Depending on conditions, water can enter into any of the three states of matter: gas, liquid, and castle. View a solidified structure with today's Groupon to The Ice Castles at Silverthorne. Choose between the following options:
- For $11, you get a visit for two (up to a $20 value).
- For $20, you get a visit for four (up to a $40 value).
With nationwide attention from publications such as Oprah.com, the Los Angeles Times, and the Huffington Post, The Ice Castles at Silverthorne stand as a jaw-dropping destination constructed entirely from icicles. More than 10,000 tons of ice form the castle's arches, tunnels, and spires, some of which reach almost 30 feet into the air. The castle is lit by more than 200 lights frozen inside the ice itself, which create an ephemeral glow in the evening akin to Superman’s Fortress of Solitude under the aurora borealis. Tickets are good for all-day access to the castle, allowing visitors to marvel at its one-acre grandeur in the daylight and experience its unearthly shimmer in the evening.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Office Icebreakers
Icebreakers help new hires get to know more tenured employees, and vice versa, by encouraging everyone to share personal info—such as names, hobbies, and places on their body that bruise easily—in a fun way. Here are some games you can use to make new best work friends:
Two Truths and a Lie: Share three facts about yourself and let the rest of the group tell you which one they had hoped you were lying about.
Never Have I Ever: Each person in the group is given 30 minutes to talk about things they never accomplished because of a lack of self-confidence or a disease that makes joints stiffen into mannequin limbs.
Ball, Ball, Bread Slice: Quickly pass a football, soccer ball, and slice of bread around a circle. If someone gets stuck with all three at once, the game is over.
Uh-oh, Emergency!: One person lies on the floor, pretending to be unconscious, while everyone else tries to guess the "unconscious" person's name. The person who guesses the name correctly has to "wake" the "unconscious" person by administering real CPR.
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