Old Jack London Square got a face lift a few years ago, and has attracted some great restaurants. It’s also located right on the waterfront so there is plenty to see.

To Do: Planes, trains, automobiles, and big, big boats: this patch of Oakland’s waterfront is heaven for transportation buffs. Kids can get their kicks on a ferry boat, or get an eyeful of smaller ships skipping up the canal between Jack London Square and Alameda, but they’re likely to be drawn to the big ships docked along the shore. The Amtrak choo-choos go by every so often, and there are always planes taking off from SFO and Oakland International.

When your littles have had their fill, you can make a game out of following the wolf’s pawprints to local landmarks and brush up on Oakland waterfront history.

Or, if the weather’s gloomy, duck into the Museum of Children’s Art (MOCHA) for one of their hands-on family extravaganzas or to check out their monthly exhibit of children’s art.

When to go: Skip on down to the plaza on a Sunday for the farmers’ market, grab an empanada or an agua fresca from one of the vendors and watch the birds pecking around. Check out their online calendar which will keep you abreast of this season’s farmers’ markets, artisans markets, and other events taking place in JLS. Consider taking your family to the Eat Real Festival in late September.

What to eat: As part of Oakland’s recent restaurant renaissance, the area’s recent openings include a Blue Bottle Coffee retail outlet and headquarters, and the ultra-hip and casual Chop Bar, which puts out amazing lunch sandwich standards (burgers, tortas, and banh mi) as well as a couple of kids’ menu items. If it’s brunch you want, head to Bocanova, which specializes in Pan-American cuisine–consider their Huevos rancheros, or grab a Churro with orange cinnamon chocolate sauce for your little one. When you need a sweet treat, hop in to Miette, newly opened in JLS.

Travel time: Oakland is 15 minutes from Berkley and downtown San Francisco, but if you are heading from Marin or the Peninsula, expect a journey of 30 minutes to an hour depending on traffic.

What to wear: As always dress in layers in case the wind picks up. Oakland is usually 10 degrees warmer than the city, so judge accordingly.

Cost: Inexpensive.

Bonus: Keep your eyes peeled for the opening of the Jack London Market, which promises to be a gourmet heaven. They plan a two-story market with stalls for all the best local artisanal goodness of the Bay Area.  More tasty shops will only make us fonder of this historic ‘hood.

www.jacklondonsquare.com



 

Trains at Carkeek – Photo by Tim & Shannon Stauffer

Spotting Trains Around Seattle

Were your toddler’s first words “choo choo?” Are you up to your eyeballs in Thomas paraphernalia? Enough with the toys…sounds like a trip with the kids to see a real, live train is in order! From Downtown Seattle to the Snoqualmie Valley, we’ve got the scoop on the best train viewing spots around Seattle.

OLYMPIC SCULPTURE PARK
Take the kids to Belltown and head over to the Olympic Sculpture Park’s BNSF bridge, where you can view the trains from above (26 feet up!) while admiring Teresita Fernández’s laminated glass art installation atop the bridge.  While you’re there, make a day of it with a picnic lunch on the sculpture park lawn (pack your own or pick something up at the park’s sustainable-food focused TASTE Café), explore the park, then make your way down to Seattle’s Myrtle Edwards Park on the waterfront for some rock skipping into Elliott Bay.

CARKEEK PARK
Railroad tracks run the length of Carkeek Park in northwest Seattle, where you can view the trains from the beach or from the pedestrian bridge that crosses the railroad tracks, connecting the park to the beach. Have your kids wave to the conductor from the bridge, and you might get rewarded with a toot of the horn!

KIDS, TRAINS AND LUNCH
If it’s raining outside, or if you’re just up for some lunch with your train viewing, check out Wild Wheat Bakery Cafe and Restaurant in downtown Kent. Ask for a window booth, sit your kids down, and watch the trains go zooming by.

SEATTLE’S NORTHWEST RAILWAY MUSEUM
The Northwest Railway Museum in Snoqualmie is housed in a restored turn of the 1900s depot. Admission is free, and guests can wander through exhibits on railroad history in what were once train depot waiting rooms. From there, you can get your kids tickets for the Snoqualmie Valley Railroad – a five mile train ride aboard an antique railroad train. See the website for times and ticket prices.

—Heidi Unruh

Natural Beauty

Whoever said ‘A picture tells a thousand words’ has never seen the photography work of Ballard mom Julia Kuskin. For Kuskin’s work – timeless snapshots of children in their everyday actions – is beyond words. A typical Kuskin photo isn’t a staged shot of perfectly coiffed kids in matching outfits smiling straight at the camera. Rather, they are environmental portraits that capture the essence of childhood. A kid tying his muddy shoe. A girl skipping down the street holding her babydoll. A boy gleefully jumping on his bed.

While she has done both commercial and portrait photography, Kuskin’s favorite subjects are kids. She often tells them to pretend she isn’t there when she’s shooting. Kids inherently feel more at ease, she says, which makes for natural scenes.

Much of Kuskin’s success comes in the way she does a shoot. She meets with her subjects first, then sets up an appointment to shoot. She uses natural light, uses digital or film, and is happy to photograph anywhere a client wants, whether it’s at home or in the neighborhood. A session can range from one to three hours, depending on the day and the family. “What people appreciate most about my work is that it captures real life. That’s what they want to remember.”

Photography by Julia Kuskin
www.juliakuskin.com
Seattle, Everywhere, 206-406-4562