Due to the large number of ghosts they can hold, haunted houses are consistently scarier than cursed sleeping bags, possessed lean-tos, and ectoplasmic studio apartments. Explore spooky space with today's Groupon to Halloween Spook-trac-ula at the Texas Transportation Museum. Choose between the following options:
- For $5, you get one admission on October 29 (up to a $10 value).
- For $5, you get one admission on October 30 (up to a $10 value).
The event takes place from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. both days.
Back for its second year, the Halloween Spook-trac-ula scares souls and decorates the confines of the Texas Transportation Museum, which chronicles the history of San Antonio's transportation with a 1913 depot, model train layouts, and full-size engines, cars, and cabeese. An eerie Ghost Train will transport passengers to the depths of fear and back, and a haunted hayride totes fright-seekers around the grounds to witness the horrific, tremble-inducing decorations as they sit among possessed hay borrowed from zombie scarecrows. Visit the storyteller in the outdoor garden area to hear ghost stories, or catch a ride on the Train-sylvania Express to seek out the ghost of Dracula during his teenage phase as a train conductor. Although this event is sure to thrill and spook attendees of all ages, it is geared toward younger family members, shying away from typical blood, guts, and property tax displays.
Although the Texas Transportation Museum sometimes features a discounted price online, this Groupon still offers the best deal available.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Letter Writing
Deprived of modern inventions such as text messaging and screaming loudly, early humans were forced to deliver long communiqués through enveloped sheets of scrawled-on paper known as letters. Get in touch with an irrelevant past by honing your letter-writing skills with these handy tips:
Choose an Address: Postal workers are notoriously stingy about giving out addresses. Luckily, streets are lined with mailboxes, which are full of free mail covered in addresses. Select a few missives from each mailbox on your street and add them to your address collection.
Select your Greeting: The greeting lets the recipient know exactly where they stand with you. Though “My Dearest Abraham” might sound good on paper, “STOP THAT RIGHT NOW, KELLI" is statistically more accurate to your situation.
Work the Body: Just like the human body, the body of the letter contains all the important and/or gross information. Decide what kind of letter this is going to be—a love letter? A confession? A subpoena? Regardless of content, smother the thing with red lipstick kisses.
The Signature: Being the first one to end the letter is a sign of weakness. Keep writing until the reader gives up.
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