Things to Do in Ottawa
Things to Do Deals
Chicago Paragliding
- Multiple Locations
Learn the basics of paragliding before strapping into a glider with an instructor for an extended flight
Sugar Grove Golf Center'
- Sugar Grove
Professional instructor Ed Hildebrand teaches private lessons conducted at a lighted driving range
Brunswick Bowling
- Multiple Locations
Long-time bowling-industry leader opens its oiled lanes for pin-punishment sessions including cosmic bowling
Village of Bensenville
- Multiple Locations
Ice arena hosting Chicago Steel’s home games sprawls across three indoor ice-skating rinks, two of which are regulation-size
Rocket Ice Arena
- Bolingbrook
Skaters of all levels hone their moves during open skates while supporters cheer them on from lodge with fireplace, free WiFi & café
Ghost Tours of Naperville
- Downtown Naperville
Paranormal investigator guides guests on a 90- to 120-minute ghost tour that examines haunted locations and covers 1/4 mile
Studio Movie Grill
- Wheaton
A wide selection of new releases and cult classics are projected on towering screens as viewers watch from leather recliners and tables
Canlan Ice Sports Romeoville
- Romeoville
Guests lace up rented skates and take to the ice during public-skating sessions held in this three-rink facility
Fox Paintball
- Newark
Paintball facility on shores of Fox River boasts wooded fields marked by myriad manmade obstacles, along with pro shop & concessions booth
Learn Scuba Chicago
- Multiple Locations
Exploratory dives for beginners led by dive expert Captain Bob
Game Pazzo
- Downers Grove
Video gaming enclave pairs consoles such as Wii, Xbox with Kinect, and PS3 with leather seats, pizza and wings, and 70 HD screens
Bogies Indoor Golf Club
- Oswego
Tracking sensors chart and display accurate shots in Full Swing HD golf simulators; more than 60 real and fantasy golf courses
Wines for Humanity Detroit
- Elk Grove Village
Professional wine adviser teaches guests to discern distinctive notes in seven exclusive vintages and pair them with appropriate dishes
Turtle Splash Water Park
- West Chicago
Admission grants guests access to waterfall, twisting tube & flume slides, water playground & 25-yard lap pool amid five tree-shaded acres
CPX Sports
- Joliet
Combatants wage a paintball war; passes include admission and equipment rental on a return visit
Fox River Pilates Center
- Geneva
Views of the Fox River pour into a state-of-the-art Pilates studio that combines fun yet meaningful classes with earthy decor
FunFlatables
- Multiple Locations
Indoor playgrounds house colorful, air-filled obstacle courses, slides, and bounce castles
The Hub at Berens Park
- Elmhurst
Hot dogs replenish guests after a game of 18-hole mini-golf and a stint hitting softballs or baseballs at speeds ranging from 40–80 mph
Bolingbrook Golf Club
- Bolingbrook
PGA professionals lead group clinics on a variety of topics, getting players ready for rounds on 7,104 yd. course with a true-island green
Sunday at Sandwich Antiques
Antique dealers from four states gather to sell their antiques, collectibles, and crafts at a fair held one Sunday a month
Xtreme Trampolines
- Multiple Locations
Supervised kids and adults bounce off commercial-grade trampolines lining floors and walls or try their hand at trampoline dodge ball
O’Hare Paintball Park
- Bensenville
25,000 sq. ft. indoor-paintball arena; speedball obstacles and inflatable bunkers
Elk Grove Bowl
- Elk Grove Village
Forty lanes with automatic scoring set stage for two games of bowling by pairs clad in provided shoes
Little Monkey Bizness Chicago
- Multiple Locations
Indoor space grants kids the chance to expend energy; weekday party for up to 12 kids lets parents kick back at coffee bar with free WiFi
Willow Hill Golf Course
- Multiple Locations
A PGA member for 14 years, golf pro Billy Knilans hones golfers' skills with one-on-one instruction during private indoor lessons
Wilderness Falls
- Bolingbrook
Two mini-golf courses feature rugged obstacles and a 35-foot waterfall; kids’ party also includes arcade tokens and food
Got Air Scuba
- Elk Grove Village
PADI instructors let students try out equipment or lead classroom, pool, and open-water instruction for open-water certification
The Comedy Shrine Theater
- Aurora
Patterned after ABC's Whose Line Is It Anyway?, this late-night show cycles through short-form scenes aimed at an adults-only audience
Bounce Town Chicago
- Oswego
Facility houses 20,000 sq. ft. of private and semiprivate arenas with air-filled mazes, themed bounce houses, and a 50-foot obstacle course
MMASTOP Fitness
- Crest Hill
Kettlebells, ropes, medicine balls, sandbags, and ropes equip pupils to build muscle and torch calories
Hollywood Palms Cinemas
- Glacier Park
Wait staff fetches cocktails, pizza & sandwiches for audiences watching first-run blockbusters from leather executive chairs.
Bikram Yoga Plainfield
- Plainfield
In a room heated to 105 degrees Fahrenheit, students practice a set of 26 asanas designed to strengthen and detoxify the body
Just Kidding Around
- Lombard
CPR-certified staff oversees play area that combines a classroom, indoor playground, and kid lounge with free snacks; no contracts required
Initial TKD Martial Arts
- Batavia
Children & adults learn traditional tae kwon do in a family-oriented atmosphere that nourishes self-confidence & discipline.
Yoga Gyan Jyoti
- Aurora
An India native and her team of instructors empower students to forge stronger mind-body connections through a series of postures
Recommended Things to Do by Groupon Customers
In 1987, Louise Beem and Dorothy Carpenter were early-childhood-education specialists. Based on their combined experience—gained from teaching preschool, founding the College of DuPage's early-childhood-education program, and being grandmothers—the two friends felt that traditional methods of teaching youngsters were less than optimal at the time. Their brainchild, the DuPage Children's Museum, began that same year. The pair designed the museum's colorful exhibits to incorporate interactive and open-ended elements, which they believed more closely matched the way kids learn and naturally process information, a discovery they say has now been corroborated by findings in neuroscience research.
In that vein, the three-story museum engages young neurons with interactive art, math, and science-themed attractions. Giving little hands the chance to explore, the AWESome Electricity exhibit bridges the gap between the electric-powered gadgets and lights families use every day to where all that nonbreakfast-based energy comes from. Kids learn how electricity gets from one place to another and what its basic units are while at play in the museum's signature hands-on spaces. Elsewhere, the Young Explorers exhibit is designed for children aged 2 and under, who develop math skills by learning concepts such as sorting and patterning and express their creativity by experimenting with color and light.
Opening weekend is a time for renewed hope, reordered batting lineups, and refreshing scents of glorious gunpowder in the sky. Catch the Flyers on May 28 for post-game fireworks after the hometown bats light up the Gary SouthShore RailCats, or pay homage to babies named Ruth as you run the bases with the kids on Family Day May 30. On May 31, remix Memorial Day grill-outs by downing two dogs off the bat, and score dollar dogs throughout game. Armed with a starter kit of ballpark eats and ballgame spheres, show the youngsters how to properly grip a fastball, a frank, and a cardboard sign that irrefutably proves fanmanship.
Paper Crown Gallery founders Dennis Quijano and Jay Turner wanted to establish a space where creativity—not expensive artwork—flourished. With the help of a roster of fellow local painters, photographers, and illustrators that wouldn't be out of place in Wicker Park or Pilsen, the duo set up shop in the northwest suburbs to prove that the city isn't the only place to find inspiration. Alongside a dizzying array of rotating artwork for purchase, they also set their energetic, multihued environs abuzz with classes in everything from drawing to spray painting to abstract website building.
Chris and Pam Schmick had spent six months cleaning out the scrap metal from their abandoned silos and just finished drilling thousands of holes in its walls. With little time to spare, they prepared for their climbing gym's grand opening on September 2, 1995—a date on which they had already agreed to hold a regional JCCA competition. The effort they've expended in the nearly 20 intervening years shows: today, climbers scramble on top ropes, lead ropes, and more than 20,000 square feet of lava-free climbing surface.
Instructors prepare visitors to surmount the gym's features in a range of classes, such as Rock Gym 101, which is an introduction to top-rope climbing that covers climbing safety, basic technique, and equipment. Once climbers are equipped with gear from the pro-shop, staff shows them around a multi-level bouldering cave, a main climbing area with 30-foot walls shaped by arêtes, cracks, and waves, and the building's five original silos. Elsewhere inside the gym, six auto-belays safely cradle visitors who wish to climb without taking a class.
The Chicago White Sox have some truly dedicated fans. In 1994, the team decided to reach out to the youngsters who worshipped their footwear. They sought to provide kids with the same conditioning and training they honed their skills with, so they started a sports-training summer camp. In a mere seven years, demand for the trainers' services necessitated that the program conduct year-round sessions in all types of sports, and the Bulls/Sox Academy was born.
Taught by the trainers who spend their life making sure that the Sox and Bulls are ready to hit the field or court, Bulls/Sox Academy's lessons bring professional techniques to aspiring athletes. Baseball programs teach functional speed movements for high-speed base stealing and help kids build the upper-body strength to knock balls out of the park and through the windshield of their least favorite neighbor's minivan. The basketball course divvies up training between shooting, skills, and defensive play. The fast-pitch softball teachers—both former professional players and longtime coaches—arm students to beat back high-velocity pitches without hurting the ball's feelings.
The T-6 Texan isn't like most of the airplanes you see on the runway. For starters, it only has two seats. Then there’s the US Military aircraft crest stamped on the side of its mustard-yellow frame—a reminder of the warplane's years of service, from the 1930s to the '50s, when it carried three 30-caliber machine guns and a 400-pound bomb-load. A 1944 T-6 Texan is part of the fleet of fliers at Gauntlet Warbirds, a flight-instruction center that specializes in warplanes and aerobatic aircraft.
Chief pilot Greg Morris has been flying for more than 15 years and teaching for 10. He has a degree in aerospace engineering from USC and was awarded Master CFI-Aerobatic by the National Association of Flight Instructors. He continues to teach the T-6 to aspiring Air Force test pilots and flight-test engineers at test-pilot school as part of the Qualitative Evaulation program. Morris and his team of seasoned instructors copilot joyrides and offer training programs for mastering each aircraft in their fleet, which, in addition to the aforementioned T-6 Texan, includes the 1942 Boeing N2S Stearman, the L-39 Eastern block military jet, as well as aerobatic stunt planes such as the Yak-52, Extra 300L, Bellanca Decathlon, and Super Decathlon, all of which credit their thrill-seeking ways to strict upbringings.
