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72 awesome things to do with kids in L.A. before they grow up

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Even in a place like Los Angeles, which is chock-full of activities, history and everyday wonders, parents and other guardians of children are still struck with anxiety when they hear the words: “What are we dooooing todaaaaay?”

(The question is usually asked in a tone that says, “And do not tell me we’re going to the same playground we’ve already been to six times this week.”)

We get it. Ideas can run dry, especially for busy moms, dads and caregivers. But L.A. is brimming with engaging and totally fun family-friendly spaces — and exploring them all through the bright eyes of a kid can help you fall in love with the city in entirely new ways.

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In this guide, we share 72 things to do with children in and around Los Angeles — memorable activities to fit every age, interest, energy level and attention span (and for grownups, every budget). Your youngster can scale a make-believe skyscraper at a rock-climbing gym, construct a sculpture out of wood scraps at a maker space, watch a sea lion belly-slide at a marine mammal rescue center — all within SoCal borders.

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All of the experiences here have been road-tested by Times writers and contributors, many with kids of our own. The list is primarily geared for the 13-and-under set, but older teens and other childlike souls would enjoy quite a few of the activities as well. We’ve skipped some of the obvious destinations, such as theme parks, most neighborhood parks and farmers markets (though we have highly specific guides for those too).

The days are long but childhood is short, so make some core memories around town. Your kids will come home happy, more connected to the city and — fingers crossed — ready for a nap. It’s a win all around. — Michelle Woo, West Coast experiences editor

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A person looks through a sheet of red slime they're holding up
(Robyn Breen Shinn / For The Times)

Jump into a lake of slime at Sloomoo Institute Los Angeles

Beverly Grove Experience
Sticky, gooey, gloppy slime continues to be an obsession for the children of today’s generation, and as a mother, let me just say: I think it’s time we all join the craze! Really, there’s something addictively hypnotic about the substance, which you can experience in all its glory at the Sloomoo Institute, L.A.’s first and only slime museum. Housed in a boxy, Barbie-pink building on Fairfax Avenue, Sloomoo lets you interact with slime in more ways than you’ve probably ever considered. You can get doused under a waterfall of slime (you’re protected with a poncho and shower cap). You can feel slime under your bare feet at Sloomoo Lake. You can catapult slime at unsuspecting family members. You can stretch slime, you can squish slime, you can stick globs of slime onto a wall of slime.

And you can make your own slime, which was a highlight for me and my 11-year-old daughter. The process requires quite a bit of tough decisionmaking. What texture would you like? Butter? Clear? Cloud creme? Jelly? Icee? And what scent do you prefer? There’s a wall of different sample smells, from gummy bears to fresh-baked bread to dirt. Finally, you have to choose your color and mix-ins (tiny toys to mix into your slime). For parents, perhaps the best part of Sloomoo Institute is that you get to leave the mess there. All of it. After getting a few specks of slime in her hair, my daughter took a trip to the makeshift Sloomoo Salon, where a friendly staff member got it out with slime-resistant vinegar.
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Puppeteers manipulate marionette clowns on a red-lit stage before a seated audience.
(Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)

Watch puppets dance at eye level at the Bob Baker Marionette Theater

Los Angeles County Attraction
It’s always a treat to take a seat in the Bob Baker Marionette Theater and submit to the utterly analog charm of puppets on strings.

Bob Baker founded the theater in 1963 with partner Alton Wood, created thousands of marionettes and ran the outfit for decades in a rustic cinderblock-walled space near the edge of downtown Los Angeles. Legions of pint-sized Angelenos passed through, many of whom are now grandparents.

Since Baker’s death in 2014 at age 90, the troupe has moved to a splendid (and very red) space on York Avenue at the border of Highland Park and Eagle Rock.

The venue holds fewer than 100 people, and most kids sit “criss-cross applesauce” style on the carpet in front. Weekend shows (usually three on Saturdays) typically begin with jaunty organ intro music by Mr. Ed Torres, followed by about an hourlong presentation that features 100 or more marionettes, which waltz madly, sing operatically, bat eyelashes and operate right at a kid’s eye level. At the end of most shows (don’t tell the kids), there’s surprise ice cream.
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Children watch miniature trains at the Descanso Railroad at Descanso Gardens
(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

Ride a train through a lovely oak grove at the Descanso Railroad

La Ca?ada Flintridge Botanic Garden
The Descanso Railroad train ride inside Descanso Gardens is open to riders once again, and model trains winding their way around a new railway garden are charming a new generation of engine-obsessed little kids. Imagine a garden where cedar trunks and fallen branches from nearby oaks uphold an overhead miniature railway, with more rails and trains running at toddler eye level.

The model train area is modestly sized; a brisk walk around it with brief stops to admire the tiny train stations would take only a couple of minutes. But with a lingering toddler, you could be here for hours. The walkways are wide enough to accommodate ample stroller traffic, and the low fences let kids get a full view.

The train ride — a ? scale model of a diesel engine — first arrived at Descanso Gardens as a seasonal attraction in the 1980s and became a permanent feature in 1996. It closed in 2023 for a renovation, including an upgrade to be completely electric. Riders take a 4 mph train trip looping under the oak trees that lasts six minutes. You straddle a low bench to ride, rendering it not entirely skirt-friendly.

There is also, naturally, an on-site gift shop in the shape of a train car.
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Two people onstage holding microphones at the "Pull My Finger" comedy show.
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Burst into giggles at a 'Pull My Finger' comedy show at the Crow

Santa Monica Comedy Show
Laughter, shrieks and knee slaps erupt inside the Crow, a comedy club tucked in a corner of Santa Monica’s Bergamot Station.

Except at this performance, the seats are mostly filled with audience members who rode to the club in car seats and whose drink of choice is chocolate milk. “Pull My Finger” is a G-rated comedy show that gets families giggling with highly interactive improv games in the style of “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” The in-house troupe, Happy Crow Lucky, acts out scenes prompted by words and scenarios blurted out by young members of the crowd (fair warning: The plot often ends up involving poop, farts and “skibidi”). Each show is packed with a hefty number of puns, which dads will appreciate, and chances for your little ones to be part of the skits onstage. When I attended, there was also a special performance by Those Klein Boys, two rapping brothers who revved up the audience with their made-up-on-the-spot lyrics inspired by the day’s show. (How they were effortlessly able to think of phrases that rhyme with “bakery in Hawaii” is a true gift.)

“Pull My Finger,” which I’d say is best for kids ages 4 to 12 and their families, happens every third Saturday of the month. The Crow also hosts “BYOB(aby/ottle/uggy),” a totally adult comedy show for parents of babies (who are too young to understand the jokes), and “IRL,” a show for teens.
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People on bikes riding the curved form of the Inglewood Pumptrack.
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Zoom down the Inglewood Pumptrack, a 'Disneyland for bikes'

Inglewood Park
Inside the sprawling Edward Vincent Jr. Park, there’s an area that’s always alive with action: the Inglewood Pumptrack. On the wavy, asphalt track that almost looks like a modern sculpture emerging out of a grassy field, kids and adults on bicycles zoom around, showcasing tricks and testing their endurance on hills, rollers and berms. On a pump track, instead of pedaling or pushing the bike forward, riders do an up-and-down pumping motion with their body to maintain momentum.

The site — launched by Grow Cycling Foundation and billed as L.A.’s first pump track — features two asphalt courses, the Woodlands and World Championship tracks. Woodlands, which is smaller and surrounds a host of trees, has smaller rollers and is designed for slower speeds, whereas the colossus World Championship track, which is wider with large rollers, was built in a mirrored design so two riders can race in opposite directions at the same time. Both tracks are open to all ages and levels.

Ameri de Vera, 9, who rides BMX on the Inglewood Pumptrack at least twice a month with her older sister, says, “I was scared at first because you have to get used to how it sways. It sways in different directions and there’s some sharp turns too. So you have to keep your eye on those, but it was really fun once I got used to it.”

Other wheels such as skateboards, longboards and rollerblades are welcome at the pump track on specific days of the week.
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A girl swings between two net bags filled with colorful balls on an obstacle course.
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Swing, leap and face-plant at American Ninja Warrior Adventure Park

Santa Ana Indoor Playground
In the upper reaches of Santa Ana’s MainPlace mall lies American Ninja Warrior Adventure Park, a shrunken version of the popular NBC show in which contestants try to climb, swing and leap toward a million-dollar grand prize. Here, though, the main rewards are a good sweat and a sense of accomplishment.

After checking in and stowing your stuff in a locker, put on your gloves and socks and start anywhere you like. You can crawl all over the inflatable course or take on any of its five more challenging tests. Try everything, in any order. The artists and engineers who built the park did an amazing job of re-creating the show’s aesthetic, using black ceilings and walls to create depth and an impressive lighting system that casts a red and blue glow over everything beneath it.

Just be warned: The park’s obstacle courses are hard. Each is about 20 yards long and starts with an unstable path to be traversed on foot. After that comes a smorgasbord of hanging by your hands, followed by tests of grit, critical thinking and dynamic balance. The spinning log in the middle of course No. 4 was my vicious adversary. ANWAP is supposed to be for all ages, but this 10-foot cylindrical section of it was not intended for 50-year-olds with janky lower backs.
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A child bounces in a bounce house.
(Funbox)

Bounce away boredom at L.A.'s Funbox bounce park

Arcadia Indoor Playground
Glue together all the birthday party bouncy castles in your neighborhood on any given Saturday afternoon and you might come close to the 25,000 square feet of delight that is Funbox. Rainbow-colored, character-strewn and endlessly cheerful, this Arcadia funhouse at the Shops at Santa Anita mall is conveniently situated near the food court, Dave & Busters, Jump N’ Jammin and Bowlero.

Inside, you and your kids don grip socks (BYO or buy there) and bounce for up to 90 minutes across a massive landscape including a jousting station, obstacle course, ninja wall and 23-foot slide. Everything you moon-walk across is inflated, so there’s no reason to stop bouncing — don’t be surprised if, egged on by your kids, you log 30,000 steps during your trip. Kids under 13 need to be with an adult, but only kids 5 and under need an adult bouncing with them. The tickets are rather steep in comparison with other playspaces ($22 for ages 6 and over, $12 for ages 3 to 5, $59 for a family four-pack and toddlers up to 2 are free), but the tranquility in the car afterward should be worth it.
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A portrait of Houdini above a table in a restaurant.
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Get tricked at Sunday brunch at Magic Castle

Hollywood Hills Magic Club
The Magic Castle, a den of mystery and prestidigitation in a customized Hollywood hilltop mansion, is adults-only — except for brunch performances on weekends, when children are welcome. Inside you’ll find a dash of Vegas, a dash of Hollywood history and a dash of deep magic geekdom — more Harry Houdini, less Harry Potter. With an invitation from a member (or a booking at the neighboring Magic Castle Hotel), you can make a reservation, turn up in classy attire (the club’s strict dress code eases a bit for the brunch set but still “adheres to a classic sensibility”), then step through the secret door (pssst! bookcase!). You’re obliged to order the buffet in the snazzy dining room (for nonmembers, it’s $75 for adults, $30 for kids). Proceed to a magic show in the main theater, then meander through the mansion, dropping in on card tricksters, sleight-of-hand artists and other entertainers.

Bonus tip: The Magic Castle Hotel is a converted 1950s apartment building, not nearly as fancy as the castle. Room rates start about $225 (and most units have kitchens). The furniture and grounds are worn, but we had alert service. And that red phone by the pool? That’s the free popsicle hotline.
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A woman stands in front of a row of glowing arcade games.
(Jennelle Fong / For The Times)

Win your dream plushie in the claw machines at the Neofuns Arcade

Monterey Park Games $
A row of pink, blue, green and purple machines beckons with windows full of plush toys at the center and along the walls of the arcade. On a busy Saturday, it’s almost a 1-to-1 mix of kids and adults with their faces pressed up against the glass of the machines, their hands deftly working to maneuver the claws over rainbow balls, stuffed bears and ducks in bow ties. The arcade is open until 11 p.m. on weekends, so expect the dueling air hockey players to jump in age as the night progresses. Pokémon fans will be especially pleased to find a smiling Pikachu featured as a prize in some of the machines. There’s a decent selection of play-for-tickets games too, with Air Dino basketball and Skee-Ball, and plenty of plush toys, knickknacks and even a coffeemaker you can snag for a certain number of tickets. If you manage to collect more than 150,000 tickets, you can usually turn them in for a toy that’s larger than your body.

Neofuns Arcade joins a crop of adorable claw machine arcades that have descended upon SoCal. Also check out the Clawcade in Torrance, Kawaii Klaws (multiple locations) and Claw Daddy Arcades in Montebello.
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A kid plays among the climbing activities at Sender One Climbing & Sender City
(Robyn Breen Shinn / For The Times)

Scale skyscrapers at Sender City

Westchester Climbing Gym
If you’ve got a miniature stunt kid, Spider-Man or Ghost Spider, they’ll love swinging their way to Sender City, vertical climbing playgrounds inside three Sender One climbing gyms — Westchester (marked on this map), Santa Ana and Lakewood. In this scalable metropolis, colorful walls are designed to look like roads, skyscrapers and circuit boards.

The climbing features are both static and kinetic, with kinetic routes made of tires that sway while climbing, providing an additional challenge. Two kids can weave their way through the spiderweb-shaped climb together. The thrilling jump-catch tower has little ones leap to catch a climbing bag (while attached to a harness, of course), while they grab glow-in-the-dark holds in the Mineshaft. Whether it’s your kids’ first time climbing or they climb every week, they’ll find ample challenges — or they can later head into the rest of the gym for harder routes.

Climbers ages 10 and older can clip themselves into auto-belays (under 10 must be clipped by parents), meaning the rope automatically catches and lowers them without the use of a human belayer. Both climbing shoes and regular close-toed shoes are permitted, and climbers must wear helmets and harnesses (athletic clothing is recommended, and you’ll want to bring socks for the slide). Advance reservations and on-site waivers are required for all parents and kids, even those who don’t climb, and all climbers must weigh between 35 and 300 pounds. Arrive 15 to 30 minutes early so you have time to change and sign waivers and still participate in a full session. To find other kid-friendly climbing gyms to visit, check out our guide.
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The orange car of Angels Flight funicular railway in downtown Los Angeles
(Michael Blackshire / Los Angeles Times)

Ride the world's shortest railway for $1

Downtown L.A. Historic landmark
Billed as the “world’s shortest railway,” Angels Flight gives downtown a mini, theme-park-like attraction. More than 100 years old, the cable railway built on an incline, which today runs between Hill Street and California Plaza connecting L.A.’s Bunker Hill neighborhood and downtown’s Historic Core, once ferried about 4,000 passengers daily. Today, it sits about half a block from its original location.

The tiny funicular railway — it’s a charmer — is a must-do at least once. Tack it on, for instance, to a visit to Grand Central Market. One-way rides are $1 apiece and, at the time of publication, Metro Tap Card users get a discount. Fun fact: Its two cars, built in a Beaux-Arts architectural style, are named Sinai and Olivet.
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A family building remote control cars.
(Ridemakerz)

Assemble a remote control car and let it race at Ridemakerz

Anaheim Toy Store
Before me lay the chassis of a remote control car and a stack of wheels. And the clock was ticking. I fumbled with a wheel and hesitated to attach it to the vehicle’s base. I was losing precious time. “You’re not going to break it,” said Matt Ducheny, who runs the Anaheim outpost of Ridemakerz. With Ducheny’s assurance, I was comfortable to apply a little pressure, and my car suddenly was snapping into place.

Next, I had to affix the chassis to the base. I had chosen a sporty model. Standing around an oval-shaped workbench, I grabbed the drill hanging before me and my mini red Corvette became a reality. All told, it took me 90 seconds to construct a car. That time wasn’t bad, I was told, but I knew I had lost a good 30 seconds bungling with the wheels.

Ridemakerz aims to make the car crafting experience simple and efficient, creating a workbench set up designed to feel like a tiny pit stop. I kept things relatively basic, but the franchise boasts that it has more than 649 car combinations. There are, for instance, standard wheels, or flame-enhanced ones, not to mention dozens of rims, an assortment of grills and a host of light-up side pipes. A basic electric car starts at about $29.99, with remote control add-ons beginning at $25.

All told, I had a car zipping around the floor of the store in about 20 minutes. Now I just need someone to race with.
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A blue concrete sea serpent undulates in the sand at La Laguna de San Gabriel.
(Etan Rosenbloom)

Enter a fantastical wonderland at La Laguna de San Gabriel

San Gabriel Valley Park
Tucked inside Vincent Lugo Park in San Gabriel is a fantastical wonderland of 14 concrete sea creatures, populating an ocean of sand. You’ll find a giant whale with a slide for a tongue, a jaunty octopus named Ozzie, two dragons and a larger-than-life starfish, all ready to be climbed atop, slid down or just grinned at. This is La Laguna de San Gabriel, the creation of master concrete artisan Benjamin Dominguez. It’s impossible to not fall in love with the place.

Opened in 1965, La Laguna was the final project in a career that took Dominguez from his native Mexico to El Paso to Las Vegas and finally to Los Angeles. In L.A., you can find his whimsical play sculptures at Whittier Narrows and the Atlantis Play Center in Garden Grove. But La Laguna was Dominguez’s masterpiece, an immersive environment where the creatures seem to exist in communion with one another.

Today, it’s also a great example of community preservation efforts in action. When it faced demolition in 2006, a group of locals formed Friends of La Laguna to save it. They raised some $700,000 to restore and preserve the playground, piece by piece.
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Marine Mammal Care Center in San Pedro
(Marine Mammal Care Center)

Watch sea lions belly-slide at Marine Mammal Care Center

San Pedro Animal Care
A visit to Marine Mammal Care Center makes for an easy family activity — kids can watch adorable seals and sea lions glide on their bellies, splash into pools and snag fresh fish out of volunteers’ hands. But the intimate center nestled in San Pedro’s Angels Gate Park does much more than prompt squeals and awws. A nonprofit originally launched out of the former Marineland, it’s renowned for its marine conservation efforts, rescuing more marine mammals per mile of coastline than any other organization in the U.S.

Sick, injured and abandoned seals and sea lions are regularly brought into the safe haven — you can find the current numbers on a whiteboard. One former patient, a sea lion named Sal, was found with a gill net wrapped around his neck. Another named Lynn was stranded after escaping an encounter with a shark. The animals are cared for by staff and volunteers, who administer medication, monitor the quality of the pool water and take progress notes. You can view the patients from a safe distance during a free visit, which you can schedule on the center’s website. While there, spend some time in the revamped visitor center, where your kids can learn more about ocean conservation with hands-on activities and perhaps pick up a fluffy seal pup stuffed animal on their way out.
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A pink bear next to shelves full of varied kinds of candy in a shop with black and white striped walls
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Make a sushi platter or beach cottage out of candy at Candified

Long Beach Candy Shop
There are a good number of candy shops to stumble into around Southern California, charming places where you can satisfy your sudden craving for an Abba-Zaba. But few are as impeccably curated — or multihyphenated — as Candified. Is the bright Belmont Shore space a Pop art gallery? A Color Me Mine-style craft studio? A purveyor of confections from the nostalgic (who remembers Chuckles?) to the trending on TikTok (Swedish candy is where it’s at, apparently). Yes, yes and absolutely yes.

Let’s start with the art. Hanging on the walls are giant framed portraits of icons — all made of candy. The Taylor Swift masterpiece uses 35,000 pieces and contains (gasp) 23,000 grams of sugar. Works depicting Lizzo, Harry Styles and “The Dance” by Keith Haring are equally jaw-dropping (and tooth-aching). The creations stem from the artistry of Candified co-founder Jackie Sorkin, who was the mastermind of Candytopia, one of L.A.’s original Instagram-era pop-up museums. She’s been called a modern-day Willy Wonka.

Then there’s the crafty studio. Kids can choose a project to create out of — you guessed it — candy. My kids were fully engaged in making sushi bento boxes for about an hour. Next time they might try assembling a beach cottage or pretty geode cookies.

Finally, there’s the candy shop itself, which carries both individually wrapped items and scoopable bulk candy. You’ll leave Candified with a high, both from the sugar and the sweet experience.
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A child reaches up to one roll in a wall full of rolls of stickers.
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Enter sticker heaven at Sticker Planet

Fairfax Sticker Shop
Sticker Planet sells one thing and that is stickers. Inside the snug, family-owned shop that’s been a favorite at the Original Farmers Market since 1992, you’ll find rolls of stickers along the walls and sheets of stickers in the aisles. You might enjoy the stickers of animals wearing fancy Victorian-era hats. Or stickers of the face of Ralphie from “A Christmas Story” with the words “Oh fudge!” Or maybe you fancy some fuzzy stickers of teddy bears in the hospital. The shop sells puffy stickers, holiday stickers, glow-in-the-dark stickers, stickers that smell like cotton candy or salami, and a few sticker-adjacent items like temporary tattoos and decals. There is an abundance of stickers, is what I am saying.

And it’s hard to pull your kids away — or leave the shop empty-handed. During a recent visit, my son scored a sheet of Spider-Man stickers and my daughter chose a jeweled alien in a rainbow-emitting spaceship. If there’s something specific you’re looking for — say, a sticker of bleary-eyed Garfield wearing pajamas and bunny slippers — ask one of the friendly staff members and they can likely help you locate it.
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Drag Story Hour at West Hollywood Library.
(Tony Coelho / City of West Hollywood )

Hear tales fit for queens at Drag Story Hour

West Hollywood Library
When you’re a kid, what’s better than getting a story read to you on a Saturday morning? Having a story read to you surrounded by a bunch of other kids your age, and the story being read by a funny, beautiful drag queen dressed in a pageant dress who’s willing to dig through a tall stack of your favorite kids books.

Originally funded by West Hollywood’s Arts Division in 2017, this series at the West Hollywood branch of the L.A. County Public Library is produced by drag queen Pickle, who is also the city’s current Drag Laureate. While she has certain books that are her go-to titles, Pickle often rotates in topical tales based on the season. At the last Drag Story Hour that fell during Pride month, Pickle read books including “Rainbow Saurus,” “Cinderelliot” and “This Day in June.”

The event is free and held in the community room just off the front entrance of the West Hollywood Library. Drag Story Hour is held every other month on a Saturday. The next one happens on Dec. 7 at 11 a.m.
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Funko store in Hollywood.
(Deborah Netburn / Los Angeles Times)

Take selfies with pop culture icons at the Funko toy store

Hollywood Store
Dark and cavernous, the Funko store on Hollywood Boulevard is part toy store, part theme park. At 40,000 square feet, it’s twice the size of New York City’s FAO Schwarz and filled with elaborate installations featuring larger-than-life versions of the brand’s trademark Funko Pop figures — little bodies, oversized heads. On a recent visit, I walked past a model of Wakanda with a running waterfall; Funko Pop versions of Harry, Ron and Hermione from the Harry Potter series sitting at a wooden table with an empty spot (just for you!); and the stars of “The Little Mermaid” perched inside a shipwreck that reached to the ceiling. Donald Duck stood at the entrance to the Crown Hotel and at the back of the store the Demogorgon from “Stranger Things” appeared to be crashing through a wall. There is also a stand of kiosks where you can design your own Funko Pop for $30. It comes in a special Hollywood branded box and is usually ready for pickup within 15 minutes.

Long lines used to stretch down the street when the store first opened in November 2019, but that frenzy has since died down (although I’m told there’s often a rush after a matinee performance at the Pantages Theatre down the street). I saw plenty of toddlers enjoying the store, but this is also a great pick for hard-to-please tweens and teens. Older kids might also enjoy a visit to the Shake Shack next door or Amoeba Music across the street.
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Bricks & Minifigs in Lomita
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Unveil your proudest Lego build at Bricks & Minifigs

Lomita Toy Store
For Lego fans, if it’s a shiny new set you’re after — the new Super Mario expansion or Minecraft house, perhaps — well, you can find that at any official Lego Store or big-box retailer. But if you’re looking to toss out the manuals, connect with a local community of builders and get a little weird with the bricks, you’ll want to head straight to Bricks & Minifigs.

It’s a Lego aftermarket shop with a handful of L.A. franchise locations, including the one I visited in Lomita. You can bring in your used Lego products to earn cash and, while there, pick up everything from loose bricks in bulk (take home whatever fits in a small bucket for $8) to rare retired sets (I spotted a 2017 Grand Admiral Thrawn minifigure selling for $200). At the Lomita store, owned by Miguel Zuniga, there’s a genuine family vibe — guests are invited to place their personal minifig (a customized Lego person) inside a Lego replica of the shop, showing that they’re part of the crew. And on the last Friday of every month, there’s BAMily Night, an event that welcomes Lego enthusiasts of any age to bring in a build they’re proud of and share it with others.

Sometimes, Zuniga will host meet-and-greets — recent guests have included Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit, the creators of “LEGO Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy,” and “Lego Masters” contestant Allyson Gail. You’ll always see kids in the space, whether they’re competing in a Lego building contest or searching for that very specific brick they lost last Christmas.
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Rediscover Center in Venice.
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Learn how to use power tools at Rediscover Center

Culver City Maker Space
What would happen if you took a space, filled it with discarded materials and invited people to go forth and make things? You might get something like the imaginative wonderland that is the Rediscover Center, a maker space that feels like a balm for our screen-warped brains.

I brought my husband and 5-year-old son to a family crafting session at the Venice location one Sunday morning and it was 75 minutes of blissful flow. Along the walls were rows of containers of donated treasures — bits of fabric, old zippers, tiny plastic toys, broken jewelry, packing peanuts, marbles and bottle caps — that we were welcome to grab from and bring back to our work table. What we did with those items was up to us. “What would we make today?” we wondered. There were plenty of creations around the room to keep us inspired. Mobiles made of toilet paper tubes! A space helmet fashioned out of metallic materials! Cardboard animal masks! In the end, my husband and son assembled a birdhouse-rocket hybrid while I created a DIY sign for my son’s room. We were proud of it all.

Rediscover Center, which also has a Mid-City space, also offers open tinkering sessions for those over 8 — there, after completing a tool training workshop, you can work with wood and tools like hammers, saws, drills and sanders. There are sustainability-focused camps and community events too. And if you have stuff at home you’re about to throw out — anything from berry baskets to old golf balls — why not donate it instead? Your trash might just become a stranger’s next masterpiece.
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Jellyfish swimming in an aquarium tank
(Adam Tschorn / Los Angeles Times)

See creatures in the Aquarium of the Pacific

Long Beach Aquarium
Although the aquarium teems with all manner of marine life, the undisputed star attractions here are the many and varied species of sea jellies that float about like living lava lamps. There are tanks full of pale-blue blubber jellies swirling about like animated mushrooms. You’ll also see smacks (yes, that’s the word for a group of them) of bell-shaped warty comb jellies twinkling like Christmas lights; majestic-looking, tentacle-trailing Pacific sea nettles; and fringed, Frisbee-like moon jellies fluttering like gelatinous pie tins.

Although the aquarium is open every day of the year (except Christmas Day), it’s worth paying a visit on a weekend between 11:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. so you can pop by the Moon Jelly Touch Lab on the Harbor Terrace and hand-feed some of the Aurelia labiata yourself. Buy a condiment cup or two of brine shrimp (one for $3, two for $5; I highly recommend the latter), pour it into the water next to a jelly and watch tiny pink blobs appear inside its translucent bell, indicating its stomachs are filling with lunch. At this point, you should take the opportunity to reach out and lightly touch the moon jelly’s bell (you won’t get stung — its venom is too weak for humans to feel) so you can tell all your friends about that time you petted a jellyfish.

For a local perspective, check out the aquarium’s Southern California Gallery, which includes the California two-spot octopus, leopard and horn sharks, California scorpionfish, a moray eel, California spiny lobsters, Catalina goby and the state marine fish — the Garibaldi.
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A DeLorean automobile, its gull-wing door open
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Behold the 1989 Batmobile (and other cool cars) at Petersen Automotive Museum

Mid-Wilshire Museum
Even those with minimal interest in cars can have plenty of fun at the Petersen, the massive automobile museum housed in that iconic red building covered in stainless steel ribbons on the Miracle Mile.

From the first functional car (which was built in 1886) to a life-size replica of Lightning McQueen from the Pixar movie “Cars,” the Petersen has plenty of flashy automobiles and factoids to marvel at.

Movie lovers can find the DeLorean from “Back to the Future,” Black Panther’s claw-marked Lexus, the 1989 Batmobile and Scooby-Doo’s Mystery Machine, among other car stars. The entire place feels a bit like a 3D encyclopedia, with perfectly organized collections of TV-famous vehicles and cars that belong to celebrities including Slash, Daniel Wu and Patrick Dempsey. Where else would you learn that athletes such as Muhammad Ali, Charles Barkley and Joe Namath inspired Lightning McQueen’s competitors in the “Cars” franchise?

For an additional charge, you can explore the Vault, where there are more than 200 automobiles, including race cars, lowriders and one-of-a-kind paint jobs. You can also sneak a peek at the 1998 Popemobile (designed for Pope John Paul II), the yellow van from “Little Miss Sunshine” (which was one of five used to film the movie) and a massive statue of the Michelin Man. On the first floor there’s the Meyers Manx Cafe, a perfect place to process all of your newfound car expertise and refuel with sandwiches and pizza.
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A man and two young children pick raspberries at Underwood Family Farms in Moorpark
(Jeanette Marantos / Los Angeles Times)

Pick your own berries or sunflowers at Underwood Family Farms in Moorpark

U-pick Farm
Underwood Family Farms in Moorpark is serious about sustainable farming — both in its farming practices and in family-friendly events that draw visitors from near and far. It hosts farm camps in the summer, a Fall Harvest Festival, Christmas tree sales and Christmas on the Farm, complete with Santa, all while running nonstop farm tours and a fun center with games, shows, gold panning, riding trikes through a maze and feeding adorable farm animals. (Keep your eyes peeled for goats overhead — they’ve built an elaborate elevated trail for goats to wander the grounds.) There are also 40 acres of farm open to people eager to pick their own veggies and berries, with regular transportation to and from the picking sites.

The “pick your own” experience brings crowds of budding farmers to the farm — especially during strawberry season in the spring. You can check which crops are available for picking on any given week on the farm’s website.
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Yakult U.S.A. factory tour in Fountain Valley
(Yakult U.S.A. )

Get schooled on probiotics (and meet a productive robot) on a free Yakult factory tour

Fountain Valley Factory Tour
If your kid loves opening those compact, foil-topped Yakult bottles and taking a swig, why not give them an inside look at how the sweet and slightly tangy probiotic beverage is produced?

On the free Yakult factory tour, you’ll watch a fun hologram presentation, interact with a huge touchscreen, learn about the history of the company and see how the drink is made, filled and sealed. And since all that activity may leave you parched, you’ll even get treated to a nice, cold bottle of Yakult.

Yakult was invented and developed in Japan by Dr. Minoru Shirota in 1935. It has since spread worldwide to more than 40 countrie,s and Sirota’s special strain — Lactobacillus casei strain Shirota — has been incorporated into many probiotic products and even skincare.

Inside the factory building in Fountain Valley, you’ll walk down a futuristic-looking hallway to see the entire production unfold: from the Seed Room, where the culturing of the probiotic strain takes place, to the Palletizing Room, where kids will be mesmerized by a robot methodically stacking the packaged Yakult bottles to prepare for shipment. Each room and the manufacturing stages are first explained in a short video — hosted by Mr. Yakult, the company’s kawaii mascot.

Recycling tip: Check with your local recycler, but Yakult bottles (and their foil lids) are known to bring in more money per pound than most other recyclable items.

Factory tours are open to those ages 5 and up, and are offered Monday through Friday (except holidays) at 10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Reservations are required and can be made online here.
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Dig It in Torrance.
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Become a worker inside a bustling construction zone at Dig It

Torrance Children's play space
To step into Dig It is to walk into a bustling, scaled-down construction zone, albeit one dedicated to play rather than the building of infrastructure. It’s likely to be humming with noise and activity, as this place is geared equally toward imagination and assembly. Once your kid enters its shoe-free playground, there is no shortage of stackable, buildable playthings.

Foam shapes beckon them — they can construct a fort, a castle or maybe a car — as do wooden wheels and blocks, where large, simple-to-affix tools stand at the ready to be turned into vehicles, towers or more. An earthquake table — push a button and it shakes — turns tremors into a joyful experience, as they can see if their mini creations can withstand a good wobble. For kids who want to practice some grown-up activities, Dig It has toy-like excavators, but for those who just want to be silly, there’s a giant hamster wheel and multiple slides.

And there’s more: Magnetic walls filled with knobs and malleable ramps beg to be touched, racing ramps await whatever you may build and a conveyor belt is going to require teamwork. “Play is really how children learn,” says Crystal McGinnis, Dig It’s general manager. She nods to a young girl escorting multiple balls through tunnels and ramps affixed to a wall. “She is learning about science. She’s learning about cause and effect. She’s learning about gravity.”

Dig It dedicates its weekday mornings to toddlers, 5 and younger. They have free run of the space from 10 a.m. to noon, at which time Dig It allows in kids of all ages. Children’s admission starts at $21, and that includes one adult. Additional adults are $8.
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A worker hoses off swan boats at Echo Park Lake.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

Paddle a swan boat in Echo Park Lake

Echo Park Experience
On warm days, it’s hard to beat a ride on the swan boats at Echo Park. They’re powered by foot paddles, and the pedaling is easy because you’re in no hurry. Maybe you’ll want to do a circuit of the lake (really a man-made reservoir). Maybe you’ll sidle up to the towers of whitewater rising from the mid-lake fountain. Maybe you’ll wait until after dark (because the swans light up).

The boats are managed by Wheel Fun Rentals. All ages are welcome to ride the Swan Pedal Boats (operators even have infant life jackets). Guests under age 15 must have a parent or guardian over 18 years old on board. The small boats can seat two adults and two children under age 10. The large boats can seat up to five people. Hand-crank pedal boats also are available.
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The field of the SoFi Stadium.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

Kick a field goal on a tour of SoFi Stadium

Inglewood Football Stadium
Any young sports fanatic would enjoy a tour of SoFi Stadium, but football fans will be especially impressed. It’s a fast-paced, roughly 60-minute swing through the stadium that starts in the VIP entrance and takes you from the bleachers to the locker room. The biggest thrill is when you’re let onto the field and have ample time to hone your throwing, kicking and running skills.

Along the way, the tour guide drops some interesting bits of knowledge: The entire stadium is 100 feet underground. Magic Johnson always requests chicken fingers when he’s dining there. The enormous video screen contraption weighs 2.2 million pounds. And my favorite tidbit: The birds are kept away from the stadium by hawks that are wrangled by a bird handler named Tango, who lives on the premises. There are three price levels of tours — we opted for the midpriced version that offered the field experience as well as access to the beautifully curated Kinsey African American Art & History Collection, which was well worth the upsell.

Tours are offered daily and are priced at $45, $57 and $68 depending on the level of access. Dates and times vary depending on games and events taking place; check the schedule here for available times and to purchase tickets.
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A miniature train runs on a track amid fake grassy hills.
(Joel Barhamand / For the Times)

Enter the coolest miniature city at Belmont Shore Railroad Club

San Pedro Model Railroad Club
Inside a run-down former Army base building overlooking the L.A. Harbor, you’ll hear the clickety-clack of trains rolling along the Belmont Shore Railroad. Around the track, people peer over to take in the scene, their faces Godzilla-like in proportion, for these locomotives are 1/160th scale (imagine a caboose resting on your thumb).

It’s amazing to see what the model railroaders have built here: an entire miniature city called Belmont. Though it is a fictional metropolis, it’s filled with re-creations of many real historical and geographic features of Southern California: the Monolith Cement Plant, San Joaquin and the green hills around the Tehachapi Loop. In the real world, a trip around the railroad line would be 20 miles.

The club, which accepts new members through an application process, opens its doors for public viewing from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesdays. Just note that the track is at a viewing height suited for adults, so you’ll likely have to lift up your young train fan to get a good glimpse.
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This classic 1963 VW bug “art car” painted by Valley artist Kent Bash in the 1980s was donated in 2014.
(Tommy Gelinas / Valley Relics Museum)

Bask in the neon glow of the Valley Relics Museum

Van Nuys Museum
Once upon a time, brilliant neon signage lit up business districts and corner shops all over Los Angeles. Even if many of the classic signs from the 1920s through the ’50s have been replaced over the years, a tube of electrified gas can still cast its spell on kids and adults alike.

So we’re fortunate to have the Valley Relics Museum with us. Housed in a double airplane hangar at the Van Nuys Airport, the museum displays the glowing remnants of San Fernando Valley restaurants and bowling alleys, liquor stores and paint shops, all cleaned up and plugged in. It has neon from long-gone local spots like the Palomino Club, once the West Coast’s premier outpost for country music, plus signage from businesses that’ll press the nostalgia buttons for Valley natives, such as Mel’s Drive-In and Bob’s Big Boy.

Beyond the gaseous tubes, the Valley Relics Museum possesses a treasure trove of pop culture ephemera, as filtered through an 818 lens. You’ll find displays devoted to Universal movie monsters, BMX bikes and vintage lunchboxes — something for any adult to connect with their inner kid. For the actual kids, there’s also a bank of vintage arcade games and pinball machines, all free to play. That’ll keep ’em occupied for a while. But the neon is what will keep you coming back.

Can’t get enough neon? Visit the Museum of Neon Art in Glendale — another worthy guardian of L.A.’s neon heritage.
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Crumbs & Whiskers cat cafe in Los Angeles.
(Crumbs & Whiskers)

Get cozy with the kitties at Crumbs & Whiskers Cat Cafe

Beverly Grove Cafe
If your kids have been dropping hints about wanting a new feline friend, or they just need something else to “pspspspsps” at for a few minutes that isn’t you, take them to this cat cafe at Melrose and Fairfax. Crumbs & Whiskers combines a chic rec-room vibe with a cozy, romantic atmosphere. The modern interior is both lush and inviting, featuring dark walls and concrete floors that ensure cleanliness and freshness. These hard surfaces are cleverly balanced with white faux-shearling rugs, accented by fluffy pink and gray pillows. The overall effect is delightfully indulgent, encouraging visitors to relax and cuddle with the kitties. This setup is intentional, as interacting at the cats’ level fosters better connections.

At any given time the cafe has about 25 cats (who were at risk of euthanasia) roaming the space and ready to be adopted. Guests are encouraged to plop down on a pouf and get cozy with the kitties. But remember, they’re cats. So play it cool and let them come to you. In order to grab a coffee with a kitten you’ll need to make a reservation. Weekday rates run $25 for a 30-minute session and $40 for 70 minutes. Children must be at least 7 years old to enter, and those under 12 need to be accompanied by an adult.
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A young boy pops a wheelie at the CicLAvia open streets festival in Wilmington.
(Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)

Join a rolling, pedaling party at a CicLAvia event

Experience
As a growing Los Angeles tradition, CicLAvia now happens eight times a year. On each of those dates, a different stretch of city streets closes to cars, giving cyclists and others of all ages a chance to reclaim the road amid a festive atmosphere.

Is it the presence of so many bikes that makes those days so exhilarating, or is it the absence of cars?

The first L.A. CicLAvia happened in 2010. The final event of 2024 is the Valley, a 5-mile straight-ahead ride on Sherman Way through Canoga Park, Winnetka and Reseda on Sunday, Dec. 8.

Organizers of these nonprofit events like to stress that there’s no official start or finish and that the day need not be a ride from Point A to Point B. They also like to remind riders to wear helmets and never stop in the middle of the route. E-bikes are usually allowed, as long you’re pedaling. (Details here.)

Also, if you don’t have a bike or don’t want to lug it across town, CicLAvia keeps a list of places that can rent you a bike. Alternatively, you could travel by foot, by skates, by scooter, by rollerblade even by pedicab.
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Hawks LA event at Temescal Canyon.
(Will G MacNeil / HAWKs)

Go on a hiking adventure with HAWKs

Nature Camp
During the pandemic, when so many families were feeling cooped up and suffering from “screen brain,” Emma Flanders decided she needed to get her toddler son Abel outside stat. She started taking him on hikes around L.A. and he was hooked. Says Flanders, “He was interacting with the natural world around him in different ways, hiking and exploring. I saw how transformative that was.”

Flanders realized that other parents wanted to give their kids similar outdoor experiences, but in the busyness of life, doing all the necessary research was a challenge. (Which trails are accessible? What supplies will they need? What’s the bathroom situation like?) So she created a program that helps dissolve that barrier to entry. HAWKs (Hiking Adventures With Kids) offers day camps and after-school programs that help kids explore the natural world and learn why it’s awesome. Activities can include guided hikes, local flora and fauna identification, nature journaling and photography, and foraging for salad ingredients — all led by knowledgeable educators (the crew includes aspiring botanists, ornithologists and ecologists).

And the camps happen in some of the coolest natural spaces in L.A., from the Pasadena Casting Pool (where campers have tracked the growth of tiny tadpoles) to the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing (where they got a private tour). Through the programs, the principles of Leave No Trace are constantly instilled to help ensure these spaces will still be thriving when the kids grow up.
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A T. rex skeleton looms over a red-and-white lighthouse and small round wood tables with chairs.
(Deborah Netburn / Los Angeles Times)

Find so much more than books in the Cerritos Library children's section

Cerritos Library
The Cerritos Library is a library on steroids. The entrance features a 15,000-gallon saltwater aquarium. The popular children’s section includes a 40-foot replica of a Tyrannosaurus rex fossil, a lighthouse that kids can play in, a rainforest tree, a model space shuttle and a highly tactile (and scientifically accurate) wall of geologic formations. And you’ll find a fireplace with a holographic fire in the “old world reading room” on the first floor and a dolphin fountain outside that kids can play in on hot days.

Oh, and there are books too. Thousands of them in the children’s area. Need a few recommendations? Visit the reference desk simply called “Help” and a friendly librarian can help lead your kid to their next page turner.
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A live bunny enjoys his space living among giant stuffed toy bunnies.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Search for fluffy-tailed friends at the Bunny Museum in Altadena

Altadena Museum
The Bunny Museum in Altadena is a — how can we put this? — whole other animal. As the origin story goes, Candace Frazee and Steve Lubanski’s romance began with a single bunny gift, which became an extensive collection, which turned into a full-fledged rabbit-themed museum. Throughout the space are displays of everything from collectible bunny figurines and bunny art to Bugs Bunny paraphernalia and movie posters featuring bunnies.

As you peruse the collections, your brain will be filled with all sorts of facts about the fluffy-tailed animal: Did you know bunnies are a symbol of fertility? Or that there was a dance that originated at San Francisco’s Fairmont Hotel in 1911 called the Bunny Hug? There are bunny greeting cards, displays of bunny watches and so many plush bunnies. In the holiday room, you’ll find Rose Parade float bunnies, a Chamber of Hop Horrors (recommended for those 13 and up) and White House Easter eggs. Note that while children are surely welcome to hop on over to the cozy destination, the owners emphasize that this is a museum and not a petting zoo. Little ones inclined to touch the collections or cuddle the two resident rabbits should wait until they’re a bit older to visit.
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A little girl stands next to a woman kneeling to tend to small potted plants
(Michael Blackshire / Los Angeles Times)

Discover what it takes to run a farm at Moonwater Farm

Compton Urban farm
From the sidewalk, Moonwater Farm looks like a private residence with a stunning garden filled with California poppies, calendula, lavender and lush fruit trees. But as you continue to walk up the driveway into the backyard, you’ll find something more — a flourishing urban micro farm with chickens, horses, goats and more luscious plants.

After a 25-year career in the print and packaging business, Kathleen Blakistone and her partner, Richard Draut — both of whom are master gardeners — used their retirement savings to start their second career as urban farmers in 2011. They initially bought their Compton property, roughly half an acre, to launch an aquaponics farm business but decided to instead transform the space into a community farm where they could teach others about farming, raising livestock, sustainability and how to grow and preserve their food.

Located in the historic Richland Farms neighborhood, Moonwater Farm hosts field trips, workshops and a farm camp for kids ages 9 to 14.
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People walk among rocks at Leo Carrillo State Beach.
(Catherine Pearlman)

Explore magical sea life at Leo Carrillo State Beach

Malibu Tide pool
There are a number of tide pools around SoCal to view sea life, but those at Leo Carrillo State Beach are some of the most accessible for kids. They’re close to the entrance of the beach and there are no stairs to climb.

At Leo Carrillo, there are surprises in each direction. Majestic sea caves. Rocky crags. Views of the Channel Islands. Every now and then, you can gaze toward the sky to find flocks of pelicans flying in formation close to shore.

The tide pools are made up of hundreds of small, pewter-colored boulders. As the waves come in, water gets trapped between the rocks, allowing for optimal sea life viewing. Here you can see mussels, crabs and barnacles but also starfish, cowrie snails and California spiny lobsters.

Before heading out, check the tides and arrive about an hour before the lowest tide. That way you have time to wander without worrying about the rising water. You can also download an app like Tide Alert (NOAA) and set up alerts for low-tide events every day.

Make sure to wear sturdy shoes — the rocks can be simultaneously sharp and slippery. And remember to look but not touch, and definitely don’t remove any of the sea life you find in the tide pools. That threatens the sensitive ecosystem and is strictly prohibited.
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Max Posell places animals down a hatch in a scale model of Noah's Ark.
(Stephen Osman / Los Angeles Times)

Weather a flood of imagination at the Skirball's Noah's Ark exhibit

Brentwood Museum
I’d make the Noah’s Ark Exhibit at the Skirball Cultural Center a rite of passage for every kid in Los Angeles if I had a magic wand. The space is designed to resemble the mythical ark from the Bible story and is filled with intricate animal sculptures and creative interactive opportunities just as enchanting for caretakers as they are for kids. In the storm room you can pull levers to make your own lightning and wind, crank a wheel to allow a giant giraffe to cautiously turn its head (“Is that a storm coming?”) and assemble wooden blocks as you imagine helping to build the massive ark. Deeper into the exhibit, kids can play with pairs of stuffed animals tucked into cubbies or climb netting into the rafters of the boat. If you’re lucky, you might catch a presentation by a master storyteller or interact with one of the 13 puppets that occasionally show up on the floor. (Check the website for scheduled programming.) Reservations are not required, but they are recommended, especially on Thursdays when entry is free. You’ll have 90 minutes to explore the exhibit. And here’s my tip for parents: Take time to look at the various animal sculptures while your little ones play. They are all made of found objects and the creativity is astonishing.
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Shelves filled with books in a room with a wooden table with seating.
(Carter Hiyama / For The Times)

Browse the shelves — and expand your knowledge of the Spanish language — at La Librería

Mid-City Book Store
Co-owners Chiara Arroyo and Celene Navarrete opened La Librería in 2012 with the goal of promoting Spanish literacy for kids.

The store’s catalog, thousands of books strong, features imported books from Latin American and Spanish publishing houses. The store’s mission is to help libraries, school districts and individual schools across the country beef up their Spanish-language book collections to make them more accessible to kids. “The majority of our business right now is supplying bilingual and Spanish books to dual immersion programs across the country,” said employee Maria Guerra.

La Librería’s shelves are stacked with pre-K through 12th-grade level books for children and young adults along with YA classics and contemporary stories by authors such as Gilles Barraqué and Amaia Arrazola. “The high-quality editions in our catalog reflect the rich culture and history [as well as] the ethnic and linguistic diversity of Spanish-speaking countries and communities,” reads the store’s website.

“I studied Chicano studies at UCLA, so I know the history of Spanish being prohibited as a functioning language in the U.S.,” said Guerra. “For me, this is a big part of reclaiming Spanish and promoting its value.”

The store also hosts cultural events with writers, artists and musicians and partners with organizations aligned with promoting Spanish literacy in America.

On weekends, don’t expect to find a quiet corner to curl up with a book; the store serves mostly families. “The store does cater to younger audiences,” said Guerra. “But we’re also seeing a lot of young adults and a lot of people who are reclaiming Spanish as a heritage language.”
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Aydin Washington smiles while seated in a helicopter
(Michael Blackshire / Los Angeles Times)

Learn to fly a plane at Compton/Woodley Airport

Compton Flight school
Located in a white building with blue lettering, near the corner of Alondra Boulevard and Wilmington Avenue, is the Compton/Woodley Airport. It opened in 1924, a century ago, and is named after Earl W. Woodley, who owned and operated the airport from 1936 until his death in 1962. The facility became the first airport west of the Mississippi to launch an integrated flight school, according to Clinton Simmons, a former member of the Los Angeles County Aviation Commission.

Today, the Compton/Woodley Airport is home to 200 aircraft, an aviation museum (temporarily closed) and several aviation-related businesses. It’s also the destination where people as young as 8 years old can learn to fly a plane with the Fly Compton Foundation.

The foundation was founded in 2020 by a group of Black professional pilots and aircraft mechanics who wanted to expose kids, especially Black and brown youth in Compton, to the world of aviation.

Fly Compton has a yearly training program to teach kids ages 8 to 18 how to fly an aircraft and eventually get their private pilot license. The classes, which run from September to May, include weekly instruction — there is one fly day per month — and virtual classes every Saturday. It costs $125 per year (plus $25 per month) for kids ages 8 to 12 and $200 (plus $50 per month) for those ages 13 to 17. The foundation also offers an eight-week private pilot summer camp, which is free for selected students as it’s funded by private and corporate donations.

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(Hawk On Hand)

Watch a hawk fly though the air and land on your arm with Hawk on Hand Falconry

Montecito Heights Experience
“The first time a hawk lands on your glove, adults turn into kids and kids into adults,” said Adam Baz. Through L.A.-based Hawk on Hand Falconry, you can surprise your birder buddy with a 90-minute falconry session withexpert Baz or someone from his team. Once you’ve gathered at Ernest E. Debs Regional Park in Northeast L.A., you’ll spend 90 minutes in the company of a Harris’ Hawk named Jasper that will fly to and from your gloved left hand, demonstrating notable intelligence, a ferocious glare, inch-long yellow claws and a hunger for tiny bits of mouse.

“All that matters to them is food,” Baz told a guest one recent afternoon. “They don’t love me.” But they’re fascinating creatures, and Baz (who has a master’s degree in ornithology) can tell you all about their species, habits, lifespans and personal histories. The cost for experiencing multiple birds, along with a pettable barn owl named Archie and an Augur buzzard named Kanoni (“an African cousin of the red-tailed hawk,” Baz said), is $400 for a group of up to four.
When Baz isn’t showing off the birds to curious customers, he and his birds are often hired by TV and movie productions to keep pigeons away or protect drones from seagulls.
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The kitchen in the Mosaic Tile House.
(Allison Zaucha / For The Times)

Enter an eye-popping art universe at the Mosaic Tile House

Venice Landmark Home
Venice is full of wonders, from the canals to the boardwalk to that Ballerina Clown sculpture atop the CVS at the corner of Rose Avenue and Main Street. But perhaps the most fantastical is the Mosaic Tile House. Beginning in 1994, artists Cheri Pann and Gonzalo Duran gradually transformed their ho-hum 1940s bungalow into a bedazzled fairy tale, covered in handmade tiles, melted-down bottles, coffee mugs, pottery, mirror shards and more.

Nearly every surface is a riot of color and texture, both inside and outside the house. Kids will especially appreciate the jaunty panda, iguana and “giraffe-a-roo” sculptures out front, and the Alice in Wonderland tableaux on the side walkway. There simply isn’t an inch of this property lacking in whimsy.

While you can certainly appreciate the Mosaic Tile House as an over-the-top visual spectacle, there’s also a sweet lesson here about how art can change our lives. Cheri and Gonzalo fell in love while constructing her studio at the house, and 30 years later, they still live and work here. In addition to their handiwork on the house itself, you can see her large-scale paintings hanging on the studio walls, and his kooky automatons and metalwork in a second studio out back. You’ll likely see one or both of them when you visit. It is their home, after all, albeit a home unlike any other you’ll encounter in L.A.

To visit the house, email mosaictilehouse@mac.com for reservations.
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People rollerskating at the Moonlight Rollerway roller rink.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

Lace up your skates and find a groove at Moonlight Rollerway

Glendale Roller Skating Rink
In the 1980s, roller rinks took over where disco clubs left off. Teens would spend their days obsessing over that epic skating sequence from “Xanadu,” making lists of songs to request at the DJ booth and scouring the mall for the perfect pair of satin skating shorts. Or was that just me?

If you want to introduce your kids to that decade on wheels, the perfect place to do it is at the Moonlight Rollerway. Knowing that the key to a successful skating experience is the music, the Glendale rink hosts themed nights featuring tunes mostly from the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s. Wednesday night is Rainbow Skate, a weekly LGBTQ event.

All the interior details — the candy-colored lights, the geometric-print rug and the mirrored ball hovering over the rink — will take you back to that totally rad era. After a good skate, make a trip to the snack bar and order up a corn dog and nachos. Just try to avoid getting any of the cheese on those new satin shorts of yours.
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An accessible trail in Long Beach's El Dorado Nature Center.
(Laura Newberry / Los Angeles Times)

Take a morning stroll in a hidden oasis at El Dorado Nature Center

Long Beach Park Trail
0.25-mile loop
Easy
This 100-acre park in East Long Beach between the San Gabriel River and the 605 Freeway is a lush, hidden oasis that features one of the most intentionally accessible trails in L.A. County.

First, stop inside El Dorado’s kid-friendly nature museum, where you can learn more about the flora and fauna in the park (there are an estimated 150 species of birds at the center, along with turtles, snakes, raccoons, foxes, rabbits and skunks). Directly behind the museum is a paved half-circle that faces one of the park’s two lakes, which are connected by a meandering stream. This is an ideal spot to take in the scenery before or after you hit the trail.

From the back of the welcome center, loop to the right, cross the bridge over the lake (stop to look for turtles) and you’ll find a sign that indicates two paths: the one- and two-mile trails and the 0.25-mile trail. It’s entirely paved, very flat, and has handrails the entire way. The jungly tree canopy is my favorite part of this walk; I almost forget I’m in a city. Native plants like California buckwheat and monkeyflower line the pathway. There are several benches along the way for rest or contemplation.

The longer trails, though unpaved, are mostly flat, except for a few steep switchbacks at the start. Parking will cost you $6 on weekdays and $8 on weekends.
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The family play space at Autry Museum of the American West.
(Autry Museum of the American West)

Learn about the real West at Autry Museum of the American West

Griffith Park Art Museum
The Autry is much more than a cowboy museum. The interactive art space has more than 600,000 pieces of art and cultural objects, and is the steward of the second-most significant Native American collection in the country. There, you’ll learn about true representations of the West, including the influence of Indigenous people, queer cowboys and even modern groups like the Compton Cowboys. At the long-term “Imagined Wests” exhibit, you can spin a wheel to write your own western, play a “Jeopardy!”-style game to test your knowledge of western films or step in front of a green screen to set yourself in the middle of a fight scene.

For the youngest museum-goers, there’s family play space where they can build a barn, pretend-shop with a grocery cart, play with trains, do some crafts, assemble a marble track and read a book from the library underneath the grapevine.
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A small child reaches up to pet a pony's nose.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

Pet a sweet old goat at Montebello Barnyard Zoo

Montebello Zoo
The L.A. Zoo is great for viewing exotic animals from afar, but where do you go to get up close and personal with your fuzzy or feathered friends? You go to the Montebello Barnyard Zoo, tucked away in a large park on the Rio Hondo. Here there are affectionate horses, goats, sheep and donkeys to pet (you can feed them for an extra $3), fluffy bunnies hopping about, pigs napping in the afternoon sun and cows sauntering around their pens like they own the place. Out back, there’s a small pond where ducks and other waterfowl quack loud and proud, commingling with turtles as they frolic in the water.

With its handmade wood signs and small scale, the Montebello Barnyard Zoo is a sweet, homespun place. And it feels all the better to visit knowing that most of these animals were rescued or donated; many are living out their retirement years here. It’s a great place for young ones to learn that animals outside the home need and deserve the same kind of care that we show our pets.

If you’re feeling fancy, you can ride a pony or take a leisurely trip on a John Deere tractor train. But we know the real draw here. It’s the animals, braying and neighing and mooing and maa-ing their friendly hellos as you walk by.
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A pair of huge dinosaur skulls, one with a person standing looking up into the mouth
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Enter the age of dinosaurs at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

Exposition Park Museum
Awe is standing before a Tyrannosaurus rex skull, your own head feeling a gumball in comparison. Come for the dinosaurs at the Natural History Museum, but stay for just about everything else — the quietly mesmerizing African and North American Diorama Halls, where artistically framed animals allow you to imagine a real-life encounter, or the heavily interactive Nature Lab, where you can learn about the challenges that face our urban coyotes or experience a meet-and-greet with a live animal.

I’ve spent many a weekend at the Natural History Museum — full disclosure, I occasionally volunteer at the space — and each visit I learn something new, be it a glimpse at how ancient fish such as a coelacanth once lived or tidbits about how a saber-toothed cat may have hunted. I’ve also stood, transfixed, near a display dedicated to P-22, the famous late mountain lion of Griffith Park, and watched a projection of a Los Angeles freeway that shows us just how perilous life can be for our wildlife companions.

But I always spend some time with the dinosaurs. The Natural History Museum’s Dinosaur Hall is a place of amazement, where one can ponder the gargantuan skull of a Triceratops, or come face to face with an oddity like the mosasaur, a sea creature. Each stroll through the exhibit space is filled with both childlike wonder and factoids about how our planet evolved.
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A low-flying jet flies over a playground at the Proud Bird in El Segundo.
(Specialty Restaurants Corp.)

Watch airplanes fly by while running freely at the Proud Bird

Westchester Restaurant
Playgrounds, planes, picnic tables and pizza: Kid heaven is here at the Proud Bird, a food hall, bar and fully fenced outdoor play area. Once the designated spot for grabbing a stiff drink during a flight delay, the space now evokes Europe’s pub-adjacent playgrounds.

The indoor bazaar offers Bludso’s BBQ and a selection of pizzas, burgers, Asian food, salads and chicken and waffles. There’s a kids menu with smaller portions of what’s on offer for adults, including cheese pizza, fried rice and BBQ brisket. Order at the bar or at a kiosk by Bludso’s and you’ll get a text to pick up your food once it’s ready.

While you wait, grab your drink and score a table out back by the two-story play structure. Beyond that is a gigantic yard full of WWII aircraft to admire. There’s even a Little Free Library by the door if your kid is more of a bookworm than a wiggle worm.

Planes arriving at LAX fly close overhead, awing children and leaving only a modest whiff of jet fuel behind. There’s also ample seating indoors, along with some interesting exhibits about aerospace history in Southern California. This is the ideal spot to kick back with a drink with friends while your kids run around between bites of food.
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A group stands in a room with swirl on the floor and varied sized paintings on the wall.
(Cross Roads Escape Games)

Solve puzzles and uncover magic in kid-friendly escape room 'The Fun House'

Anaheim Escape Room
Shortly after Cross Roads Escape Games opened in 2016 with its foreboding, horror-inspired “The Hex Room,” co-founder Madison Rhoades realized the market at the time was lacking in kid-friendly, family-focused escape rooms. Enter “The Fun House.”

“This is exactly what kids want — an immersive, themed experience where they can go wild and touch everything and explore,” Rhoades says.

After entering via a giant clown — don’t worry, clown-phobics, there are no clowns or scares in the actual room — groups find themselves in a space where paintings come alive and talk to you and all sorts of nooks, crannies and doors are there for exploration. Expect in this magic-themed room to uncover some illusions — winning “The Fun House” means you’ve graduated to becoming a successful magician.

Cross Roads features two versions of the game, one for adults and one geared more for kids, with the recommended age being 8 and older (an adult must be present if anyone under the age of 13 is participating). The “kids” edition simply means puzzles may contain a few less steps to being solved. But Rhoades is quick to point out that sometimes the little ones are better puzzle solvers anyway.

“The Fun House” runs most Wednesdays through Sundays and requires a minimum of three players, with a price of $42 per person.
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Clothing and other items on display at Time Travel Mart in Echo Park
(Andres Melo / For The Times)

Restock on ‘Mammoth Chunks’ at the Time Travel Mart

Echo Park Gift Shop
If the deals strewn across the windows of the Time Travel Mart (“Papyrus and Quill Blowout!” and “30% off neural implants”) don’t lure you and your kids, the meeting of a robot and a Neanderthal taking place in the storefront might do the trick. Started in 2008 by 826, a nonprofit organization founded by authors Nínive Clements Calegari and Dave Eggers that’s dedicated to inspiring students to approach writing as a creative practice, it is inarguably one of the most creative gift stores in America.

The small market, designed like a convenience store, is animated by conversations between visitors slowly studying the details of the items up for sale, which include a steel wool scouring pad deemed a “robot toupee,” a hand-cranked music box billed as a “Victorian iPod” and a create-your-own T. rex head. “Which is funnier,” you might overhear, “this bottle of robot milk or the Dark Ages Breath Ruiner spray?” Whatever choice they make is ultimately for the greater good: All proceeds go toward operating 826, which publishes stories by students that are available for purchase in the freezer aisle.
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Kidspace in Pasadena.
(Keren Lynn Photography / Kidspace)

Pull giant levers and adopt a caterpillar at the very hands-on Kidspace Children's Museum

Pasadena Local intel
On this 3.5 acre campus — one of the most magical children’s spaces in L.A. — young visitors can dig for fossils, ride a trike around a track, go fishing from a canoe, discover the laws of physics with giant levers and pulleys, and sell their harvest at a farmstand. And all this is before even entering the buildings. It’s easy to spend an entire day at Kidspace, Pasadena’s long-standing family destination filled with more than 40 hands-on exhibits. Make sure to save at least an hour of that time for Arroyo Adventure, a creek with a running stream that adventurous kids can walk through. Tip: Bring a swimsuit or a change of clothes.

At Kidspace, each season is anchored by a whimsical celebration: Winter Frolic, happening now, features a no-ice sock skating rink. In the summertime, there’s Kidspace Campout, complete with campfire songs and lessons about native wildlife. And in spring, it’s Butterfly Season, a popular time at the museum when kids can adopt a live caterpillar.
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Golf N Stuff in Norwalk.
(Pam Lane)

Putt-putt-putter down the 605 to Golf N' Stuff

Norwalk Miniature Golf
When you glimpse those telltale blue-and-white castle turrets from the 605, you can finally hush the choruses of “Are we there yet?” Behold: a sprawling, 11-acre wonderland of bumper boats, go-karts, a kiddie train and four 18-hole mini-golf courses, all shaded by swaying palms and cooled by fountains and brooks.

Opened in 1971 in Norwalk, the small chain with locations in Ventura and Tucson, Ariz., has seen major updates but retains its classic vintage feel. Pose for a photo by the iconic tree house or in front of the kitschy Big Ben-esque clock tower, or go for a birdie by the giant shoe. On a hot day, heading inside the arcade can provide hours of button mashing on Donkey Kong, Galaga, Mario Bros., Jurassic Park, Halo and pinball. Meanwhile, younger kids will gravitate toward simpler carnival games like the milk jug toss and bean bag toss.

Parents should bring hair ties for kids’ long hair and know that several attractions have height requirements, and some don’t allow open-toe shoes, Croc-style shoes, flip-flops, high heels or sandals. Prices can add up per attraction, so check the website for coupons.
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A Books and Cookies storytime.
(Books and Cookies)

Dance along at a Books and Cookies musical story time

Culver City Literacy Program
When Chudney Ross closed Books and Cookies, her gem of a children’s bookshop in Santa Monica, it wasn’t the end for the brand. Not in the slightest. Because wherever Ross goes, young fans seem to follow. Today, Books and Cookies is a traveling celebration of literature, part storytime, part dance party, that Ross hosts at public spots around L.A., including Ivy Station in Culver City (marked on this map), Runway Playa Vista and the Santa Monica Pier. How will you find it? Just look for Ross in a brightly colored outfit and a flock of giddy toddlers on blankets around her.

At a Books and Cookies story time, Ross reads books, often focusing her selections on a theme (which have included changing seasons, Black history, inclusiveness and ice cream). When it’s time to boogie down, kids are handed shakers, scarves and instruments. The event is topped off by parachute play and a simple craft. “Anyone who comes is like, ‘How did you get 50 toddlers to sit on blankets for 45 minutes?’” Ross says. “I say it’s because I didn’t ask them to. There are no rules around it.” Find out where Books and Cookies will pop up next on its Instagram page.
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A group of cyclists on lighted bikes participate in the Venice Electric Light Parade.
(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

Roll bright with Venice Electric Light Parade

Venice Parade
Arguably one of L.A.’s least known and most beloved traditions, the Venice Electric Light Parade is a weekly two-hour bicycle ride that takes you along the Venice boardwalk to the Santa Monica Pier and then into Venice proper along city streets with a pack of 200 to 300 other wheeled riders of all ages. It’s led by event organizer Marcus Gladney, a.k.a. the Captain, who began the tradition back in 2015. You can outfit your own bike with lights or just get to the Venice Boardwalk early and put down $40 with Sebastian “The Light Man” Butler to get your bike wired with festive lights. Or you can rent a prelighted bicycle for $99, a fee that includes a special Venice Electric Light Bike Parade hoodie or shirt. You don’t have to have lights on your bike to ride; in fact, you don’t even have to have a bike — some people use rollerblades, skateboards or scooters — but if you don’t want to put lights on your bike you can wear them on your body or around your head.

To join in the festivities, which take place every Sunday (unless it’s raining), all you need to do is join the folks who begin to gather at Windward Plaza an hour before sunset and start rolling at dusk. It’s free to participate.
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A square viewing window on a page of illuminated manuscript
(Joel Barhamand / For The Times)

Be mystified at the Museum of Jurassic Technology

Palms Museum
I won’t say too much about the Museum of Jurassic Technology, to preserve this experience for you, and because the people who work there would prefer there to be an air of mystery to their windowless institution on Venice Boulevard.

Still reading? That curiosity will serve you well on your visit.

A few caveats: Parts of the museum are dark and narrow, and there is no elevator to the second floor, so people with limited mobility may not be able to get the full experience. (The museum discounts tickets for people with disabilities to account for this.) Though nothing is expressly inappropriate for children, younger or more sensitive kids might not enjoy themselves — if they’d be freaked out by a taxidermied mouse, skip. There’s a surprise on the roof.

General admission is $12 and must be reserved ahead of time. Tickets for children 12 and younger are free; $10 for students, educators, seniors and unemployed people; and $3 for people with disabilities and active-duty military. Masks are still recommended inside the museum. Open Thursdays and Fridays from 2 to 8 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays from noon to 6 p.m.
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In-N-Out sign in Baldwin Park
(Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)

Journey to the beefy center of the In-N-Out Burger universe

Los Angeles County Fast food
For certain carnivorous Californians, a visit to this burger chain is like church, but with more flexible hours and no shushing. At the flagship location in Baldwin Park, you can drive through, as most customers do. But you can also eat inside, then browse mountains of merch at the company store. Even if your kid’s not ready to enroll at In-N-Out University (also on-site; where managers train), there’s fun to be had browsing the vast inventory of T-shirts, socks, shoes, pens, jewelry, beach towels and board shorts. In the designs, palm trees and car culture abound.

If anyone is selfie-hungry, you can head to the nearby replica of the chain’s first tiny, red-and-white burger shack, open for photo ops from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday through Sunday at 13752 Francisquito Ave. in Baldwin Park.

Harry and Esther Snyder opened the first In-N-Out burger shack in 1948, which put them among the first to try a drive-thru restaurant. To taste what the fuss is all about, order a “double-double, animal-style” — a double cheeseburger with the works, basically — which has fueled the company’s growth to more than 400 outlets in eight Western states.
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Octavia Lab at Los Angeles Public Library.
(Keith Kessler / Los Angeles Public Library)

Make 3D art, podcasts, short films and more at Octavia Lab at Central Library

Downtown L.A. Library
You might think of a 3D printer as a high-tech piece of hardware, but it has surprisingly practical applications. If your kiddos need new glasses or clothing hangers, you can print them at Octavia Lab, the DIY maker space named after science fiction writer and Central Library patron Octavia Butler, located on Lower Level 2 of the Central Library next to the Science, Technology and Patents Department. But you can also print whatever fun or wacky thing your kids desire (an anime figurine, Dungeons & Dragons dice, a phone stand or their own original architectural sculpture).

First, learn the basics of Tinkercad, a free, 3D design tool that’s browser-based, and prepare the design at home. Then, sign up with a Los Angeles Public Library card, fill out a membership form to use the space and make a reservation beforehand (phone or in-person only) to use the facilities. Younger kids should be supervised by adults, while ages 12 and above can work independently on projects that include visual art, podcasts, music, film, sewing and embroidery, and archivism and storytelling. Software available spans a wide range, including GarageBand, Ableton, LogicPro and Adobe. While there, I spied LAPL artist-in-residence Andy Crocker and her daughter printing a vinyl cat sticker her daughter designed on Photoshop, using a large Octavia lab printer (you supply the vinyl, file and transfer tape). You and your kids can even tackle a family preservation project of converting old home videos or VHS tapes into modern file formats easily viewable by future generations. Low-cost parking is available at the 524 S. Flower St. Garage (get your validation at the Info desk on the main floor).
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Children play at the new Maple Park all-inclusive playground, in Glendale on Saturday, Aug. 17, 2019. City and other officials held a ceremony to cut the ribbon.
(Raul Roa/Staff Photographer)

Play alongside children of all abilities at Shane's Inspiration in Maple Park

Glendale Park
L.A. is full of great playgrounds, but very few are accessible for kids of all abilities. That’s what makes Shane’s Inspiration in Maple Park in Glendale unique: With its rubberized groundcover, big, roomy swings with back supports and wide, nonslip ramps on play structures, this castle-themed playground has been specifically designed for children of all cognitive and physical abilities. There’s an area with musical devices and a small shaded area under a castle turret that features tactile, sensory-rich puzzle games. The park also offers lots of shaded seating areas and tables to have lunch or for kids to just take a break from the stimulation of the playground.

The first Shane’s Inspiration playground was created by Catherine Curry-Williams and Scott Williams over 20 years ago to honor their son, Shane Alexander Williams, who died of spinal muscular atrophy at just 2 weeks old. Since then, more than 70 of the accessible playgrounds have opened worldwide. The original playground is still bustling with activity and happy kids in the heart of Griffith Park, just a few miles from the Glendale location.
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An interior view of the busy dining room at the Gudetama Cafe in Buena Park.
(Stephanie Breijo / Los Angeles Times)

Get eggy with it at Gudetama Cafe

Buena Park Cafe
The bright yellow building that sits just to the east of Knott’s Berry Farm marks Sanrio’s first Gudetama Cafe in the U.S. Once inside, it’s all yellow and eggy everywhere, especially when it comes to the food. Nearly every dish involves runny yolks — and most come emblazoned with the face of the world’s favorite anthropomorphic, utterly lazy egg. The menu features classic breakfast sandwiches with bacon and American cheese, egg-topped sliders and avocado toast, in addition to an egg-topped chicken katsu sandwich, and all are served with tater tots.

Character statues can be found hanging from the ceiling and on display tables. The walls are awash with murals of Gudetama listlessly saying, “Meh,” “Whatever … ” and “Can I go now?” Nine-year-old visitor Olivia Lopez told The Times that Gudetama reminds her of her mom, Cynthia “Cyn” Lopez. The duo wore matching “Gude vibes” shirts and drove down from the San Fernando Valley to try the new restaurant when it opened earlier this year. A self-described Sanrio fan since her childhood, content creator Lopez said she jumped at the chance to see the cafe and “share this passion of loving Sanrio” with her daughter.
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Methane gas bubbles up at the La Brea Tar Pits.
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

Take in the sights (and smells) of the La Brea Tar Pits and Museum

Mid-Wilshire Museum
Where else are you going to go to experience bubbling tar pits (well, actually bubbling asphalt pits) and a heart-tugging re-creation of what it meant to get mired in one? L.A.’s Mid-Wilshire district is the world’s only urban area that has an actively excavated Ice Age fossil site, complete with its own smelly pit of gooey black gunk. This is a fine place to take children who want to see a towering mammoth skeleton and its massive mighty tusks as well as other Ice Age remains, large and small, that have been retrieved from the inky depths. There are replicas of giant sloths, mastodons and saber-toothed cats as well. Plus there’s a working fossil lab for on-site excavations.

Outside around the pits and Hancock Park (the park, not the neighborhood), children can get in some running and screaming time while admiring the climbable Ice Age mammal sculptures. Adults (or precocious kids) can savor the Pleistocene Garden, with its plantings representing the Los Angeles Basin’s native vegetation 10,000 to 40,000 years ago.
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Walt's Barn in Griffith Park.
(Jeff Ino / Walt’s Barn)

Visit Walt’s Barn, where Walt Disney tinkered with trains and dreamed up ideas

Griffith Park Museum
Just down the road from Travel Town is an incredible historic relic that any Disney fan, train enthusiast or self-respecting Angeleno needs to see at least once: Walt’s Barn, where Walt Disney tinkered with model trains and dreamed up ideas for his theme parks to come.

Disney was a train fanatic. So much so that in 1950, five years before Disneyland opened, he built a ?-scale steam railroad behind his Holmby Hills mansion. The Carolwood Pacific Railroad puffed along on a half-mile track, including a tunnel beneath wife Lillian’s flower garden. At the center of it all was the barn, where Walt controlled the track switches.

In 1999 the Disneys moved the barn to Griffith Park, where it now sits on the grounds of the Los Angeles Live Steamers Railroad Museum. While kiddos looking for Moana and Elsa tie-ins may be disappointed, the barn is filled with all sorts of unique memorabilia from Disney and his animators who shared his train obsession. You’ll see Walt’s work tools, the wash basin he used to prep for meetings, that kind of thing. Outside there’s a yellow passenger car that was in operation on Disneyland’s opening day in 1955.

Once you’ve gotten your fill of the Disneyana, take a ride on one of the miniature trains run by the Los Angeles Live Steamers Railroad Museum.
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A woman and her toddler daughter play in the Children’s Garden at Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones / Los Angeles Times)

Explore a kid-sized secret world inside The Huntington

San Marino Botanic Garden
Past the small blue door that marks the entrance to the Children’s Garden at the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens, you’ll find concrete fish statues shooting random spouts of water into the air and toddler-sized fountains making domes of water just begging for little fingers to get involved. There are fairy doors to look for, a rainbow tunnel to run through, and a personal favorite: a crack in a stone wall that makes ethereal tinkling sounds when you drop pebbles into it.

Here, brilliant landscaping and art design encourage kids to learn about the natural world as they romp. They’ll feel the pull of Earth’s core as magnetic sand runs through their fingers, and marvel at how sunlight refracts into different colors inside a rainbow tunnel. The Dr. Seussian plants and animal-shaped topiary are a big part of the experience too — this is a botanical garden, after all. The garden is impossible for kids not to love. You’ll know from the “wow” expressions on their faces when they first see it, and how unwilling they are to leave.

With all the enticing water features, consider packing a change of clothes for little ones or maybe even putting them in a bathing suit. It’s also worth checking the website before you go for any special family programs. Weekends are generally crowded, but weekday afternoons can be surprisingly quiet.
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Actors perform on an outdoor stage under huge trees, facing an audience in bleachers
(Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times)

Learn a Shakespeare monologue at the storied Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum

Topanga Entertainment Venue
There’s something magical about the Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum. The amphitheater founded by its namesake actor, musician and social activist has captivated the region for more than half a century and provided a haven for the arts, all hidden among the trees. Shakespeare is a particular focus here, where the grounds are planted with vegetation named in the bard’s works and multiple Shakespeare plays are included in each repertory season. Original works also are produced, as are live musical and improv performances, and the grounds host family-friendly events such as holiday fairs.

Given its founder and its early days as an artists commune, the Theatricum Botanicum is heavily community-minded, hosting fundraisers, educational workshops, youth classes and the Shakespeare-themed “pay what you Will” nights. The theater also honors its founder’s friendship with and legacy of folk hero Woody Guthrie, who for a time lived on the premises; the team is working to build the Shelter, a Guthrie and Geer archive on-site. Geer’s daughter Ellen serves as the artistic director, and his granddaughter Willow participates in acting and directing, keeping the family’s legacy alive and thriving in the canyon.
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High tea spread with savory sandwiches, sweets and tea in floral china.
(The Langham Huntington, Pasadena)

Go pinkies up at the Langham Huntington for fancy afternoon tea

Teahouse $$$
Put on your best gloves and fascinator for a tea soirée. The Langham Huntington is a winning choice for a fancy tea party. Head to the Lobby Lounge, which is set just a little ways back from the actual lobby and bookended with views of the Horseshoe Garden and the rest of the grounds; floor-to-ceiling windows make this a light and airy space for a formal occasion. Cherry almond scones and strawberry lychee macarons are standouts on the spring menu at this traditional British tea service ($75 for adults, $40 for children under 12), with signature three-tiered trays for savory sandwiches, a host of sweets and tea taken in delicate floral china.

During the holidays, there’s “teddy bear tea” ($90 per person) complete with special treats, a visit from Santa, a puppet show and a Paddington Bear teatime friend to take home.
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Annenberg PetSpace
(Michelle Woo / Los Angeles Times)

Read to an adoptable pet at Wallis Annenberg PetSpace

Playa Vista Pet Adoption Center
Even if you’re not actively looking to bring home a new pet, visiting the cheery and futuristic Wallis Annenberg PetSpace is a delight. The community space facilitates animal adoptions, yes, but it’s also a fun spot for kids to play (there’s a hamster wheel and slide exclusively for small humans); meet dogs, cats and critters (my daughter and I encountered a leopard gecko and a box turtle); and learn more about animal welfare though interactive touchscreens and unique programming.

Kids are welcome to bring in a book and work with one of the team members to read to an adoptable pet. Every Saturday at 11:30 a.m., they can join a free Paws & Pages story time event where they’ll hear an animal-themed tale, do a craft and meet a critter. Other community events include Puppy Bowl, dog-friendly comedy shows and a fur-ociously fun cat art show (one piece from this year’s show, “Kobe Entering the Kingdom of Kittens” by Britt Ehringer, depicts Kobe Bryant ascending into feline heaven and it is extraordinary). Activities at Wallis Annenberg PetSpace change daily, so check the calendar for the latest. And who knows? You may just meet an adoptable pet there and find yourself totally smitten. If you’re suddenly signing papers to bring home a new family member, don’t say we didn’t warn you.
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Los Angeles, CA - August 13: People explore the Travel Town Museum at Griffith Park on Sunday, Aug. 13, 2023 in Los Angeles, CA. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Ride through L.A.’s rich railroad heritage at Travel Town in Griffith Park

Griffith Park Museum
For train enthusiasts, this free, mostly outdoor museum is a must-see destination. Your budding conductor can walk among the numerous trains and tracks, get up close to ancient locomotives and — best of all — ride a 16″ gauge miniature train around the grounds. A huge open-air structure houses a few exhibits, a children’s learning center and a play area for the littlest ones.

The museum hosts interesting exhibits such as “The Trains Must Be Fed,” which focuses on Fredrick Harvey, a 19th century American innovator who created restaurants, hotels and souvenir shops for railroad travelers in the western United States. Kids will get a kick out of the prices back in the day — an entire breakfast cost 75 cents, for instance — though grown-ups may just shake their heads solemnly.

Follow the tracks to the Travel Town Museum Store to grab cold drinks and snacks for the kids, and to shop for souvenirs like miniature train sets, books and games. You’ll be glad to know that your purchases support the foundation’s train restoration projects and other educational programs at the site.
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Star Eco Station displays rescued animals in glass tanks
(Jessica Roy / Los Angeles Times)

Get up close and personal with exotic animals at STAR Eco Station

Culver City Zoo
Does your little one love animals? Then hightail it to STAR Eco Station, an exotic animal rescue. On Saturdays and Sundays, guided tours begin every hour, leading groups through rooms of reptiles, fish, amphibians, birds and small mammals. You’ll hear wild stories about how those animals got there: A tortoise that was found strolling down Slauson Avenue in Culver City, an alligator discovered under a bed in a hotel room, a bobcat somebody thought was a lost kitten in Texas. There’s a small exhibit about the plight of plastic waste featuring a tortoise who got stuck in a plastic six-pack ring. The tour guides will take some animals out of their cages for kids to admire (and pet, if they’re feeling brave). Other highlights include tegus, an iguana, sugar gliders, a chinchilla, a hedgehog, a tank of axolotls and a rescued conure once owned by an electronic DJ that dances when the music comes on. The tour lasts just under an hour.

It is a bit more modest than a traditional zoo: Some of the animals are in the same types of plastic tanks and metal cages your pets live in at home. It lends a charmingly cozy feel to getting up close and personal with a hairy tarantula.
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A screening of "Raya and the Last Dragon" at El Capitan Theatre.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

See a Disney film with a stage show at El Capitan Theatre

Hollywood Movie Theater
The El Capitan is an L.A. rite of passage. Maybe you saw your first Disney movie here. Or you took your kids to see “Toy Story” or “Moana” at this grand old movie palace, which opened as a playhouse on Hollywood Boulevard in 1926, four years after the Egyptian and a year before the Chinese. Disney and Pacific Theaters painstakingly restored the El Cap in the late ’80s, reopening it in 1991 with the world premiere of “The Rocketeer.” It’s still the site for many Disney premieres, as well as first-run showings of the studio’s various Marvel, Pixar and Lucasfilm movies. Seeing those films at the El Capitan feels like an event, with a jaunty preshow Wurlitzer pipe organ program that ends with the grand instrument descending into the theater’s floor. Look over at your kid’s face as the organ disappears. Wasn’t the drive worth it?

Stage shows feature characters from the films, interactive DJs, dance parties and trivia contests with prizes. The theater also offers sensory inclusive screenings with dimmed lights and lower sound, reduced capacity and sensory activity bags (available upon request). And of course, snacks are a must. Pick up an El Capitan popcorn bucket and Mickey pretzel at the concession stand, or promise your kids you’ll pop next door to the Ghirardelli Soda Fountain & Chocolate Shop for a sundae after the show.
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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA AUGUST 28, 2020-A view of the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

Geek out with amateur astronomers at a star party at Griffith Observatory

Griffith Park Observatory
If you’ve caught your kid stargazing out their window when they should be tucked in bed, jet them to this once-monthly astronomical extravaganza on the front lawn of the Griffith Observatory. Your kid will be in good company as amateur astronomers from local planetary societies provide their perspectives on heavenly happenings — and lend a wide variety of refracting and reflecting telescopes. Toddlers to teenagers will enjoy details of the sun and moon, including solar viewing through hydrogen-alpha telescopes, which show details not normally viewable with white light images. Though star parties are mostly outdoor affairs, you can also head indoors to see the Tesla Coil, the Samuel Oschin Planetarium and the Zeiss Telescopes on the building’s east end, used for spying the Moon, planets and other bright objects. If you’ve got kids under 5, they’re only allowed at the first planetarium show of the day at 10:45 a.m.

Lines for each telescope can get long, and are cut off to end viewing by 9:45 p.m. Restrooms and changing tables are in the parking lot, within the Observatory on the Historic level and in the lower levels of the building (the Edge of Space and the Gunther Depths of Space sections). Parking can be challenging if the Greek Theatre’s lot is full, but check out street parking on West Observatory Road on the way up, or at the top parking lot — or opt for a rideshare or take LADOT’s DASH bus.
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Watts Towers.
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

Learn what keeps the Watts Towers upright

Los Angeles County Attraction
This tall, rough-hewn landmark, built by an enigmatic Italian American laborer and surrounded by a blue-collar community that’s mostly Latino and Black, has become one of the West’s most emblematic works of art.

Sabato (Simon) Rodia, a wiry immigrant from Italy, not quite 5 feet tall, started this backyard project in 1921 and spent 33 years putting up Watts Towers (up to 99 feet high), using rebar, concrete, cast-off tiles, bottle caps and bits of colored glass. (Weirdly, Italian immigrant Baldassare Forestiere was doing something similar in Fresno through most of those years, but working his way down, not up.)

Rodia walked away from his project in 1954 and died in 1965. For decades, arts advocates and government officials tangled over the city’s sometimes corrupt and incompetent maintenance of the landmark. Yet his towers survived, credited as inspirations by local heroes including artist Betye Saar and jazz great Charles Mingus.

The triangular property is now a state historic park and community arts center, and after years of restoration, the scaffol