day Trips
If you want to go for day trip there are quite a few museums you can visit and there is also a trolley ride that will take you around the town and give you a tour of the interesting places, which can be nice if your totting along tots.

4) Evening Tours Will Be Packed!
If you’re planning on going on an evening/haunted tour during the month of October things are going to be crowded.  We were in a tour group that had probably around 40 other people in it, which meant that some times it was difficult to hear our tour guide.  Also there were a whole bunch of other tour companies doing tours at the same time, so we often had to wait a few minutes for previous tour groups to move on before we could visit certain sights.  Finally, I would not recommend attending the evening tours with children.  We brought our then 9 month old son, and it was fine to carry him around, but the stories they tell are not child friendly and you may want to avoid the potential nightmares/scares I assume younger children would walk away with.

Summary & Stars ★★★★☆

Four stars.  We had a really fun time visiting it, my husband loved it and wants to make it yearly tradition though I think as our children get older we would plan more of day visit to see the decoration and less of a visit to see the more “scary” things.  If you want to go during the month of October consider going during the first few weeks to avoid massive crowds.  The town is quaint and nice to walk around on and there are a lot of museums to visit during the day.  Evening tours during the month of October are really crowded and busy and not child friendly.  Consider taking the commuter rail to avoid the hassle of parking.

Have you been here before?  If so I’d love to know more about your experience and any tips or tricks you have in the comments section below. 

Salem Witch House (Pretty much the Center of all the things going on in Salem)
310 1/2 Essex Street
Salem, Massachusetts

Phone:  978.744.8815
Website: http://www.salem.org/

Touring Boston – What to Know About Apple Picking at Russell Orchards

Let me start by saying we love the Boston tradition of Pick Your Own Fruit.  We’ve loved picking apples each fall and we have loved getting to pick a few different kinds of berries this summer.

Over the weekend my husband and I decided that we really wanted to go apple picking this year and since I had a baby due in less than a month we decided that sooner would be better.  We got everything ready in the morning and packed into the car but when I pulled up the address to Tougas Orchard (my personal favorite) we found out they were closed for the day so we decided to try out Russell Orchard since we had seen flyers around campus for an outing the rest of the school was planning there.

The drive to Russell Orchard was beautiful and the parking lot didn’t seem to busy as we pulled in,

which was what we expected going on a weekday rather than a weekend.  As I mentioned I was less than a month away from my pregnancy due date so after a long car drive I really needed to use the bathroom.  Unfortunately my very first experience with Russell Orchard was with a row of very poorly maintained port-a-potties.  Ugh.  Being unbalanced and pregnant the last thing I wanted to do was squish my roundness into the stinky cesspit.  Toilet paper and urine was everywhere, there was no clean toilet paper to be found, the toilets were super full and looking at their little service dates marked on the inside of each port-a-potty it has been weeks since they had been serviced.  Using them myself and then taking my two year old to use them was absolutely revolting, and I’m sad to say it but that initial experience may have tainted the rest of my view of Russell Orchard.

Anyway, moving on to the Orchard Summary.

1. Bathrooms
This place has been around over a 100 years (or so they claim) and they still only have a line of port a potties for bathrooms.  Gross.

2. Pricing
The price for the apples was quite low compared to some of other orchards.  You paid an admission fee $3/person and that would later be credited toward your fruit.  Apples were $1.75 a lb.

3. The Orchard
I felt like we really could have used a little more help and direction when it came to this part.  After we paid our fee and were given a bag to put our apples in we were simply sent on our way and told not to get on the tractor tailor because that was only for kids on field trips.  Great.  … but we didn’t know what to do or where to go, there were no maps and no further instructions given.  We ended up wandering down the long main road looking for any kind of signage that suggested apples ready for picking.

It was a fairly long walk and I wish we would have brought a stroller, since my toddler is pretty big and a pain to carry, but we didn’t know how far away the apples would actually be.  However the trail was fairly rough so I don’t know that a stroller that wasn’t a jogger would have done much good.

Eventually we found the apples and they had a bunch of different ones clustered together.  Each row being a different type of apples so you could get a good variety without additional walking. There were apples everywhere, mostly all over the ground, which was kind of sad, and I suspected it was because they didn’t have any people there giving directions or telling you to be careful what you picked because anything you pick should go in your bag like many of the other orchards do.

Also we went the last week of September, and I don’t know if it was the time of year or the location or something else all together, but the flies and mosquitoes were out in swarms. We all came home with multiple bug bites.

4. Other Fruit
I was pretty excited that this orchard also had raspberries that were still available to pick so after we got our fill of apples we again headed to the main desk to try to get some direction to where we could find the berries and again we were pointed in a vague direction back into the orchard.  Still poor signage and no maps.

However when we did find the berries they were great.  Tasty, delicious, ripe, and they cost a fair amount less to pick than they do at the grocery store… which does not seem to be the case for most of my apple picking experiences.

5. Other Features
They have a few animals enclosed in a fence, mostly chickens and geese and a sign warning that they are not tame and to be careful around them.  There was no playground that I could see and only handful of benches.  The general store was nice and they had some really tasty ice cream there, but other than that there wasn’t much that stood out to me.

Summary & Stars:

★★☆☆☆

Two stars. Gross bathrooms killed this place for me, and having that added to a complete lack of direction and instruction left me pretty disappointed.  I feel like there are so many great orchards in New England that I would not waste my time returning to this one.

Have you been here before?  If so I’d love to know more about your experience and any tips or tricks you have in the comments section below. 

Address:

Russell Orchards
143 Argilla Rd.
Ipswich, MA  

Phone: 978-356-5366
Website: http://www.russellorchards.com/ 

Touring Boston – What to Know About Apple Picking at Tougas Farm

I had a friend set up a toddler playgroup date to Tougas Farm, the one she claimed was her favorite place to go apple picking and I was excited to go experience another apple picking farm (see my post on Lookout Farm for the first experience).  I was extra excited because we didn’t have a car at the time and she offered to drive us there, which was amazing.  It seems like a lot of Pick Your Own Apple farms are a good 45+ minutes away from the Cambridge/Boston area and you really can’t get to them without a car.

This orchard is set up in two parts.  You drive there and park, across the street from the parking area is a barn where you go to purchase your pass or to pick fruit and on the same side as the parking lot there is the farm store, a huge playground, and farm animals.

Things to note about Tougas Farm:

1.  How Pricing Works
Here you pay an initial admission price, I want to say it’s around $7-10/person and you get a sticker and a receipt saying you’ve paid.  Then you are given a bag for your fruit and sent into to orchard behind the barn.  You pick the fruit you want, then you take it back to the payment barn and they weigh it.  You are charged by pound, but the initial entrance fee you paid goes toward your fruit.  So if you go with two people you’ll pay $14 to get in, but that $14 gets you $14 worth of fruit.  If you pick more than $14 worth of fruit you just pay the extra per pound amount, if you pick less than you miss out on a few dollars worth of food.

2.  Travel
Their orchard seems fairly compact and it was easily walkable with a toddler without a stroller, but there is a little bit of walking involved.  There are thick patches of grass and wide walk ways between the trees so it would also be really easy to bring a stroller if you wanted or needed one.  Also different variety of apples have all be planted close to each other, so one row of apples will be Gala, the row next to it will be Cortland, the row next it will be something else, etc.  So it’s easy to get a good variety without having to do a lot of traveling.  

3. Helper Assistance
Around each area of picking they have farm workers telling you the process.  These people are great and they’ll explain to you and your kids how to pick fruit so you don’t pull a whole bunch you don’t mean to off the tree, how to find good, ripe fruit, and if you have questions about which apples taste which way these people are great for insights.  (also they have no qualms about you sampling the fruit as you go… thank goodness because I think my son ate his weight in apples while we picked.)

They had a smallish picking area, maybe 10 rows of apples open at a time (New rows open as all the apples from those rows get picked), but each row was a different kind, so I could pick some gala and some cortland and some … uh, yellow ones all kind of at the same time.  It was also great for my toddler son because he could just run wild through the different rows exploring and finding other kids.

4. Playground
The playground is by the general store.  It’s big, and there are tires to climb on, an old tractor, a couple of big wooden play structures, swings, slides, things to climb on etc.  The playground is also surrounded by picnic tables if you bring snacks.

5. Farm Animals
This is for sure my sons favorite thing about this farm. They have lots of farm animals (goats, pigs, chickens, lamas, sheep) and for $1 you can buy a small bag of food pellets to feed the animals.  The animals were surprisingly soft and good about taking the food from small children and my son loved getting to poke the food through to them and getting soggy goat lip kisses on his hand.  Thankfully they also have a nice outdoor washing station right next to the animals so you can clean up as soon as you’re done.

6. Bathrooms
With kids bathrooms are so important and not all the farms have great one.  These ones are big and attached the general store next to the playground and animal yard.

7. General Store
They have a general store and some of my most favorite apple donuts.  If you come to pick apples you really shouldn’t leave without trying one of their apple donuts.

Summary:
This is my favorite farm that I’ve been to so far.  It’s less expensive than Look Out Farm (though it has fewer activities) but it still has plenty for kids to do and it’s a great day trip.   I’m fairly confident my son would be willing to brave the drive just to feed the animals.  The farm and picking is compact which makes it nice and easy to walk and they’ve really just made it a pretty experience with green grass between the fruit trees, a great play area, fun animals and nice bathrooms.

Rating:

★★★★★

Five stars, I thought this place was great.  It was perfect for a day outing with a toddler, I loved being able to walk around and play and not drag a stroller with me.  I thought the grass everywhere was a nice touch and we could not get enough of feeding the animals.

Have you been here before?  If so I’d love to know more about your experience and any tips or tricks you have in the comments section below. 

Tougas Farm

234 Ball Street
Northboro, MA

Phone: 508-393-6406
Website: http://www.tougasfarm.com/