White House, TN Outdoor Activities
Outdoor Activity Deals
Honeysuckle Hill Farm
- Coopertown
Guests in harnesses soar over ponds and creeks on eight ziplines and traverse bridges up to 100 ft. in the air
Europa Go-Karts and Golf
- Nashville-Davidson
Two miniature golf courses, batting cages, and go-karts at a family-friendly complex with an indoor game room
The Crag at Cool Springs
- Franklin
Explore 6,500 sq. ft. of indoor climbing space with belay instruction and rental harness, shoes, and belay device
Prescott Golf Instruction
- Multiple Locations
PGA Level 3 apprentice adapts to each student's skill level and interest, focusing on anything from chipping technique to perfect putts
Juro Stables
- Mt. Juliet
Guided trail rides amble through forest and fields to uncover natural wonders at a pace that caters to riders’ experience levels
King's Creek Golf Club
- Spring Hill
Designed by Arnold Palmer, par 70 course seamlessly integrates three creeks, groves of trees, and bentgrass greens into 6,807-yard layout
Sugar Creek Carriages
- Downtown Nashville
Horse-drawn romantic rides hoof it through downtown Nashville with passengers snuggled away in a white limousine-style carriage
Xtreme Paintball Nashville
- Lebanon
Two outdoor fields set the stage for staff-monitored scenarios such as capture the flag and team elimination
Rod & Gun Guide Services
- Green Hills
Instructor with 30 years of angling experience teaches pupils to fly fish with provided gear during one- or two-hour lesson
Red Leg Action Sports
- Clarksville
Fortresses in wooded fields or inflatable bunkers make ideal terrain for speedball
Mammoth Cave Adventures
- Cave City
Ziplines whiz guests across leafy canopy outside of Mammoth Cave National Park before they free fall on a 70-foot drop
Bob White Springs
Learn the basics of fly-fishing in three-hour lessons at springs with its own hatchery
Recommended Outdoor Activities by Groupon Customers
Cheekwood's assemblage of botanical gardens stretches across more than 55 acres of verdant land, inviting members to explore its natural nexus of wooded streams, gentle pools, and stone grottoes. Visitors can appreciate Mother Nature's leafy hairline by weaving through Japanese, wildflower, and perennial gardens and cruising down avenues of crepe myrtles in lilac-powered lowriders. Green-thumbed guests can also admire each display's unique gardening style and exchange salutations with bursting seasonal flora. Guests can venture inside the 30,000-square-foot Georgian mansion to find Cheekwood's collection of decorative arts and Visions of the American West, a Wild West exhibition on display until May 4. The video-installation galleries explore Buffalo Bill's life and his legacy as Wild West icon and fearsome ventriloquist.
Boasting five all stars in the 2011 Prospect League, the Nashville Outlaws look to continue their ascent toward the top spot in the West Division. With the season coming down to the wire, contests against the first-place Quincy Gems (August 1–August 3) and league rivals the Dubois County Bombers (August 5–August 6) take on playoff implications, their stakes raised like a flag made of filet mignon. The slugging showdowns throw down at the recently renovated Dugan Field, where muscles flex under brilliant stadium lights on turf handsomely outfitted in team colors. Munch on two included hot dogs as the athletic action picks up speed, or use the meaty cylinders to get in some batting practice of your own, swinging at the nearest pair of disco-ball earrings.
When patrons step into Lanes, Trains, & Automobiles Entertainment Depot, playful noises jostle their senses: the crash of bowling pins, the decisive zaps of laser-tag guns, the thunder of colliding bumper cars. The center shelters a spectrum of friendly competition under one roof, but at the heart are 32 bowling lanes. During open-bowling hours and late-night cosmic bowling, touchscreens tally strikes and automatic bumpers shift up and down to accommodate different players in case they decide to somersault down the lane.
Nearby, up to 16 laser-tag soldiers duck behind barrels and walls splattered with neon paint in the 2,500-square-foot Lazer Station. In the Spinzone, black lights and colorful spotlights swivel around a central traffic signal, which dictates the stops, starts, and illegal U-turns of bumper cars.
In the arcade, patrons battle for champion status and pick of pizza toppings at air-hockey tables, skee-ball machines, and racing video games. Professional competitors face off on flat-screen TVs at Tailgaters, an on-site eatery slinging burgers and pizza. Eight VIP bowling lanes, a designated party zone, and a stage for live entertainment and karaoke act as peaceful dignitaries in the 4,500-square-foot restaurant as well.
At Sumner Skate Zone, disco balls shower the blue-and-white-checkered floor with sparkling patches of light. As the beat rolls onward, so too do the wheels of traditional, speed, and inline skates. Off the rink, an arcade room buzzes with the sounds of reckless point scoring and the giggles of ticklish joysticks.
During skating breaks, visitors can refuel on pizza, nachos, and cookies at the snack bar or peruse the center's stock of skating gear and accessories. Open-skate sessions, parties, and special events populate the arena on a daily basis. An afterschool program helps to ensure kids have a safe place to do their homework or discuss the impact of performance-enhancing drugs in the world of spelling bees.
Founded with the goal of transforming downtown Nashville into a compelling, culturally rich urban center, Nashville Downtown Partnership fosters a sense of community via fun-filled initiatives that showcase the city’s finest offerings, such as the tenth annual Downtown Home Tour. Participants on the tour get a chance to see a variety of chic private spaces, ogling unique floor plans with an emphasis on ultramodern design that whisk guests into the future without the disheveled hairdos inherent with leaps through the time-space continuum. The Partnership creates such interactive experiences to help introduce locals to the benefits of living in the center of Music City, such as having easy access to its hundreds of restaurants as well as sports and entertainment venues.
A real stock car roars around a banked oval track. As it navigates the chicanes and wrestles g-forces to the floor, a coach's voice crackles in the driver's ear. This isn’t the Indy 500; it's L.A. Racing. Featured on NBC Today in L.A., L.A. Racing's Adventure programs let would-be racers grip the wheel during fast-forward laps around a real track. This video shows the rubber meeting the road at Irwindale Speedway.
Inside, L.A. Racing's instructors educate new drivers with BlueTiger simulators, helping them get a feel for new tracks and learn to follow the proper line through turns. These practice cars feature realistic racing effects—engine vibrations, road-surface texture, bumping, and deer attacks, for example. Competition courses are available for drivers who want to take racing to the next level and master advanced techniques such as throttle control, trail braking, and passing.
