As a Daytona Beach area mom who happens to work in
tourism, I'm always interested to see what my two children (a
12-year-old daughter and a 10-year-old son) love the best about our
hometown. Last year I grabbed my copy of the Daytona Beach Area
Convention & Visitors Bureau's Visitors Guide, and used it
to find out. The kids chose the activities and dubbed it our
Summer of Adventure -- and the results were nothing short of
memorable.
We started with something of a dare -- parasailing
over the Atlantic. It was big, it was daunting, and it was voted
most likely to make us all "scream like girls." Of
course, the fact that Daytona Beach Parasail offered tandom rides
actually made it quite easy, since I could take each of them up
separately. Their experiences were as individual as they were. My
daughter the adventurer rocked the seat, belted Queen's
"We Are the Champions" and shouted to our boat captain to
send us higher
-- and then to dip our toes into the ocean. My son the
contemplator of life whispered his impressions of the stillness,
then marveled at the number of water towers the area boasts, how
the birds were able to fly this high, and how the tether line could
really be "the strongest cord ever made," as I'd
promised him it was. The view from 1,000 feet was phenomenal, as
was the experience.
The next weekend we opted for surf lessons with
none other than local longboard legend Mimi Munro. She's my
version of a surfing superhero: a petite surfista who rocks a size
0 bikini, solid biceps AND six-pack abs. It wasn't just that
she could dance on the waves and make it look easy. What truly
impressed me was the fact that she was able to convey
her grace, her enthusiasm for surfing, and her deep respect for the
ocean to my children. We all had a blast, and we've been
surf-junkies ever since.
While we do love the great outdoors, we're
always up for a good story. The Museum of Arts & Sciences had
plenty of stories to tell. We learned about the 13-foot-tall Giant
Ground Sloth that was unearthed in a nearby park, about
Batista's Cuban art collection, and about the local Root
family's history-making connection with the original green
Coca-Cola
bottle. We even got to see the Root's donations of passenger
trains, a fully-stocked apothocary shop, race cars and even teddy
bears. And when we finished inside, we ventured back outdoors to
the raised boardwalk through the Tuscawilla Preserve. (The
adjoining Tuscawilla Park boasts a popular disc golf course, by the
way. It's free and open to the public, but trust me, it's
more challenging than it looks -- so finding our discs was half the
fun!).
Before the summer ended we also took in the Daytona
500 Experience, the Daytona Beach Boardwalk, SpeedPark Motorsports,
snorkling at Blue Springs, and the Marine Science Center. This
summer? It's anyone's guess what' they'll choose.
But since we 'll all get a vote, I'm opting for a tasty
breakfast at the Sun Glow Pier, a half-day deep sea fishing
excursion, and a trip to the Coke Zero 400. Talk about a wild
ride!