Independence, KY Outdoor Activities
Outdoor Activity Deals
Cincinnati Bike Center
- Central Business District
Rent a cruiser or comfort bicycle for four hours to explore Cincinnati
Dagaz Acres
- Rising Sun
Four-part course challenges visitors with dual 23-acre-long ziplines over ravine, canopy ziplines, rope bridge, and swinging plank bridge.
Eastern Hills Indoor Tennis Club
- Linwood
Instructors teach tennis fundamentals in six classes; summer membership included
Rusty Wallace Racing Experience
- Sparta
Professional drivers sate their need for speed in stock cars during exciting ride-alongs and racing experiences
ClearCreek at The Practice Center
- Franklin
Buckets of 40–45 range balls help golfers warm up at the driving range before they tackle 18 executive holes studded with sand traps
Gallop Again
- Harrison
Stable that specializes in the rescue and rehab of neglected horses leads kids' camp sessions with rides, crafts, and outdoor activities
Fun Factory Roller Skating
- Norwood
Skaters of all ages careen across the hardwood floors of the indoor rink amid arcade games, a bounce house, and a concession stand.
Paintball Country
- Liberty
Enormous obstacles and 40 acres of woods await paintballers clutching Tippmann 98 Custom markers and 500 rounds of ammo
RockQuest Climbing Center
- Sharonville
Pick up indoor climbing basics in belay class before one week of open access to the gym’s 20,000 sq. ft. climbing wall
Skydive Warren County
Certified, experienced staff members accompany clients on jumps that start 10,000 ft. above the ground and include 50 seconds of free fall
Equine Education Shelby Trails Park
- Simpsonville
A 25-year equestrian veteran teaches jumping and dressage to all levels of riders inside a lighted, controlled indoor environment
Recommended Outdoor Activities by Groupon Customers
Colonial Pines Golf Club’s 18-hole course blankets 127 acres of tranquil Ohio Valley farmland for 5,966 yards of rolling hills and imposing hardwoods. Golfers traverse the par 70 layout on the backs of motorized carts or caddies hoping to improve their piggyback-ride form, steering balls away from a menagerie of hazards, including mounds topped with swaying heathers, woodsy thickets, and six lakes spanning 11 acres. The first tee shot aptly foreshadows a round in which avoiding water hazards and ingratiating oneself to ball-stealing fish will be critical, as drives must cross a pond that runs from the tee box to the beginning of the fairway.
Course at a Glance:
- 18-hole, par 70 course
- Length of 5,966 yards from the farthest tees
- Course rating of 68.3 from the farthest tees
- Slope rating of 117 from the farthest tees
- Three tee options
- Link to scorecard
Hoofbeats resound across cropped-turf grounds at Shelby Trails Park Equine Education Center. Here, 25-year equestrian Corinne Bradley teaches dressage and jumping techniques to riders of every stripe, from beginner to advanced to honorary centaur. She works with all ages but especially enjoys teaching young people, perhaps because she was only a child herself when she mounted her first horse. By the time she got to high school, she was steering her steeds through full-on equestrian events. Today, Bradley manages an equine paradise. Indoor riding areas introduce barn stormers to their mounts in a controlled environment, and winding trails encourage human and beast to bond while taking in the scenic countryside.
A student of the Parelli way of riding, Bradley’s style emphasizes the horse-rider relationship. Through the Parelli philosophy, students learn to communicate effectively with equines, earning the horses’ trust by eating salt licks and respecting how they react to their natural environment.
The Phoenix Equestrian Centre's owner and lifelong horse expert Linda Gonzalez draws on her professional racehorse-training experience while teaching riding lessons and caring for her fleet of steeds. Having trained racehorses that have breached the upper echelons of the nation's Experimental Handicap top 200 and gone on to race before the queen of England, Linda has an expert eye for tending to the needs and birthday wishes of each horse. Set on 19 acres, her horse boarding and training facility features 60'x60' indoor and 100'x200' outdoor riding arenas, where ponies are free to strut and students take their first tentative gallops atop well-trained mounts. Aside from private lessons and day camps, Linda also breaks and trains unruly horses, leases trustworthy steeds, and hosts a variety of informational seminars about the future possibilities of a centaur composite race.
Opened in 1968 as a nine-hole course, Cardinal Hills added a back nine in 1996 to form a 5,614-yard excursion that challenges oncomers with undulating greens and tree-lined fairways. Though relatively short in overall length, the Harold England design presents its fair share of difficulties, forcing players to choose their clubs wisely and to carefully discern which flagsticks are actually remnants of failed moon landings.
Course at a Glance:
- 18-hole, par 70 course
- Total length of 5,614 yards from the back tees
- Course rating of 70 from the back tees
- Course slope of 113 from the back tees
Mud oozes through fingers, toes, and other places mud should never ooze through during Mudathlon, a challenge that puts 3 miles and more than 40 obstacles between racers and the finish line. With multiple stops across the country, Mudathlon transforms its destinations into messy, muck-riddled swamplands, where participants ascend walls, zip down slides, and always end up in the same place—back in the mud. Course marshals stationed along each route keep feet moving in the right direction, and at the finish line, the top three male and female competitors receive Top Mudder awards for finishing fastest while ingesting the government’s daily recommended serving of mud. After the race, individuals and teams gather to celebrate at a country-themed party, which continues the festivities with live music, costume contests, and an abundance of food and beer.
