Skip to main content

F is for Frugal Vacation Destination



As you can see from my previous days' posts, we spent several days this past week in St. Louis, Missouri. It is one of our favorite cities to visit as a family. In fact, the kids want to go every year. We always seem to do the same things, even though there are tons of things to do that we have never gotten around to doing. It is a fun-filled city and the activities are cheap and, oftentimes, FREE! If you are a car drive away, St. Louis is a FRUGAL vacation destination. Here's what to do once you get there ...


Hotel. First, I recommend staying in a hotel NOT in the downtown area. They are super-pricey there and staying out a bit doesn't add much to your drive time. We have stayed in an extended stay 20 minutes out of downtown and, this time, we stayed at a Drury Inn near Forest Park, which is the zoo area. That being said, stay in a Drury Inn if you can. The one at the Convention Center downtown is actually not too expensive, in comparison to other hotels, so if you want to stay downtown I would choose it. Why Drury Inn? FREE parking, FREE big hot breakfast, FREE evening buffet, FREE cocktails in the evening, FREE popcorn and soda all afternoon, FREE indoor pool, FREE internet. We probably saved $200 on this trip just in free food at the hotel.


St. Louis Zoo. It has FREE admission and is a great zoo! Parking is $12.00. But, there is FREE parking on the street OR you can park at Turtle Playground on the street and walk over. I wouldn't pay for parking. When inside, you do have to pay for the sea lion show, the infant animal zoo, the train, carousel, stingray petting area, etc. You can purchase an armband for $10 per person that would get you into all of those things. This time we just went to the sea lion show so didn't purchase the armband. It was $4 per person. Other than a couple of bottles of water, and a couple of stuffed animals, we didn't spend any money. You can bring in a full cooler if you want, so bring your own drinks and snacks.


Turtle Playground. I mentioned this briefly above. It is right across the street from the zoo. It is just a playground with huge turtle and snake sculptures that the kids can climb on. My kids love it, and we go every time. And, it's FREE! We took our lunch there one day.


St. Louis Science Center. It has FREE admission. Parking is $10.00. You can park on the street for FREE (very limited) or park by the Planetarium and it's FREE in that lot. Admission to the Planetarium movies is separate ($5.00 per adult, $4.00 per child), but the movies are cool so worth it, in my opinion. We lucked out this trip with it being the 50th anniversary of the Planetarium, so entrance was only 50 cents per person! We bought a snack there, but otherwise didn't spend any money.


The Gateway Arch. You have to go to the Arch. Admission to it and the Museum of Westward Expansion located within are FREE. If you want to go up in the Arch, it is $10 per adult and $5 per child. Go HERE to get a coupon for Buy One Adult Get One Child Free.


The Metrolink. Ride the Metrolink. It's cheap and fun!! This is where having a hotel out of downtown is easy. Our hotel was by the zoo. We parked our car in FREE parking at the Forest Park station and rode the Metrolink to the Arch one day. Both ways it cost a total of $8.90. We saved gas and the kids had a blast!


City Museum. This is the most expensive thing we ever do on our trip. Admission is $12 per person, and the roof is an extra $5 and the aquarium is an additional cost, as well. If you go on Friday or Saturday night after 5:00 p.m., it's $10 per person and is open until midnight. That's what we did this trip. It is the funnest place you will ever go to ... both for kids and parents alike. I can't even describe it. You have to go there to believe it. You have never been anywhere in your life where adults act more like goofy kids. That, alone, is worth the admission.


Other things. Of course you can go to a St. Louis Cardinal's game, or a hockey game. We always say we are going to go to Grant's Farm (which has FREE admission, other than parking) but never make it there. You can tour the Anheuser-Busch plant, ride the Becky Thatcher riverboat, go to Union Station, eat at Hard Rock cafe, and tons of other things. I don't know that we will every accomplish all we want to in St. Louis.

Our goal is always to experience as much history and do as many FREE things as possible. And, we always want to eat at a local hangout. In St. Louis it's Fitz's. They make and bottle their own rootbeer and sodas. It's not necessarily cheap or free, but it's GOOD and fun! And you can get a FREE rootbeer float by going HERE. I do not recommend getting one per person. They are HUGE! I'd just get a couple and share them.


As you can see, we spent very little money for a four-day vacation, in comparison to many vacations. And, it must be fun because my kids want to go back every single year. If you are looking for a fairly FRUGAL vacation destination for your family, or even as a weekend for you and your spouse, check out St. Louis!!

Linking this post up at Blogging Through the Alphabet with Marcy at Ben and Me.

I am also linking this post up with Laura at Loving and Learning on the High Plains.

Adventure Fridays

Comments

  1. What a great and inexpensive way to have a vacation! Looks like all four of you kids had a good time.

    It's amazing what's in our own backyward if we just pay attention.

    ReplyDelete
  2. One thing I love about St. Louis is all the FREE culteral activities--the Art Museum in Forest Park is also free (there may be special exhibits that cost $$, but they usually have one night when they're free). There are also 1500 FREE seats to nationally touring Broadway musicals at the Muny during the summer. Let me know next time you come to town and we can meet!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow! I wonder if ALL Drury Inn's are like that? My sons could EAT $200 in other night themselves! :wink: I remember when we went we parked the car at the hotel and just took public transportation everywhere (or walked if things were close together). It was a cost, but definitely not expensive and you can see a lot of the city from windows as you go by. We loved the zoo and science museum and arch. That float looks awesome!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for linking up! This looks like so much fun! Next time we are in MO we will have to check this out!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

We all know that in this crazy world of homeschooling, we need all the (adult) support we can get. Please leave a comment if you so wish!

Popular posts from this blog

ABCya

Eli's reading resource teacher shared a website with me yesterday that I would like to pass along. It's called ABCya . There are separate educational sections with fantastic games for ages kindergarten through 5th grade. I browsed the 2nd grade level, and it includes age-appropriate games about Letters, Numbers, Shapes, Geometry, Patterns, Mouse Manipulation, Art and Holiday games. There are lots and lots of fun and creative games for children to play. They are fun, but oh, so educational. Eli's favorite, in his short time playing it, was Create a Car . A lot of the games also have Apps available for purchase (99 cents for most of them) for the iPad and iPhone. I have been looking for another free website for games similar to Starfall , for some time. I think I have found it. I can feel confident having Eli and Brynne play these games.

Cells ~ It's What's for Dinner

Dawson made edible cells on Friday. He made an animal cell pizza ... and a plant cell chocolate chip cookie ... He reviewed what he's learned about cells the past two weeks, and I had dinner made by someone else. Win, win!! I am linking up at Science Sunday at Adventures in Mommydom.

Last Child in the Woods ~ Chapters 1-4

Welcome to our book study of Last Child in the Woods by Richard Louv. To be honest, I have no idea what this "study" is going to look like. I imagine that when we get together I will post about all of the things that caught my eye. And I would ask that you leave a comment, or a link to your own blog post in the comment, about what caught yours. This isn't anything formal, ladies, just a place to talk about what we have read. I have now read the first four chapters of Last Child in the Woods two times. It is just so good. Several things have specifically hit me deep, but in general I just realized that "times, they are a changin'." Things aren't the way they were when we were kids. Chapter 1. Gifts of Nature ~ "When I see birches bend to left and right ... I like to think some boy's been swinging them." ~ Robert Frost What is your definition of nature? What feelings, visions, senses does it conjure up? For me, it's not a