Manhattan’s Upper West Side is such a Mecca of kiddie-oriented facilities and amenities that to single out even a dozen inevitably means leaving out dozens more. Odds are, any place you stick your finger on a map stretching from the bottom of Central Park West at 58th Street to the top of the park at 110th Street/Cathedral Parkway and all the way over to the Hudson River, you’ll find a cool spot to shop, eat or play with your kiddos – maybe even all three! But, if you’re looking for the best of the best, check out some of Red Tricycle’s favorites.

Where to Shop With Kids on the Upper West Side

Find a little of everything at Ivan’s Pharmacy. At this upper 90s hidden gem you can get your prescription filled and stock up on various household necessaries, all while your kids browse through a terrific collection of LEGO kits, dolls, stuffed animals, books and more.

Buy baby clothes and goodies at giggle. They sell everything from nursery furniture and bedding to clothes (including tiny outfits made from organic cloth) and toys (organic also available).

Sort out new shoes at the Junior locations of both Harry’s Shoes and Tip Top, where the service is personalized and even comes with a branded balloon at the end.

Get a haircut at  Cozy’s Cuts for Kids. While you could just trim your kiddo’s bangs with a pair of manicure scissors while they lean over the sink, this UWS spot also offers ear piercing, nail bejeweling, toys and even birthday parties. They also offer a 1st Haircut Special, which comes with a racing car to sit in, a video to watch, bubbles, lollipops, a free toy from the goody basket for your kid and an official certificate to mark the occasion for you.

Buy a toy that gives back at A Time For Children. Here, 100% of the profits go to The Children’s Aid Society of New York. Some of the teens from that program even work at the store, on track for a career in retail sales.

Go food shopping at Fairway. It’s like no other market and even you don’t go in hungry or in need of anything, you can almost guarantee you’ll walk out with a bag of goodies your kids want to try right away. Hint: the aisles are narrow and packed – so leave the stroller at home.

Stock up on craft supplies at Michael’s, the art supply store that has everything you ever wanted – and everything you never knew you wanted – for the crafty kid (and their parents who really do intend to put those photos in an album… soon).

Where to Eat With Kids on the Upper West Side

Looking for a bite to eat? From lunch to dinner and even sweets, favorite family destinations on the Upper West Side include:

Grey’s Papaya: You’re not a true New Yorker till you’ve popped by for a hot dog and a smoothie here. Plus, it’s perfect on-the-go food for when your kiddos aren’t in the mood for sitting through a lengthy restaurant meal.

Sugar and Plum: On the other hand, if you’re brave enough to go upscale with your small fry, Sugar and Plum offers a Kid’s Menu fit for royalty including black angus beef mini corn dogs. They’ve also got an ice creamery, bake shop and candy store on the premises.

Chocolate Works: If dessert made on site isn’t good enough for your kids, how about a chance to mold their own? Here, every kid can be Willie Wonka, and enjoy a chocolate vat, chocolate fountain and colored chocolate to decorate with.

The Shake Shack: The line here is reportedly shorter than at the mother ship location in Madison Square Park.

Dallas BBQ’s: The prices are reasonable, the portions generous, Wet Naps are provided… and so is an extra shot for your Texas-sized Daiquiri (but only if you need it).

Artie’s Delicatessen: They’ve got pastrami, egg creams and booster-seats. What else do you need out of life?

Big Daddy’s: Crayons on the tables keep kids busy while you wait for your all-American diner fare, plus the pictures on the walls allow you to educate your kiddos in such key historical figures as Mork, Rerun and The Fonz.

Where to Play on the Upper West Side

Visit a world class museum. You’re probably aware of, or maybe even have gone to the Upper West Side specifically to go to the array of wonderful museums – The Children’s MuseumThe American Museum of Natural History and The DiMenna’s Children’s History Museum to name a few. And even Lincoln Center.

Drop-in to play on Saturdays at The Jewish Community Center of Manhattan. If you’re a member, you’ll be able to use the facility’s gorgeous pool, roof-deck and gym, but even non-members can play in the gym and participate in special activities every Saturday from 2:00 pm to 5:00 pm during the Shabbat R&R program.

Burn off energy at a favorite playground. You’ll also find dozens of playgrounds on the Upper West Side including the oldest one in Center Park, Heckscher – nearly redone for your pleasure (if it was good enough for Peter Thatcher in Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing it’s good enough for your SuperFudge) and Hippo Park along Riverside Drive, which not only has hippos, sprinklers, swings and monkey bars, but also a cool little playhouse that you can rent for birthday parties. Just don’t confuse it with Central Park’s Safari Playground, which also has hippos. (Many a birthday bash has been tragically derailed by clueless parents going to the wrong spot.)

Get there: Go west, young man! Or take the 1, 2, 3, B or C train to a stop between 66th Street ad 110th Street.

What’s your favorite spot on the Upper West Side?

– Alina Adams

You might have heard through the grapevine that muscadines are in season. September and October are prime months for picking this southern grape. Muscadines have an intense sweetness like a Concord grape, but yet tougher, plum-like skins and larger seeds. Scuppernongs are a greenish variety of muscadine. Combine the fun of self-serve harvesting with the sweet taste of this Georgia native fruit at these Atlanta-area farms.

Backyard Figs and Muscadines
As the name implies, Backyard Figs and Muscadines isn’t exactly a farm. It’s more of an acre yard with 3 fig trees, a muscadine vine and a few apple, pecan, and hickory trees that produce more than the family can eat. They don’t use pesticides, and they’re open every day by appointment from 8 am to dark.

455 Railroad Avenue, Flovilla, GA 30216
Cost: $5/gallon
Contact: 770-504-1729 or paulhale@mail.com

Bank’s Vineyard
Bank’s Vineyard boasts 15 acres with 20 vines of muscadines and scuppernongs. They’re open daily from 9 to 7. You don’t need an appointment, but you may want to call to make sure the fruit is ripe; they generally aren’t ready till September.

290 Banks Road, Fayetteville, GA
Cost: $1.50/pound
Contact: 770-633-9990

Brown’s Muscadine Farm
If you’re looking for a place to spend all day in the muscadine vineyard, Brown’s is the place to go. Their fields include toilets and picnic tables, so bring a lunch (or at least a sandwich or cheese and crackers to eat along with your grapes) and make a day of it. They use no pesticides, and they’re open from late August through October.

4853 Evans Drive, Union City, GA 30291
Cost: $8/gallon; $1.25/pound
Contact: 770-964-5304

Dacula Briarpatch
It’s a small homestead farm, but Dacula Briarpatch offers plenty for families, from restrooms and picnic tables to group tours. The main crops are blueberries and blackberries, but fall harvest includes apples and pears as well as muscadines. Your kids will enjoy the $5/person tour, which includes a show-and-tell of nature objects, from deer bones to birds nests.

2503 Cammie Wages Road, Dacula, GA 30019
Cost: Call for pricing
Contact: 770-962-4990

Weaver’s Berryland Farm
Weaver’s grows blueberries, blackberries, raspberries and vegetables as well as muscadines. This family farm gives a glimpse of what farming was like a generation ago, with 50 year old tractors and an historic barn. Your kids will also enjoy chickens and peacocks, as well as the 70 muscadine vines.

2252 Hiway 16 West, Jackson, GA 30233
Cost: $8/gallon
Contact: 770-595-8303

Waits Farm
The farm covers fewer than 5 acres, but Waits Farm packs a lot of grapes in a small space. The farm boasts 220 vines and 12 different kinds of muscadines and scuppernongs. They’ll be ripe from late August to mid-October.

3779 Old Braswell Road, Monroe, GA 30650
Cost: $4.50/gallon
Contact: 770-207-6910

What is your family’s favorite southern delicacy? Tell us in the comments section below!

–Lisa Baker

Photo courtesy of  Paul Hale of Backyard Figs and Muscadines, Creative Commons via Flickr and Bank’s Vineyard via Facebook

Did you sink a Battleship or Guess Who as a kid? Perhaps you had a Clue it was Mrs. Peacock in the study with the rope as you prepared to Operate on the guy with the big red nose?  If these sentences don’t have you scratching your head, you are a child of the pre-iPad era and know that back then board games were big business.  Below are a few of our faves old school game picks. Let us know in the comment section below if we missed your choice nostalgic game.

Rubix Cube

Any of you who remember this torture device probably also remember peeling off the colored stickers in order to re-stick them when that last blasted line didn’t match up!  How did colored, plastic squares hold so much power over us as kids?

 (Photo courtesy of Gracedustin via Flickr)

Clue

If you knew it was Professor Plum in the Library with the candlestick, then you grew up with a steady diet of mystery sleuthing playing Clue as a kid. Whether Mrs. Peacock is your go-to gal or old Mr. Cranky pants, Colonel Mustard, Clue remains a fave among Gen X and Y parents.

 (Photo courtesy of Chris Corwin via Flickr)

Life

Ah… if only in real life you could buy a sports car, marry the guy of your dreams and move into a mansion with the spin of the numbered wheel. You’re on cloud nine, until…the dreaded “Taxes Due” spot!  The board game Life ushered many young girls and boys into the trials and tribulations of being a grown up, if only for a short time, while taking a ride in their favorite plastic car.

(Photo courtesy of  LifeSupercharger via Flickr)

Simon

Flash green, flash blue, flash blue, flash red, repeat… faster. Are your hands sweating yet? If so, you probably watched every kid in the rumble seat of their family car matching wits with Simon.  Now, nearly 35 years later, you’re more likely to find it in iPad form than a clunky piece of plastic, but the game itself continues to instill anxiety in the hearts of children everywhere.

 (Photo provided by Toywhirl via Flickr)

Mouse Trap

It seems you can, in fact, build a better mousetrap and this game helped children the nation over try to outwit their opponent at it.

 (Photo courtesy of Squiggle via Flickr)

Perfection

The last plastic piece is almost in its matching tile when BOOM – the entire board is thrown in the air and the alarm sounds. The minute is over and the player has not in any way reached Perfection. Let’s just rename this little beauty, “the heart attack.”

 (Photo courtesy of Jronaldlee via Flickr)

Battleship

If you’ve ever shouted the battle cry, “You sunk my battleship” you have been through the rigors of the strategic game of little grey plastic boats. Remember placing the ships as close together as possible to make it seem like the biggest ship had been found?

 (Photo courtesy of nworbleahcim via Flickr)

Chutes and Ladders

Chutes and Ladders was an early lesson in winning (up the ladder you go) and losing (down the ladder you slide, and to make it interesting, let’s add a broken plate of cookies.) And just when you thought you had made it to the winning square? More often than not, the result was that last long slide to the bottom.

(Photo courtesy of Ben Husmann via Flickr)

Guess Who?

Who else thought the people on the cards in this guessing game really could talk based on the commercials promoting it during our youth?  What a letdown to open the box and realize that instead of a grandma saying, “Can you guess who? “, it was really just a deduction game based on facial features.

(Photo courtesy of Ben Sutherland via Flickr)

Operation

Ushering a whole generation of young imaginary surgeons, Operation not only let kids of the 80s and 90s operate on a character, but freak out at the smallest hint of a trembling hand.

(Photo courtesy of Pernell via Flickr)
 
 

What board games most remind you of your childhood?

— Laurie Halter

If you haven’t been to what used to be known as The Center House at the Seattle Center, you’re in for a shock. Following suit with Seattle’s recent explosion of to-die-for restaurants, The Armory is the fanciest food court you’ve ever seen. In fact, don’t you dare even breathe the phrase “food court” once you step in the doors of the Armory or you may be taken away to Seattle hipster jail (they make you wear flannel shirts that cost $300, in case you were wondering). Pulling together the best of Seattle’s local food scene, the Armory has been transformed from somewhere you only went to fuel up your starving kids after a long day playing at the Seattle Center into a kid and parent-friendly dining destination that caters to every taste bud in your family.

Bean Sprouts Café

New to Seattle, Bean Sprouts Café makes your kiddos feel right at home. They have created a place that encourages kids to get involved in their dining experience with a kid-height counter, a picture menu to allow them to pick their own meal and even a “gong” for them to ring when they branch out and try a new food. We especially love the Wazzles (Pizza on a waffle? What!) and the salads that are served in whole-wheat tortilla cones. Freshly made organic baby food also available for the littlest Amory diners.

Hours: Sunday through Thursday from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm and Friday through Saturday from 11:00 am – 8:00 pm

Online: Visit the Bean Sprouts website at beansprouts.com

Bigfood

Eventually, every good food truck decides that it’s time to stop playing the field and settle down in a serious, committed relationship with a permanent location and for Bigfood, that new ball and chain is right here at the Armory. Bigfood uses flatbreads at their base, filling them with goodies that make an oversized taco-ish meal. Their daily specials will make you become a loyal follower before you even get the first bite down and your kids will be begging for just one more Sweetbread – their signature grilled flatbread… tossed in cinnamon sugar. They do also still have a roaming food truck that you can follow around the city. Check them out online for a detailed schedule.

Hours: Sunday through Thursday from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm and Friday through Saturday from 11:00 am – 8:00 pm

Online: Visit the Bigfood website at bigfoodmobile.com

Eltana

Every kid loves a bagel. We’re not sure if it’s the hole in the middle or the fact that they can chew on them for days without making a dent, but bagels are kid-food, through and through and Eltana’s bagels won’t disappoint. You can find Eltana at their own stand near where you can overlook the Children’s Museum, towards the center of the Armory. They make all of the bagels at their Capitol Hill location (which is also fantastic at 1538 12th Avenue, Seattle) and deliver them to the Armory fresh on a daily basis. Don’t forget to take some to go – you’re going to regret it tomorrow morning, if you don’t!

Hours: Weekdays from 8:00 am – 4:00 pm and weekend from 9:00 am – 5:00 pm

Online: Visit the Eltana website at eltana.com

Kabab

I scream, you scream, we all scream for… Falafel? Sounds good to us and to your kids! The funniest part of going to Kabab at the Armory is going to be listening to your kids try to pronounce it and the best part is the tasty Mediterranean food that will satisfy your cultural cravings and expand the palates of your little ones at the same time. If your kids aren’t into falafel, check out the basic kababs, which come in beef, chicken or lamb.

Hours: Sunday through Thursday from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm, Friday and Saturday from 11:00 am – 8:00 pm

Online: Visit Kabab on Facebook for more information

MOD Pizza

You’ve been playing all day at the Seattle Children’s Museum or the Pacific Science Center and your kids need to eat… like, 20-minutes ago. Head straight to MOD Pizza, which is located along the outside edge of the Armory. Each pizza only takes 2-3 minutes to cook, making them the perfect solution for kiddos who are this close to full-blown hunger breakdowns. Bonus points to MOD for also being budget-friendly – each pizza, no matter which toppings you choose, is less than $7.00. There are seven other MOD Pizza locations in Seattle and on the Eastside to enjoy as well!

Hours: Sunday through Thursday from 10:30 am – 8:00 pm, Friday and Saturday from 10:30 am – 9:00 pm

Online: Visit the MOD Pizza website at modpizza.com

Pie

Pie. Not only is pie the new cupcake, but it’s also not just for dessert anymore. Now that we’ve used every pie-related cliché possible, let’s actually talk about the pie. Pie serves both sweet and savory selections, so you can eat pie for lunch, dinner and dessert, if you’d like. Kiddos devour the Mac N’ Cheese Pies (with peas inside – yum!) and you’ll be hard-pressed to choose from savory pies such as BBQ Pulled Pork and a classic Chicken Pot Pie. For dessert, move your internal pie-switch to “sweet” and select a bunch of their Mini Mini Pies to do some pie sampling. Look! Even Mayor McGinn loves Pie!

Hours: Daily from 10:00 am – 7:30 pm

Online: Visit Pie online at sweetandsavorypie.com and keep an eye on their Facebook page for daily updates on pie flavors

Plum Market

No need to declare yourself vegan to enjoy Plum Market! The satellite location of Seattle’s very popular Plum Bistro, Plum Market is an extension of everything that you love about gourmet vegan food. At the Market, Plum serves deli-style dishes. You and your kids will love scoping out their daily offerings – ranging from salads to sandwiches to desserts – and you can choose to have as little or as much as you’d like, making them a great choice for kids who eat like little vegan birds.

Hours: Sunday through Thursday from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm, Friday and Saturday from 11:00 am – 8:00 pm

Online: Visit Plum Market via the Plum Bistro website online at plumbistro.com

Quincy’s

Bringing the Seattle Center back to its old school roots, Quincy’s new location in the Armory is still serving up the tasty kid-friendly burgers and seafood that it did over 30-years ago. And, who can talk about Quincy’s without talking about their milkshakes? Dining at Quincy’s is more of a sit-down, relax, be served and enjoy some quality family time kind of place, rather than just a quickie in and out meal, so be prepared to kick up your feet a bit for lunch or dinner here. Don’t actually kick up your feet. That would be rude.

Hours: Sunday through Thursday from 11:00 am – 6:00 pm, Friday and Saturday from 11:00 am – 8:00 pm

Skillet Counter

Seattle’s favorite food truck turned restaurant now has a new family member – Skillet Counter in the Armory. And, unlike the around-the-block lines that can have your stomach growling and your kids whining at their other locations, Skillet Counter moves through their line quickly and the crowd seems to be a bit thinner, making it a great choice for enjoying all of the goodness of the Skillet brand with your kiddos. They have a great dedicated kids menu that includes faves like a grilled cheese sandwich (no crust, on brioche) and a grilled PB&J – both served with their yummy fries. Mom and Dad, we suggest anything with bacon on their menu, which is pretty much everything. Yum.

Hours: Daily from 8:00 am – 8:00 pm

Online: Visit Skillet online at skilletstreetfood.com

Tips for Visiting the Armory with Your Kiddos:

Park in the garage on Fifth Avenue North, which is near the entrance to the EMP. If you spend $10 or more while dining at the Armory, they will validate your parking and knock down the fee to just $1. There is a 90-minute limit, however, so if you’re planning on hanging around at the Seattle Center afterwards, be prepared to pay a little bit more.

Don’t miss the play area that is upstairs from the dining area of the Armory – there are staircases near the stage that head up to that open-aired mid-level of the building.

Snag a seat near one of those adorable kids’ tables. They are tiny and perfect for little ones who are over being in a highchair, but too small to sit at a huge table.

Have you taken your kids to the Armory? Tell us your favorite spots in the comment section below!

— Katie Kavulla

Photos via the Bean Sprouts Cafe Facebook page, the Eltana Facebook page, the Pie – Seattle Center Facebook page, the Plum Bistro Facebook page, all other photos by Katie Kavulla