Since this is Atlanta—odds are that you didn’t grow up here—and you might be freaking out a little that your kids will. You don’t relish the amount of time they will spend stuck in traffic or that they might grow more accustomed to the sight of rushing planes overhead rather than birds in the sky. Don’t despair! Small town sanity awaits just a stone’s throw from Atlanta’s I-285 fence, and you’ve got plenty of time to impress upon them that there are many charms that exist outside the city. Check out these three towns, all only about an hour’s drive away, whenever your family needs to ease up on the gas and slow it down a bit.

Athens: Regardless of your football allegiances, Athens is a cool town with plenty to do for kids of all ages (not just for the dads out there who suddenly morph into Freddy Frat-tastic the minute they hit Clarke County on game day). Just over an hour from Atlanta, don’t let a trip to the vicinity pass you by without hitting Memorial Park and the Bear Hollow Zoo, which houses rescued and rehabilitated native animals (think turkeys and hawks, not panthers and silverbacks). Start at the zoo, then head over to the castle-shaped and community-built World of Wonder playground. If you’re there on a Wednesday, round out your day at the Athens Farmers Market at City Hall in the afternoon, followed by a quick caffeine rescue at Jittery Joe’s before you head back to Atlanta.

Details: Memorial Park and Bear Hollow Zoo, 293 Gran Ellen Drive, Athens, Ga 30605, Memorial Park, 8:00 a.m.-Sunset Monday-Thursday, 9:00 a.m.-Sunset Friday- Sunday, Bear Hollow Zoo, 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. daily, Free, Athens Farmers Market, 705 Sunset Drive, Athens, Ga 30606, Saturdays 8:00 a.m.-Noon at Bishop Park, and 301 College Avenue, Athens, Ga 30601, Wednesdays 4:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. at City Hall, World of Wonder, 4440 Lexington Road, Athens, Ga 30601, Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-Sunset, Saturdays 9:00 a.m.-Sunset, Sunday 12:00 p.m.-Sunset

Eatonton: Where else can your kids experience life on the farm, get their fill of Uncle Remus’ Brer Rabbit stories, and see a thousand-year-old rock eagle effigy all in one town? Just over an hour from Atlanta, Eatonton is an excellent option for little kids with short attention spans but big appetites for adventure. Start your day with a mid-morning snack in the historic square, then head three blocks south to the Uncle Remus Museum in Turner Park. Soar over to Rock Eagle with your picnic lunch, and round out your day at the nearby Crooked Pines Farm with a hay ride, petting farm, crafts, and an agricultural lesson (appointment required, no minimum number of participants). You’ll head back to Atlanta with some happily tuckered-out troops!

Details: Eatonton Historic Square, 114 West Marion Street, Eatonton, Ga 31024, Uncle Remus Museum, The Uncle Remus Museum, 214 Oak Street, Eatonton, Ga 31024, Open daily 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. (closed one hour for lunch), Rock Eagle Effigy Mound, Open daily, Free, Crooked Pines Farm, 355 Harmony Road, Eatonton, Ga 31024, Call 706-347-0274 for appointments, $4.00 per person

Madison: Once a year, Madison morphs into the hotspot for small town kid’s nightlife. They like to party? They like to get down? Head to Madison for the Firefly Festival the last Friday in July. Go after lunch to enjoy the town that Sherman “refused” to burn, and stay for the stilt walkers, bubbles, face painters, inflatables, crafts, and family entertainment. Festivities begin at 7:00 p.m. so you’ll be driving the hour back to Atlanta with some sleepy passengers but you can count on a quiet ride! Outside of the Firefly Festival, count on beautiful Madison for an easygoing visit that might best get to the heart of small town living, with nothing much to do other than soak up its sweet, southern charm.

Details: Madison Firefly Festival, 132 North Main Street, Madison, Ga 30650, Friday, July 26, 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m., $5.00 per child, adults free

Where is your favorite small southern town? Tell us below!

– Shelley Massey

Photos courtesy of the author and Creative Commons via Flickr 

It was once the private estate of John and Lilla Leach; world-travelers, botanists, and all around cool Oregonians who called their expansive garden and manor home Sleepy Hollow. Rad. They collected flowers and plants from all over the globe then gave them a home here. The Leaches bequeathed their estate to the City of Portland and the public was able to come traipsing through starting in 1983 thanks to a partnership with Friends of Leach and Portland Parks & Rec. Wait until you see this place. What an aptly-named gem it is – simply because you cannot help but relax and be inspired at the same time. Urban oasis anyone?

Sleepy Hollow err…Leach Botanical Garden boasts lots of room wander, explore, uncover and discover. It’s never crowded, consistently lovely and always free. With almost seventeen acres of awesomeness waiting, get ready for creek-side mosey-ing, winding trail exploring, native and unique plant, succulent and flower sniffing and stone step skipping. It’s such a magical place, it’s easy to forget how close to home(s) you are.    

The Johnson Creek Footbridge is open and awesome. This bridge isn’t always available to cross, but now in Spring it is open for all the joy you can muster. Yahoo! Kiddos and grownups will love walking on (right over the) water. Be sure to pause and take in the scene from here. It is a gorgeous place to be and like every bridge over bubbled water–it leads to some hidden delights on the other side like:

A very stop-and-play-worthy stone cabin, perfect for young ramblers to claim as their own. Ninja house? Hansel and Gretel’s lair? Princess or fairy cabin? Whatevs! The stone cabin is the perfect spot for a picnic or snack break and some good ol’ fashioned imaginary play.  

You can hug a dinosaur! Yup, you can. He loves hugs. But you can’t ride him. He’s not quite that strong. See if you can find this extinct garden delight and when you do get those arms around him. Stat! And be sure to say hello to the plant pot people, too. You’ll know ‘em when you see ‘em. 

Honeybee Hikes, summer camps and other classes keep it real. Really amazing that is! There seems to always be something cool happening for the kiddos here. Especially when school is out. Keep the learning and adventuring going strong with a few hours, days or a week of guided learning and discovery. The Leach Botanical Garden web site is a bevy of info about their award winning summer programs and their partnership with Audubon means you never know who (or should we say hoo-hoo) might be stopping by.


The Children’s Nature Fair is coming soon! Last but oh-so-far-from-least, mark your calendar for this annual collaboration with Johnson Creek Watershed Council, Zenger Farms, Portland Parks EE, Audubon Society of Portland and EEAO.  Blooming on Saturday, May 18 from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm, this year’s Children’s Nature Fair theme is Nature Explodes! and will feature volcanoes, oozy geology, arts & crafts, slug races, 25 cent mini ice cream cones, live music, ladybug walks, worm activities and something billed as the Mad Science’s Fire & Ice Show. Ok, sold. See ya there!

Leach Botanical Garden is free (donations welcome) and open Tuesday – Saturday 9:00 am – 4:00 pm and Sunday 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm.

6704 SE 122nd Ave
Portland, OR
503-823-9503

–Liz Overson

What did you do on your last visit to Leach Botanical Garden?

Photos courtesy of Leach Botanical Garden Facebook page and Liz Overson

Welcome to our first weekly post from our friends at 7×7, a site that keeps you up on the best of SF on a day-to-day basis. We’ve teamed up for an exciting partnership to bring you a weekly dose of fantastic Date Night ideas around San Francisco.

All eyes might be on the city’s Italian hot spots, but our true neighborhood restaurants are French. Flying under the radar with an average of 40 seats, SF’s bistros are refreshingly low on hipness and rich with steak frites. Straight out of your last trip to Paris, these seven are packed to the brim nightly with regulars often greeted by the owner with a kiss on both cheeks. Bon appétit!

1. L’Ardoise (Duboce Triangle), 151 Noe St., 415-437-260

Chef-owner Thierry Clement grew up in Orval, a village near Sancerre, where his parents own a butcher shop. In SF, while working at restaurants such as Fringale and the former Frisson, he dreamed of opening his own bistro. One day, he took a wrong turn (of course, while on his scooter—how French) onto a tree-lined street in Duboce Triangle. “I said to myself, Wow. It’s like a small village inside the city,” says Clement of L’Ardoise’s surrounding block. He recently took over the stoves at Le Charm too, the very first restaurant he worked at when he moved here. Not coincidentally, he’s engaged to be married to its owner.

Best seat in the house: Plant yourself at the bar so you can watch the kitchen action.
Signature dish: Coq au vin. “You can make this dish in an hour and a half, but it takes me five hours, plus the marinating. I’m very precise about it,” says Clement. —Sara Deseran


2. Bistro Central Parc (NoPa), 560 Central Ave., 415-931-7272

After 18 years of owning the popular Baker Street Bistro, Jacques Manuera’s eyes started to wander. His heart settled on an ex-crack house in NoPa that had been burned to a crisp in a fire. “It seemed like an interesting undertaking,” says the modest Frenchman wryly. Barely a year after opening Bistro Central Parc, a skip away from the Panhandle, the former drug den is now a neighborhood gathering spot with chef Nicolas Jardin—a Marseille-native who can say he worked with Guy Savoy (if briefly)—at the stove. It’s clear their devoted regulars have followed them. Not a moment goes by in the perpetually packed restaurant without hearing Manuera bid a customer adieu with a “bonsoir!”

Best seat in the house: A window table looking out onto the tree-lined street.
Signature dish: Juicy rack of lamb served with ratatouille. —Laura Mason

3. Chapeau (Inner Richmond), 126 Clement St., 415-750-9787

Twenty or so years ago, Chapeau chef and co-owner Philippe Gardelle moved to San Francisco to learn English. The self-taught cook from Toulouse has always loved to entertain. “When you come to this restaurant, it’s like coming to my house,” he says. The only French restaurant on a strip of Asian eateries and markets on Clement Street, Chapeau is a destination. And Gardelle is the perfect dinner party host, darting back and forth from the kitchen to the front of the house to make sure everyone is enjoying their meals. “During the day, I write the menu, cook, and choose the wine, but at night I like to be where everyone is,” he says.

Best seat in the house: The bar, especially for drop-ins.
Signature dish: Cassoulet de Toulouse. “I like to have a country dish on the menu,” says Gardelle. —Allison McCarthy

4. Le Charm (SoMa), 315 Fifth St., 415-546-6128

Before owner and Hong Kong native Lina Lew worked under Hubert Keller at Fleur de Lys in the early ’90s, she cut her teeth in kitchens all over France, including Michelin-starred Moulin de Mougins in the French Riviera. In 1994, Lew and her then-husband (whom she met in Paris) opened Le Charm. With its burnt-orange walls and white tablecloths, it has long offered a romantic respite on a busy corner of SoMa. Today, Lew floats between the front of the house and the kitchen, where she cooks with executive chef and fiancé Thierry Clement (see L’Ardoise).

Best seat in the house: A table on the heated patio strung with lights.
Signature dish: Cassoulet —Lauren Ladoceour


5. Le Zinc (Noe Valley), 4063 24th St., 415-647-9400

“French food doesn’t have to be a fancy occasion,” says Diana Braud, who once owned a wine bar called Millesimes with her husband Max Braud, right near the Odeon Metro Station in Paris—a casual spot where they crammed as much food as they could behind the bar. When the couple married, they decided to take their love of Parisian food to San Francisco, the only city that felt right for the little place they envisioned. They opened Le Zinc (the name is a colloquial term for “cafe” in France) 10 years ago and have cultivated a following of French customers who stop in weekly for a taste of home.

Best seat in the house: The one window table in the front is where the action is.

Signature dish: The bouef bourguignon. 
—Jennifer Pollock

6. Gamine (Cow Hollow), 2223 Union St., 415-771-7771

This red, storybook bistro located in the old Chez Maman space was transformed into Gamine three years ago when owner Stephen Bouillez bought out his former partner Jocelyn Bulow (the owner of Chez Papa and Chez Maman in Potrero Hill). Bouillez, who now runs the tiny 30-seater with his partner Susannah Dempsey, greets every single one of his guests as if he’s known them for a lifetime. He hails from Marseille and his food is the kind his grandmother used to make in the south of France. “We sell four cases of rosé every week because rosé is my milk,” he says. Oldies but goodies like escargot steeped in butter are on the menu, as are three kinds of mussels. On sunny days, the few seats under the awning offer some Parisian-style people watching mixed with Cow Hollow-style Lululemon fashion.

Best seat in the house: Parties of 8 to 12 can reserve the cozy, drapery-laden private room upstairs free of charge.
Signature dish: Grilled pork chops with mustard sauce and Brussels sprouts. —S.D.

7. Le P’tit Laurent (Glen Park), 699 Chenery St., 415-334-3235

You could call owner Laurent Legendre a bistro-generating machine. The Paris native studied at Ecole Hoteliere and honed his chops at culinary institutions like L’Arpege and the four-centuries-old Tour D’Argent. But he gave that up when a 1996 vacation to San Francisco lured him westward for good. Soon after, he debuted the much-loved Clementine in the Inner Richmond, followed by Bistro Clement, before opening Le P’tit Laurent nearly four years ago on an angled corner of Glen Park so village-like it could be straight out of Amelie. And he’s 
not done yet: Look for his new wine-and-oyster bar right across the street this spring.

Best seat in the house: The romantic 
two-top in the window corner or the bar 
if you’re solo.
Signature dish: The $22 three-course “neighborhood” menu, available Sunday through Thursday. If it’s on the menu, don’t miss the rabbit Normandy and the chocolate soufflé for dessert. —Robin Rinaldi