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Weekend Wayfarers

➽ ABOVE: This secret hideout “Connect” awaits at Fortlandia, the new exhibit now open at LADY BIRD JOHNSON WILDFLOWER CENTER in Austin. // RIGHT: A life-size Dinosaur Bob, one of dozens of STORYBOOK SCULPTURES on permanent display, towers over downtown Abilene.

Stop and smell the roses at these fall travel destinations in Texas and Oklahoma

WORDS ELIZABETH SMITH

AHHH, OCTOBER. AS THE AIR TURNS COOLER and beckons us outdoors, we can’t help but follow. To make the most of your autumn, think of the new season as a fresh opportunity to explore the world beyond your usual haunts—and beyond Dallas-Fort Worth. Fall head over heels for these underrated travel destinations in Texas and Oklahoma, offering special family events, exhibits and entirely new attractions ripe for exploring this October and November.

Plus, you’ll find each of these stops within a 3-hour drive from North Texas, so you can discover the natural beauty, cultural history and imaginative experiences all in one weekend.

SOUTH

LADY BIRD JOHNSON WILDFLOWER CENTER | AUSTIN

Founded in 1982 by its namesake—the Texas native and former first lady “Lady Bird” Johnson—in the Texas capital city, the wildflower center now spans 284 acres and bursts with wildlife, native trees and plants. You’ll see the variety of fall-blooming flowers, like fall aster and prairie goldenrod, for yourself when you come to play in Fortlandia, a collection of custom forts designed by local architects, designers and artists and open to the public for imaginative play Oct. 4, 2021, through Jan. 30, 2022.

The playhouse design from a group called the Masketeers was inspired by discarded masks—a recognizable symbol of the pandemic—which the group has reframed as a symbol of hope and environmental education. You’ll find six forts in the center’s Mollie Steves Zachry Texas Arboretum and a bonus fort along the Ann and Roy Butler Hike-and-Bike Trail at Lady Bird Lake.

In addition to the Fortlandia exhibit, kids can play on Fort Build, the wildflower center’s year-round build-your-own-fort nature play area, and on select Saturdays this fall, join free drop-in activities to learn about trees and leaves.

Whenever you visit, be sure to pack a picnic to eat al fresco, or grab a bite from the center’s on-site Wildflower Café. Admission is $12 for adults, $6 for children, and free for 4 and younger, and reservations open seven days in advance for daily admission from 9am–5pm.

Also included with admission: access to Silvana, an immersive light maze on display for the first time in North America. Starting in December, both the Silvana and Fortlandia exhibits light up at night for the Luminations series. // 512/232-0100; wildflower.org/fortlandia

WEST

NATIONAL CENTER FOR CHILDREN’S ILLUSTRATED LITERATURE | ABILENE

Plenty of happily-ever-afters begin in small towns, but more so than usual in Abilene, the official Storybook Capital of America and home to the National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature (NCCIL). The museum,

Spark!

their imagination

Celebrate and grow their inner inventor this Fall at Spark!Lab.

What is Spark!Lab?

This unique space offers children and their families an opportunity to create, innovate and problem solve, empowering kids to develop the skills and confidence they need for success today and in the future.

801 W. Irving Blvd., Irving, TX 75060 972-721-3700

Open Wednesday–Saturday, 10am–4pm

For more information and reservations:

irvingarchivesandmuseum.com

CREATIVE+INTEGRATED

approaches to speech + feeding therapy

Speech | Orofacial Myofunctional | Feeding Therapy

We believe in a multi-sensory holistic approach to therapy to meet individual needs.

SAFETY IS A PRIORITY

Our safety measures include:

+ Checking temperature at door + Wash hands upon entering and leaving + Clean and sanitize rooms between each client + All therapists and clients wear face shields

7002 Lebanon, Suite 102 Frisco, TX 75034 469-408-4634 • F: 972-618-1051 walkeztalkez@gmail.com walkeztalkez.com

Ads with © are © of Lauren Publications, Inc. 2021. ➽ ABOVE: Join in the social dancing, stickball games and more demonstrations at the CHOCTAW CULTURAL CENTER’s Living Village.

dedicated solely to the artwork of children’s picture book illustrators, debuts its latest exhibit Golden Legacy: 75 Years of Original Art from Golden Books on Oct. 14.

Remember those picture books with the golden foil on the spine? Visit the literature center, open Tuesday through Saturday, to discover more beautifully illustrated stories than you remember reading as a child. Family Fun Art Saturdays are on hiatus during the COVID-19 pandemic, so check back before your visit to see whether they’ve resumed.

Even more storybook characters await your arrival outside the museum in the form of bronze sculptures on display all around town. Dr. Seuss characters the Lorax, Yertle the Turtle, and Sam I Am from Green Eggs and Ham—they’re at Everman Park in downtown. Dinosaur Bob? You’ll find him towering over Cedar Street staring eye to eye with an orange Volkswagen Beetle.

You can find every one of the city’s collection of public storybook sculptures—the largest of its kind in America, with new sculptures added each year—by visiting the online adventure guide. Turn your sculpture-hunting into a friendly competition by downloading the GooseChase app, selecting Storybook Sculpture Scavenger

Hunt, and uploading selfies of your findings for points. Visit on Oct. 23 for From Castles to Clouds, a Saturday evening event featuring a walkthrough dragon experience at T&P Depot, a prince-princess procession down Cypress Street (costumes encouraged), the unveiling of a new kinetic sculpture and a preview of a 3D storybook mural called Flight of the Dragon. The night wraps up with an outdoor screening of How to Train Your Dragon in the Adamson-Spalding Storybook Garden. // 325/673-4586; nccil. org. 325/677-1161; ONE OF TYLER’S FAMOUS ROSES abilenecac.org

EAST TEXAS ROSE FESTIVAL | TYLER

Your travels east of Dallas-Fort Worth may typically halt in Canton (the flea market is legendary), but do yourself a favor by traveling deeper into the Piney Woods to Tyler— where during the 88th annual Texas Rose Festival Oct. 14–17, you can witness the colorful changing of the fall foliage and roses in bloom. (East Texas roses peak in two seasons: October and April.) The weekend-long festival features events, like the Rose Queen’s tea party, in and around the Tyler Rose Garden, the nation’s largest rose garden with more

than more than 35,000 rose bushes and 500 varieties of roses.

An elaborate pageantry of flowerthemed costumes honor the town’s history in the rose-growing industry. Don’t miss the Rose Parade on Saturday, Oct. 16, to see the gowns custom-designed by Jacob A. Climer, the Dallas-native costume designer for opera and theater who now lives in New York. The custom-made gowns for each lady of the festival’s royal court represents a different flower: calla lilies, tulips, hydrangea and so on. Stop by the Tyler Rose Museum to see even more gorgeous flower-covered dresses and headpieces from festivals dating back to 1933.

For more nostalgia-meets-familyentertainment, don’t miss the outdoor movie screening of Suspicion, a classic black-and-white film from 1941 starring Cary Grant, and the arts and crafts fair with pony rides and bounce houses in the kids zone, held at a city park with a newly renovated playground—and plenty of roses. // 903/593-6905; visittyler.com

NORTH

CHOCTAW CULTURAL CENTER | CALERA, OK

To truly honor Native American Heritage Month as a family this November, you can start by honoring the 14,000-year legacy of the Chahta people with a visit to the Choctaw Cultural Center. Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma’s brand new cultural center debuted in July 2021 in Calera, Oklahoma, a little more than an hour drive north of Dallas, with several interactive attractions and exhibits—each created from the Choctaw perspective— that make visit well worth the miles.

Discover a replica of an ancient spiritual mound at the center’s outdoor Living Village, along with traditional dancing and stickball game demonstrations on the field. A giant turtle (Luksi) welcomes families to the Luksi Activity Center, a children’s activity area with traditional Choctaw houses and a miniature forest to explore. The temporary exhibit now on view, Long Ago: Stories of the Choctaw People, delves deeper into the tribe’s history via artistry of oral storytelling and allows you to interact with stories themselves.

With a teaching kitchen for learning how to make traditional meals—and the Champuli Café with kid-friendly meal options for when they get hungry— there’s more than enough to fill a day before returning home. Visit the cultural center during open hours Wednesday through Sunday for the regular admission price of $12 for adults, $6 for children, and free for 3 and younger. // 833/7089582; choctawculturalcenter.com

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