![]() ![]() Plan ahead and set limits with your kids on what you’ll spend money on before you roam the resort. The upside is the ease of keeping up with your key and “cash” when spending most of your time in a bathing suit. ![]() This makes it easy (almost too easy) to buy anything, at any time in the resort. The adults’ wristbands are also RFIDs (Radio Frequency Identification Device) which means the key to your room and access to your credit card are always available and at your fingertips (or, wrist, as the case may be). It’s tough to get used to at first, and your kids will complain (greatly, if your kids are remotely like mine), but it gives you entry into all areas of the resort, including the water park (where only resort guests are permitted). When you check in at Great Wolf Lodge, each family member receives a waterproof wristband that must be worn during your stay. We took breaks in between swimming sessions and enjoyed the other activities the resort offers (see #5). We realized we weren’t able to stay in the water park for longer than two hours at a time before the chlorine in the air started to bother our eyes. And, one more thing: the level of chlorine is high at the indoor water park (as it should be with so many people swimming indoors). Lifeguards are stationed at all of the water rides and activities. They’re provided and are, like the lifejackets, free of charge. Our kids are four and six and we spent most of our time at the wave pool (although our four-year-old loved the toddler splash area and our six-year-old enjoyed the slides at Fort Mackenzie).ĭon’t bring any big pool toys like rafts. In addition to these areas, there are lots more water rides and activities listed on the Great Wolf Lodge Grapevine website. And tall, more advanced slides are great for adventurous older kids (and insane adults). The medium-sized slides (at Fort Mackenzie) are for bigger, braver (elementary-aged) kids. The wave pool (Slap Tail Pond) is zero entry and fun for all ages, with made-for-two floats built for catching a wave. They’ve got a toddler splash area (Cub Paw Pool) that includes small, supervised slides and plenty of fun water sprays. ![]() From toddlers to teens, from parents to grandparents, there’s a water activity for everyone. We forgot kids’ goggles and bought some there but prices are high ($18 each for kids’ goggles) so save money and remember your swim gear.Īs I mentioned, Great Wolf Lodge was designed with families in mind. ![]() Great Wolf Lodge does have a swim shop at the entrance to the water park for anything you may have forgotten. Skip the sunscreen but don’t forget swim shoes, goggles, coverups, and an extra swimsuit for each family member so you can don a dry one each time you hit the park (which you will do several times a day, if your kids have anything to say about it). I hate that when we leave the beach for the day we are all sticky and icky and hot. I hate that each year I have to figure out which sunscreen offers the best protection but also the least harm from chemical exposure. I hate that it needs to be reapplied to sweaty, sandy, squirming kids. But I hate holding down squirming kids to get it on them. But there is one thing the beach requires that makes me kind of crazy: sunscreen. I’m a Parrothead for more than one reason: the sun the sand the colorful drinks with cutesy umbrellas great photo opps with the kids as they splash in the surf the great beach memories we make. Here are the five coolest things about visiting this indoor water park in the winter: Also? Swimming, tubing, and sliding in the winter without having to trek to the Caribbean or Mexico to do it? Perfection. Great Wolf Lodge appealed to us primarily because we didn’t have to fly to get there and it’s completely family-friendly, which is important to us when traveling with young (read: crazy, wild, full-of energy, only-tiny-reserves-of-patience) kids. We considered several different locations when planning our Winter trip. Just after Christmas our family took a trip up IH-35 to Great Wolf Lodge in Grapevine, Texas (near Dallas and the DFW Airport). ![]()
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