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Visiting this Metro Park site is akin to stepping back into 1880s Ohio.
Guests can experience firsthand what life was like on an Ohio farm while costumed staff tend to pigs, geese, turkeys and horses near the big barn. A restored 1856 farmhouse is open for tours. And visitors can even help with chores such as washing clothes by hand or — gulp! — butchering chickens.
Admission and parking:
Information:
free. 614-8910700, metroparks.net
Acclaimed as one of the best family science centers in the country, COSI in downtown Columbus offers myriad hands-on exhibits and entertaining demonstrations.
Visitors can ride in a space capsule, make robots dance and even watch rats play basketball. COSI also features a giant-screen theater and a planetarium.
$15 (children ages 2-12) to $20; additional fee for movies and some exhibits; parking: $5.
614-2282674,
Admission:
cosi.org
Creamy, sweet goodness is excuse enough to visit an ice-cream factory.
But families who stop by the popular attraction can also participate in many free activities, including visiting an ice-cream museum, taking a factory tour, and feeding ducks and fishing in the catch-and-release mill pond.
Admission and parking:
Information:
free. 1-800-5895000, velveticecream.com
Visitors to the historical park will get a double — and doubly beautiful — dose of history.
Rock Mill, a grist mill built in 1824 on a rocky gorge high above Hocking River Falls, has been completely renovated and fitted with a replica 26-foot water wheel. Nearby sits pretty Rock Mill Covered Bridge, constructed in 1901, about four years before the mill stopped grinding grain.
Bibliophiles, young and old, will love visiting Columbus’ downtown library, which is marking the oneyear anniversary of its massive $35 million remodeling and expansion.
The expansion enlarged the original 1907 Carnegie Library, which still serves as a beautiful entryway to the modern and airy site.
Floor-to-ceiling windows in the new reading room provide a delightful view of the nearby Topiary Park, at 480 E. Town St. — itself a great family destination. The park features a rendition of Georges Seurat’s iconic painting “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte” — with every figure, including the monkey, rendered in sculpted yew plants. The living “painting” is surrounded
Perhaps central Ohio’s most natural and untouched park, it also includes the 4,769-acre Beck Preserve, the state’s largest state nature preserve.
On the 5,300-plus acres of Clear Creek, visitors find vast woodlands dotted with picturesque sandstone cliffs. The park, which is crisscrossed with beautiful ravines and creeks, is home to hundreds of animal and plant species, including Ohio’s last remaining populations of native rhododendron. Families can revel in nature’s beauty.
Admission and parking:
Information:
free. 614-8910700, metroparks.net
A short trip underground takes visitors millions of years back in time to when these natural caverns were formed by an underground river. Many eons later, but still hundreds of years ago, Wyandotte Indians are thought to have used the caverns as gathering places.
Present-day visitors can tour three levels of the cave, plus enjoy the “Animal Encounter” petting zoo, play miniature golf and mine for gems in an old-fashioned mining sluice.
free (children 3 or younger) to $9.95, plus fees for activities; parking: free.
Admission: Information:
740-5487917, olentangyindiancaverns.com
The county northwest of Columbus has one of the best collections of covered bridges — old and new — in the state, including four historic covered bridges and a historic steel-truss bridge.
Visiting the bridges, most of which are near the Big and Little Darby scenic rivers, can make for one of the most picturesque drives in central Ohio. For lunch, you can take a picnic and visit the nearby Milford Center Prairie, Bigelow Cemetery or Smith Cemetery state nature preserves or stop in one of several restaurants in Marysville or another nearby town.
937-6426279, coveredbridgefestival.com
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