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Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Great Wolf Lodge, Williamsburg, Virginia

In celebration of President's Day Weekend, we drove straight past Mount Vernon (home of George Washington) and drove down to Williamsburg, Virginia, to one of the many Great Wolf Lodges across the USA. The place is a big playground for young teens and younger (and young at heart).

Entrance to Great Wolf Lodge

 When we checked in, the lady behind the desk handed out wolf ears to our kids. Two out of three children were happy to wear them.

A happy four-eared child

Twice the fun

They even posed in a fun wooden chair!

Best you can get with three kids in one picture where they have to sit on each other's laps

We checked in and went to our room, which was spacious, with a kids' area featuring bunk beds and a more traditional area for us parents.

Parents' end of the room

A fireplace and a TV!

Kid's area

Inside the kid's area

Our particular room looked over the back of the property--a view to the water park!

Out our window

In the lobby is a giant clock that has an animatronic performance. We didn't stick around too long because we wanted to get to the water park.

The great clock show

I forgot to bring the GoPro camera (which is nicely waterproof) so I only took pictures from outside the water park area.

Pools and water exploring area

Water exploring, wave pool, toddler pool

The water park was a lot of fun. In addition to the short slides in the water exploration area, the back of the building had much larger slides for the 8-year-old and up crowd. Our kindergartner was not interested in climbing lots of stairs to go down the amazing (and somewhat terrifying) water slides. Those slides required inner tubes. One slide had a custom tube that could fit five people. The older kids enjoyed it a lot, especially dragging mommy on to experience the delightful terrors of going down a dark tunnel on a vinyl tube! We eventually got the youngest to go on the family slide though it took lots of reassurances.

The other big attraction at Great Wolf Lodge is MagiQuest. Parents buy their kids wands at a magic shop that lets them interact with various areas on three floors of the hotel. A handy map is provided.

Map of the fantasy land, with locations in the hotel identified below

The magic shop also gave us paper maps to carry around with us. The first stop for any magi was a magic portal, where missions are given. We started with the Pixie and Princess mission. On the monitor, it showed the runes we needed to collect in order to complete the mission.

Where to start

Each rune has its own set of items to collect. The items are in the halls of the hotel (though just near the lobby, not through the entire hotel). Pointing the wand at an item makes it light up. A hidden speak usually announces what reward is collected for pointing at the item. If it's part of the current quest, the item itself is collected. If it's not part of the quest, sometimes the player just gets some gold. Or the announcement says you don't need it yet.

Hawk's claw

Zapping a frog

Once all the elements are gathered, we went to a portal to combine them or given them to an on-screen character. The typical result was a rune useful for continuing the quest or in other  later quests.

The princess wants to get her jewels back from...

The goblin king, who we defeated

The game is fun but we did a lot of backtracking to get items. To do all the missions takes six to eight hours. The guy at the magic shop said that people can bring the wand back on a subsequent visits to pick up where they left off. I'm not sure we will remember to bring it again if we do go again.

Non-wand action

The place is amazing. It also has a bowling alley, an arcade (like Chuck E. Cheese), a 4D movie, and a few other things we didn't try. A mini-golf course and a high-ropes course located outside were not open in February. They also had activities like yoga, crafts, bingo, and story hour at various times. The kids did yoga once. We didn't try the other stuff.

We had a good time though the older kids are on the cusp of outgrowing some of the stuff.

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