Got a budding Jacques Cousteau or Shark Week enthusiast? Luckily, you don’t have to venture to the ocean to get up close and personal with these toothy friends. At Sharkmania, Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium’s latest exhibit, landlubbers can touch real live sharks, learn about buzz saw sharks, and walk through a life-size replica of a megalodon jaw. But for the real adventurous ones in your crew, it’s the Eye-to-Eye Shark Cage Dive that’s the main attraction. Read on for the scoop on this heart-pumping thrill—no experience needed.

Helen Walker Green

A School of Sharks
Before taking the plunge, it’s time for shark school at the Dive Center. Your instructor will give you a talk on the rules of the cage dive and an introduction to the sharks you’ll meet (all 17 of them!). The rules are easy to follow, and the whole experience is carefully coordinated and safety-conscious. Psst! The instructors are brimming with shark facts and even have a way of keeping energetic 8-year-olds engaged.

Helen Walker Green

Shark Fact: Sharks have been around for 400 million years. They were here before the dinosaurs!

Getting Suited Up
After your get the important shark deets, the instructors will help you put on your dry suit, dive boots, and goggles. (Be forewarned: Letting the air out of the suits will cause much laughter). No need to worry about packing a swimsuit for this journey. The dry suit zips up over your clothes – the only things you’ll need to take off are your shoes and socks. Good to know: Your head, hands and feet will get wet during the dive.

Helen Walker Green

Shark Fact: Sharks have a sixth sense called electroreception. They can sense electricity in other living things (this comes in handy when they’re looking for their next snack).

Davy Jones’s Locker
When it’s time to head into the dive cage, your instructor will show you how to breathe through your scuba mouthpiece as well as add weights to your suit (to make sure you sink!). When everyone in your crew masters breathing like Darth Vader, it’s time to climb down the ladders and into the cage with the instructors by your side. Psst! If you don’t want your mouthpiece to fill with water, don’t smile on your way down – glug!

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Kris Sherman

Shark Fact: Sharks lose thousands of teeth in their lifetime! Bet they make a fortune from the Tooth Fairy!

Shark-Infested Waters
Plunging into the cage is an exhilarating experience for kids and grown-ups alike. Not only will you come face-to-face with these fascinating fish but you will get a shark’s-eye view of the aquarium – with friends and family looking at you through the glass. Don’t be surprised if the lemon shark playfully buzzes your cage a few times or the nurse sharks bask in a pile right by you. This is a great opportunity to try to spot the different sharks—can you see the blacktip reef shark with its signature blacktipped fin, and the unusual-looking Japanese wobbegong?

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Kris Sherman

The dive team will take video of your cage dive and will get a shot of each person waving to the camera (you can buy a copy on a shark-shaped USB drive). The cage dive lasts about 20 minutes, with the entire experience lasting an hour. Good to know: The instructors will continually check on you during the dive and can easily send you back up if you feel uncomfortable.

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Dive Staff

Shark Fact: Shark babies are called pups.

Save the Sharks! 
When you’re back on dry land, you will have the opportunity to find out even more about sharks and how important they are to our oceans. The dive instructors love sharks and they want you to love them too!

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Dive Staff

Good to Know
1. You don’t have to cage dive with your kids, but you are welcome to attend the pre and post dive talks with them.

2. Friends and family can watch the cage dive in the South Pacific Aquarium.

3. Although the shark tank is heated to 75 degrees, it can be chilly standing in the cage. The aquarium has fleece under-layers to loan divers – or you can bring your own.

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium/Dive Staff

4. Everyone gets a free souvenir towel. T-shirts, baseball caps, and a video of your dive are also available for purchase at the Dive Center.

5. Certified PADI divers age 15 & up can go on a scuba dive with the sharks.

6. Allow time to enjoy all that Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium has to offer – there are many wonderful animals to see, including polar bears, red wolves, Sumatran tigers, and elephants. You can also take a camel ride during the summer months and during the holiday season (that’s if you’re energetic enough to handle riding a camel and cage diving with sharks all in one day!).

Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium
5400 N. Pearl St.
Tacoma, Wa 98407
253-591-5337
Online: pdza.org/sharkmania
Reservations: pdza.org/dive (online reservations are required)

Rates
Members: $60
Non-members: $75
(Includes admission to Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium and souvenir towel)

Ages
8 and up

Cage Dive Times
Daily, 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 2 p.m. & 3:30 p.m.

Would your kids like to go cage diving with the sharks? Let us know in a comment below.

— Helen Walker Green

Environmentally conscious 21st century Angelenos rejoice! You and your family can experience a carless LA. Grab a stroller, bike, blades, scooter or skateboard:  it’s time for the pedestrian-friendly, car-free, wheel-y fun celebration that is CicLAvia, taking place this fall on October 5 in downtown Los Angeles.

Cycle-what?
As their website touts, CicLAvia “temporarily removes cars from LA streets…and fills them with smiles.” Originally started 30 years ago in Colombia as ciclovia, it launched in 2011 in our fair city, growing to multiple events in 2014 with more planned for future years that branch out beyond the city center.

Where do we go?
The upcoming October 5th event is called the “Heart of LA” tour and takes place downtown.  It’s not the same downtown route that CicLAvia has traveled in the past – this fall it will branch out into new areas like Echo Park, the Historic Broadway Theater District,  Boyle Heights all the way to East Los Angeles.   Riders (and walkers) of all ages can join in anywhere along the route, though it’s easiest to start near an endpoint.  A wheel-free walking-only zone is located this year in the Broadway Theater Districs at Broadway and 9th St., if your little one isn’t quite up to biking or triking with the crowds.  There will also be a kids zone at the East LA Civic Center and you can stop in at the Festival of Philippine Arts & Culture, which is being held in Grand Park.  A complete map is available online at ciclavia.org.


And how do we get there?
Getting there can be half the fun, if you live close enough to take an early morning bike ride.   Load up the minivan – or if you’re nearby, board Metro to transport you to the route.  Both buses and subways allow bikes at no extra charge – be sure to study the guidelines before embarking on your journey:  get the 411 at metro.net/bikes.

Remeber, CicLAvia is for everyone, but peewee peddle-pushers just learning to ride may need extra help, and this isn’t the best place to practice balancing.  That’s where tandem attachments and bike trailers are magic.  Pedestrians are welcome as well, as are strollers (hey, they’ve got wheels!).  The organizers of CicLAvie just ask that if you’re going slow, stay to the right, for safety’s sake.

Helmet, check. Air pump, check. Water, check. Sunscreen, check.
Safety first.  There are lots of happy helpers along the route, many passing out water or offering to top off tires in need of air (or just give encouragement).  To minimize stress and max-out fun, here are our tried-and-true tips to ensure a memorable experience you’ll soon want to repeat:

  • Fill tires beforehand: Flats are no fun.  Pop-up repair spots are hard to predict, though über-friendly organizers are strategically sprinkled along the course, ready to aid in a pinch.
  • Dress comfortably & for conversation:  A brightly colored easy-to-see graphic tees makes friends & meets new neighbors.  Or dress your baby biker dude in a vintage concert souvenir.
  • BYO water (& lip balm): Many spectators graciously offer refreshing bottles along the way, but there’s no guarantee.
  • Prep your phone for pix (sync, download & clear memory): Besides photo ops of tykes on trikes in the middle of 6 lanes of seemingly deserted urban thoroughfare, there’s lots of local color to soak up.
  • Pick a portion to ride:  The course is 10 miles in total, too long for most little legs, with designated crossing points for cars.  Try a segment with few (or no) traffic breaks for constant wind in your hair, tangles be damned.
  • Get a late start: The event goes from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.  No need to be crowded in with the masses.  Eat a healthy breakfast (mmmm, pancakes for fall?) and hit the road a little later.

The CicLAvia site is chock full of detailed guidelines, from parking sites and rules of the road (helmets for everyone!) to a handy dandy downloadable printable map.   Click ‘Join’ on the homepage to get newsy email updates about the route, entertainment and food – and upcoming events.  Because we’re pretty sure that when you’ve  experienced CicLAvia, you’ll be counting the days till the next event. (That would be the South LA route on December 7, or you can wait for the Iconic Wilshire Blvd. ride in spring of 2015.)
What: CicLAvia “Heart of LA” is October 5, 2014 from 9 a.m.–4 p.m.
Online: ciclavia.org

– Kim Orchen Cooper

Have you participated in CicLAvia before?  Got any additional tips?  Share them in the comments below. 

Photos courtesy of the author.