MetroFamily Magazine April 2015

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CAM 64 ACT PS IVI & Find

Kicking It at Camp Summer camps for everyone in our Summer Camp Guide

in o TIE ur Sum S mer CAM Is P

sue

APRIL 2015

WELCOME SPRING WITH A LESSON IN GARDENING CZECH IT OUT: Find culture and fun at this Yukon dance hall

See our calendar for 135 fabulous events!


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guide...

The ultimate OKC family fun

Volume 18, Number 4

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE | APRIL 2015

46

EDITORIAL

Sarah Taylor–Publisher Hannah Schmitt–Managing Editor Lindsay Cuomo–Calendar Editor Heather Davis, Jennifer Sharpe, Mae Kiggins and Lindsay Cuomo– Contributing Writers Steffanie Halley and Emily Hart– Contributing Photographers

Find a camp for every interest and age in our Summer Camp & Activity Guide

HAVE A STORY OR BIG EVENT? We are all about family activities and fun in the OKC metro. If you have a story to share, let us know!

CONTACT THE TEAM AT 405-601-2081 or email info@metrofamilymagazine.com.

INTEGRIS FIT & FUN CAMP

DESIGN & SALES Stacy Noakes–Art Director Callie Collins–Marketing Director Athena Delce & Dana Price–Sales Kathy Alberty–Office/Distribution Shelly Sanderson–Business Development Circulation - 35,000 Also available as a digital edition at www.metrofamilymagazine.com Articles and advertisements in MetroFamily do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the magazine or Inprint Publishing, Inc.We do not assume responsibility for statements made by advertisers or editorial contributors.The acceptance of advertising by MetroFamily does not constitute an endorsement of the products, services, or information.We do not knowingly present any product or service which is fraudulent or misleading in nature. MetroFamily Magazine is a monthly magazine published by Inprint Publishing, Inc. 725 NW 11th, Suite 204 OKC, OK 73103 Office: 405-601-2081 Fax: 405-445-7509 info@metrofamilymagazine.com ©Inprint Publishing, Inc. 2015, All Rights Reserved.

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MARATHON MOM Our April Real Mom has a special connection with this month’s Memorial Marathon

PLUS... DON’T MISS ALL THIS

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CZECH IN FOR FUN Yukon Czech Hall buzzes with family fun and living history every Saturday night

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URBAN FARMING April is all about buying local produce and learning to grow some of your own

Get Involved in Autism Awareness Editor’s Picks: This Month’s Can’t-Miss Oklahoma Festivals

18 Explore Grove & Grand Lake

36 Learn about Kids Fest 2015 42 Mom Humor: Summer Camp Promises


r u o r e t En contestsig! to win b

Welcome FROM OUR EDITOR

This month, we help you make summer camp decisions, pull back the curtain on an Oklahoma dance hall & cultivate your interest in gardening.

Dear Mom and Dad, I love everything about this camp... except the campers. Love, Serina.” That’s one of dozens of letters included in a book I discovered recently called “P.S. I Still Hate It Here: More Kids’ Letters from Camp.” It’s the second book of camper letters from Diane Falanga, who was inspired to put the book together by her own daughter’s dramatic comments about camp. There’s no question camp can be a little tough on campers and their parents, especially overnight camps that take kids away from home for long periods of time. But reading through all the melodramatic correspondence in the book (the poison ivy! The mean counselors! The horrible food!) I was reminded of my own camp experiences and I realized all the kids featured in the book probably made it back home safely and managed to find some silver lining on that horrible rain cloud that seemed to hang over their time at camp. In doing some reading and digging up research for this issue, the benefits of summer camp became abundantly clear. Whether it’s a day camp nearby

or a sleepaway camp across the country, summer camp means meeting new friends, learning to be more independent and gaining new skills. Young campers are making decisions on their own for the first time and older campers are discovering a new side of life as they put away their phones and say goodbye to their tight group of friends for awhile. We’re so excited to share summer camp opportunities with you in this issue. While we know a lot of factors go into helping parents make a decision about sending kids to summer camp, we feel our Summer Camp & Activities Guide (on page 46) truly has something for everyone. Hannah Schmitt Editor

KIDS Y O J N E NTH O M S I FEST TH HER T O F O NS O T D N A NTS E V E L I APR e 22 s on pag r start Calenda

THERE WILL BE DOZENS OF OUTSTANDING DOOR PRIZES GIVEN AWAY AT KIDS FEST. LEARN MORE ON PAGE 36!

• Enter our April giveaways at www. metrofamilymagazine.com/contests

• We need your help!—We’re looking for one-of-a-kind dads to feature in our Dad Issue in June. If you know a dad who deserves some kudos in our magazine, email our editor at hannah@metrofamilymagazine and tell her why!

• Online Exclusive:

Stay Safe This Month—April is National Digging Awareness Month and we have special tips from Okie811 to help keep you and your family safe at www. metrofamilymagazine.com/safe-digging.

THIS MONTH’S COVER: Cover Kid Winner and Oklahoma City resident Chelsey P., 8, is the daughter of Leonel and Marivel P. Her favorite activities are painting, reading and playing soccer. Chelsey is wearing an outfit provided by Macy’s Quail Springs. Special thanks to the local department store for providing outfits for our Cover Kids winners.

! W WO

Photo: Emily Hart, www.ninaandbphotography.com


family buzz

We’re buzzing about

summer camp BY HANNAH SCHMITT MANAGING EDITOR

Sixteen-year-old Rebecca Hatton will leave her Edmond home this summer to spend two weeks at Kanakuk Kamps in Lampe, Missouri. As countless Oklahoma City kids prepare to pack up and head to summer camp, Rebecca reminds kids to keep an open mind and prepare to make new friends. “My camp friends are my best friends,” she said. “At camp, I feel the safest to be honest and open about the things I’m going through and how my year has really been. It’s a deeper level of friendships than what I have at school.” Rebecca’s mom, Kristen Hatton, has been sending her daughter away to camp since she was just 9 years old. While it wasn’t easy at first to watch her daughter go experience things without her, she said the benefits have been worth it. Kristen and Rebecca answered some questions for MetroFamily readers to help their kids get the most out of the summer camp experience.

MetroFamily: How did it feel to send your daughter away to camp for the first time? Kristen: You know, I wasn’t nervous only because I went to camp for five weeks every summer as a kid. I really knew the wonderful benefits of going to camp. I missed her, of course, but the benefits outweighed that and I knew the earlier I started sending her the better. It helps to remind yourself that you’ll miss them more than they’ll miss you.

“My camp friends are my best friends” MetroFamily: How do you pick the right camp for your child? Kristen: There are different things for everyone to consider. Do you want your kid to learn a new activity or skill? Go to a

PHOTOS COURTESY OF REBECCA HATTON

co-ed camp or an all girl or all boy camp? Everyone has to think about proximity and cost. But besides that, I would encourage parents to think about sending their kids to a camp where they won’t already know a lot of the people. Rebecca has not ever gone to camp with people from her hometown and that’s allowed her to make friends from all different parts of the country. When you send your kids off with people they don’t know, they have better opportunities to make new friends.

MetroFamily: What changes have you seen in your kids due to their camp experiences? Kristen: I see a lot of positive changes. They have stronger friendships and more accountability that stays with them all year. I feel like it’s helped all three of my kids (she also has two sons, ages 11 and 13) grow and mature in ways they might still get out of life otherwise but camp has given them a lot more of it at an earlier age. They’ve grown to be adventurous and independent through camp.

Sounding Off on Sleepaway Camp The American Camp Association estimates more than 11 million people will go to camp this summer. The association also reports of the more than 12,000 camps available in the U.S., about 47 percent of them are overnight camps. We asked our Facebook fans their thoughts on how old kids should be before attending sleepaway camp. Here are a few of their responses: Megan C.: My daughter is going to marine biology camp this summer in California and she’s 10. METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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Geoff E.: It depends on the kid and the camp. My kids started going to Kanakuk for a month each summer at age 8. My wife did the same when she was a kid so we felt safe sending our kids there. Jenifer B.: 12, unless accompanied by a parent. Leesa C.: It is hard to guess. My oldest kids are 8, and I wouldn’t send them now. We are comfortable with day camps at this point. Tara N.: I was 11 and it was really, really hard on me. It took me four of the six days to stop feeling horribly homesick. (Oodles of sleepovers before that though.) Probably it depends on the kid!


Autism Awareness Month BY HANNAH SCHMITT

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he Centers for Disease Control & Prevention reports one in 68 children in the U.S. has been diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. April is Autism Awareness Month and the Oklahoma City metro boasts endless opportunities to help raise awareness and meet the needs of the growing number of children affected by autism.

“A great way to build awareness is to really challenge our community to think differently about people with autism so everyone can be a better participant in the community,” said Melinda Lauffenburger, the executive director of Autism Oklahoma and a parent of a child with autism. Autism Oklahoma is a nonprofit dedicated to making Oklahoma more autismfriendly and aware. The organization helps Oklahoma natives with autism find support and care. The organization started in 2002 with just two families. The organization now reaches about 4,000 families in Oklahoma. Oklahoma is one of a handful of states that hasn’t passed insurance reform to provide autism treatment within the state. Because proven treatment for autism cannot be covered by insurance in Oklahoma, Lauffenburger said the families in our state are at a disadvantage when it comes to accessing professionals and treatments for autism. “We have to challenge our community to think differently,” she said. “We have to help each other. It’s just a situation where families work together to support each other to help our kids to reach their full potential.” Lauffenburger has seen the difference support has made in the life of her own daughter, Joy Lauffenburger. Diagnosed at 7 years old, Joy is now a 22-year-old biology major at the University of Central Oklahoma. Lauffenburger learned early on her daughter needed a support team of family members, medical professionals and therapists to help her reach full potential.

PHOTO COURTESY OF AUTISM OKLAHOMA

Lauffenburger recommends parents who have just had an autism diagnosis in the family start out by joining a parent support group, which can be found at www. autismoklahoma.org. A support group is helpful for parents to find local tools and resources. “It’s an isolating disorder for the whole family,” she said of autism. “It’s isolating for the individual with autism, for the siblings and for the parents and extended family. It can be life changing for the whole family when you have a support network around you.” Those looking for ways to get involved in raising autism awareness can start by participating in the largest autism awareness event in Oklahoma, the PieceWalk & 5K. About 8,000 people are expected to participate in the event that starts at 7:30 a.m. May 2 at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark. The event includes a resource fair and family-friendly activities like live music and bounce houses. Learn more and register for the event at www.piecewalk.org. Autism Oklahoma is looking for volunteers for the PieceWalk & 5K. The organization has about 400 volunteer opportunities available throughout the year for individuals looking to give back and support the cause. Sign up for these opportunities at www. autismoklahoma.org. Looking for more local autism resources? Easter Seals Oklahoma is another organization doing powerful things for kids with special needs. Read about their new Peer Integration Program at www. metrofamilymagazine.com/EasterSeals/.

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get out!

There’s plenty to explore when you get outdoors with the OKC Parks & Recreation Department.

FREE FISHING CLASSES For youth ages 5-15 8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Edwards Park Lake May 9, June 13, July 11 Crystal Lake May 16, July 25 South Lakes Park May 23 Metro Tech Spring Lake June 20, July 18 Dolese Youth Park Pond June 27

Call 405-297-1426 to sign up!

Martin park nature Center Adventurers of all ages love the wooded trails and programs at Martin Park Nature Center. • Nature Story Time • Nature Play Dates • Weekend Trips and Excursions • Full Moon Hikes Programs for scouting, singles and homeschool groups. PLUS! Sign your child up for a nature birthday party. Visit www.okc.gov/parks or call 405-297-1429 for information.

@okcparks For more information about programs and activities, call 405-297-2211

Editor’s Picks: Can’t-Miss Festivals Just Outside OKC

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pril is festival season in Oklahoma. Warmer temperatures kick off a month of outdoor events like arts festivals, live music and living history demonstrations. While there are plenty of festivals to be found in Oklahoma City, these four April festivals are worth the drive.

Choctaw Frontier Days April 23-24

Choctaw Creek Park Harper St. between N.E. 10th St. and N.E. 23rd St., Choctaw 390-8198 Why We Love It: The 12th annual Choctaw Frontier Days celebration will take visitors back to pioneer days in Oklahoma with Land Run re-enactors, cowboy and cavalry encampments, mock gun fights and old-fashioned games. The living history event is family friendly and presents learning opportunities for guests of all ages. Enjoy food and merchandise vendors on site. Admission and parking are free. Event takes place 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday and Friday.

Azalea Festival April 1-30

Honor Heights Park W. Shawnee & N. 48th Streets, Muskogee 918-684-6302 Why We Love It: Inspire your family this month with a trip to Muskogee to see thousands of blooming tulips and sprawling azaleas, dogwoods and wisteria. Honor Heights Park welcomes thousands of visitors each April to soak up 40 picturesque acres. The highlights of the month-long celebration of spring include the Azalea Festival Parade at 11 a.m. April 11 in downtown Muskogee and the Party in the Park from 1:30 to 6:30 p.m. April 18 at Honor Heights Park.

Stillwater Arts Festival April 18-19

April 25 & 26

Kirkpatrick Family Farm 1001 S. Garth Brooks Blvd., Yukon 834-1876

Downtown Stillwater 405-747-8070 Why We Love It: The arts scene in Stillwater is alive and well. Visit this annual festival to see some of the best in arts and entertainment from throughout the region. Your family will love strolling the festival grounds to hear local music, view live art demonstrations and taste classic festival fare. Organizers expect about 10,000 visitors so don’t miss your chance to experience it. Admission is free. Event will take place from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

Iron Thistle Scottish Festival

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Why We Love It: Give your family a taste of Scotland with Celtic bands, Irish dance troupes, sheep herding demonstrations and tons of traditional Scottish foods. The event has something for all ages and interests and makes visitors feel as if they’ve traveled across the globe. The highlight of the three-day event is the traditional fire ceremony on Friday night. Friday festivities are free. General admission Saturday is $5; free for ages 9 and under. Friday gates open at 6:30. Other festivities take place 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.



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in the Yukon area over the past century. It became a place where the area’s European immigrants, their families and friends could come together and celebrate a world they created in Oklahoma but fashioned after the world they left behind.

“A member of my family has been in the band since before Oklahoma became a state,” Masopust said.

Though the Yukon community has changed over time, the Hall continues to serve as a social center for Czech-American culture. For the past eight decades, Saturday nights at Czech Hall have been filled with music, dancing and cheer. The tradition continues when the hall opens its doors each Saturday night from 8 to 11:30 p.m.

f you’re looking for a unique piece of Oklahoma history to explore with your family, look no further than the stage inside Yukon Czech Hall. It’s where you’ll find Davis Masopust playing with the Masopust Polka Band every other weekend as locals dance.

The Masopust Polka Band and The Bohemian Knights are the two house bands at the dance hall and they alternate playing on stage on Saturday nights for the hall’s weekly family dance. The stage is located inside a dusty off-white building with a red roof just south of Yukon. Inside the historic building, visitors find a shiny dance floor that’s been scuffed by the dancing shoes of Czech immigrants and Oklahoma natives since 1899. Yukon’s Czech Hall hosts live music and dancing every Saturday night. The Hall got its start as part of the prominent Czech community that settled

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METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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“Czech music is family music,” said Elaine Benda, Czech Hall committee member. “Our dance is something the whole family can do together. You can eat together and dance together.” The Hall’s come-as-you-are policy means everyone is welcome. “You don’t have to be Czech,” promises Benda. “Just come and explore our music and our culture.” Since its establishment in 1899, well before the weekly dances, music played an important role at Yukon Czech Hall. The Hall’s reputation made it a popular stop for


Yukon was designated the Czech Capital of Oklahoma in 1968 by Governor Dewey Bartlett due to the large number of Czech people who moved to the area in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Oklahoma Czechs, Inc. presents an annual Czech Festival to celebrate Yukon’s heritage and teach young people about Czech culture. The event is hosted the first Saturday in October and features Czech music at an outdoor concert, authentic Czech dinners, homemade kolaches, a carnival and parade. Just like the weekly dances at Czech Hall, the event preserves the history and shares the precious traditions of Czech heritage.

bands from the area and throughout the country. Today, the two house bands sometimes share the stage with other traveling bands, but guests are sure to get an earful of Czech heritage regardless of when they visit. The bands cycle through many polka standards but mix in a variety of other styles including waltzes, swings, folk dances and even modern pop tunes. The Masopust Band uses a tuba to accentuate the bass in their sounds while the Bohemian Knights highlight the accordion. Even if you are unfamiliar with the Czechs’ rich musical history, you will find yourself recognizing many of the tunes the bands play. They even play the ever popular “Chicken Dance,” a favorite of young kids at the event. “Kids can see the instruments and musicians up close,” shares Benda. “The whole family gets in some physical activity while they have some fun.” The volunteers are even willing to throw in some dance lessons.

regulars strive to win each year. The hall also offers family-friendly dances on New Year’s Eve, Valentine’s Day, Czech Day and Masopust, the Czechs’ Mardi Gras celebration. The dance hall serves up delightful concessions depending on the occasion. Families can expect everything from popcorn and cookies on some nights to traditional Czech food on others. Special celebrations at the venue include ice cold beer and wine coolers for adults and kolaches and kielbasa sandwiches for the whole family to get a taste of Czech life. The Hall got its start in 1899 when the members of Lodge Sokol Karel Halicek and Western Fraternal Life Association Lodge Jan Zizka No. 67 joined together to create a place for social gatherings. Today, the Hall still is run by volunteers and the efforts of these two organizations. Through their efforts, the long-standing tradition of the polka dances is still going strong when many others like it have long since vanished.

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“If you are interested in learning some traditional Czech dances, feel free to call ahead,” offers Benda. “Several club members are happy to share their skills.” Several times throughout the year, the Hall hosts special dances with extra festivities. Their Halloween dance features a costume contest that many

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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Brought to you by:

APRIL 2015

The Tristesse Grief Center and the Tulsa Office of New York Life


The volunteers are honored to share their culture with the community just as their parents and grandparents did. “It’s our turn now,” shares Benda. “The Hall is like our second home. Many of us grew up here.” Beyond music, dancing and community events, the volunteers work hard to preserve and share their culture. The Hall is also home to the Czech Cultural Museum showcasing local history and ethnic customs. Learn about traditional toys, recipes, national dress and more through the displays. The building itself is a testament to the rich story of the Czech culture. The lengthy tradition combined with the personal stories makes Czech Hall more than just a meeting place. The essence of what the Hall means to the community is perfectly described in the words written in their historical account of the hall: “It’s a breathing spirit of the people.”

LaVerna Benda, Elaine’s mom, shared these words about what Czech Hall meant to her in a community story written in 1999 about the Hall’s 100th anniversary. “I’ve been coming here since I was born. Now I’m one of the ones who is helping, doing everything I can to keep this tradition going. I’ll sit here and think about all the people I have known, the last 60 years. They’re gone, yet their spirit lingers. We hope we can keep this Czech Hall going another 100 years.”

Admission is $5 for anyone 14 and older. Czech Hall is 2.5 miles south of I-40 on Cornwell Drive, also known as Czech Hall Road. Call 721-4396 if you want dance lessons and check www.czechhall.com for updates about special events and activities at the venue. BY LINDSAY CUOMO

“Czech music is family music.”

“Most of the Czechs you talk to will tell you how they grew up here,” Benda said. “My parents met and got married here.”

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Real moms of the metro

Meet Jennifer Walker

BY JENNIFER SHARPE - CONTRIBUTING WRITER PHOTOS BY STEFFANIE HALLEY www.steffaniehalley.com


Join us for a fun-filled Summer of Dance!

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n the days leading up to the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon this month, countless runners will visit the “In Honor Of” booth set up by the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum to honor victims of the April 19, 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building. There, they will likely be greeted by a 15-year-old boy with the first name Walker who will flip through binders containing the photos and bios of the 168 people who were killed in the bombing. Walker is there to help the runner select someone to honor with their run and write the name of that victim on a slip of paper that will be pinned to their back during the race. Walker will feel good about volunteering his time to the cause, but will feel an especially powerful bond with any runner who elects to have the name “David Walker” scrawled on their back during the race. Although they never met, David is his grandfather and his namesake. Walker’s mom, Jennifer Walker, describes herself as a “daddy’s girl” who was a high school senior when her dad died in the bombing. Today, she volunteers at various race-related events with her son and her 10-year-old daughter, Graecin. “He’s been volunteering so long he kind of knows all the victims,” Jennifer said of her son. “He can give a rundown of the different jobs—like this person was in the military, this was a dad or a grandparent—and it’s really impacted him to know it’s not just Granddad who was murdered. There were so many people from every walk of life and it’s helped him understand the magnitude of the loss.” After the death of her dad, Jennifer went on to earn a degree in health and sport science from the University of Oklahoma and considered going to medical school. Instead, her life took on a new focus when she became pregnant unexpectedly with her son. “I call my son my angel,” Jennifer said. “The only way to honor my dad is to raise my son the way that I was raised.” That means pointing her kids to God in everything, she said. In addition to volunteering at the marathon, Jennifer and her kids attend LifeChurch together and volunteer their time with many church efforts, including City Rescue Mission, the holiday Giving Tree and the Pasta for Pennies fundraiser. Mirroring her dad’s love of education and federal work, Jennifer has returned to the classroom after many years as a financial

WALKER AND GRAECIN STA THEIR GRANDFATHER’S CHAIRND AT MEMORIAL’S FIELD OF EMPTY AT THE CHAIRS.

advisor and insurance agent. She’s a student at the University of Central Oklahoma studying criminal justice and forensic sciences with hopes of working in a crime scene unit for the FBI. “I enjoy the puzzles at the crime scene; I enjoy helping solve those,” Jennifer said. “I’m drawn to the idea of helping victims be able to move past a stage, and go on to the next stage in healing.”

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Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum Executive Director and Race Director of the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon Kari Watkins said Jennifer and her kids are just a few of the countless volunteers working to carry on the legacy of family members by volunteering their time and energy to the run. “Jennifer, like our many volunteers,” Kari said, “believes that one person can make a difference and she is willing to prove it with her kindness, helpfulness and non-stop energy for the Memorial Marathon.” The Memorial Marathon is scheduled for April 26. On race day, Jennifer can be found helping wherever she’s needed just as she has in years past. “There’s still a lot of pain and a lot of sadness there,” Jennifer said, “but it doesn’t run the show. I am in charge of either dwelling on it or moving on.” Jennifer and her kids are just a few of the hundreds of volunteers who make the Memorial Marathon a success each year. Volunteer opportunities still are open in several areas including the Health & Fitness Expo, Runner Registration, Start and Finish Line Set-Up/Breakdown, Course Marshals and Gear Check. To learn more about volunteer opportunities, visit www.okcmarathon.com/volunteer/ METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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This year marks the 20th anniversary of the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. To mark the occasion, the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum is asking Oklahoma residents to recommit to the Oklahoma Standard. On April 19, 1995, all eyes turned to Oklahoma City, where in the midst of tragedy the people of the city banded together in selflessness and service. That spirit of generosity became known as the Oklahoma Standard. In every hardship since, the community has continued to display this spirit of spontaneous altruism. The National

Memorial & Museum staff is asking locals to remember the fallen this month by committing an act of service, honor and kindness that celebrates the Oklahoma Standard. They’re asking community members to reach out in these ways: • Service means giving your time to someone in need. This could mean volunteering at a soup kitchen, or tutoring a student. • Honor the victims and survivors of the 1995 bombing, by visiting the Memorial Museum, cheering at the Memorial Marathon or leaving a token of appreciation on a chair in the Memorial.

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• Kindness involves everything from holding a door for a stranger to cleaning up your neighbor’s leaves.


Jennifer lost her dad in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building 20 years ago.

dig deep!

Here’s how she carries his legacy through her kids: How has motherhood changed you? I grew up the baby of five girls so I was spoiled with a tendency to be a bit selfish. Once I became a mommy, that all went out the window. My children are my world and there isn’t anything I wouldn’t do for them.

What is your favorite quote about parenting? For my own struggles as a single mom I find encouragement in the Philippians 4:13: “I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength.” For my children, I always speak Philippians 1:9 over them: “I pray that your love will overflow more and more, and that you will keep on growing in knowledge and understanding.”

What are five words that describe you? Christ-centered mother of two.

How do you find balance? I find balance doing what I love: acts of service, especially when my children can do it with me.

What is your biggest challenge? Letting others help with my family. My kids are not a challenge because they’re gifted academically and have good behavior.

What is your parenting style? I take a biblical approach to parenting. I try to raise children who are independent, only dependent on God and are loving, strong, educated and service-minded.

What is on your wish list? That no one would ever break my children’s hearts.

What’s currently on your playlist? Mostly Hillsong United.

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June 1-5 June 22-26 Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. - Plant a container garden - Create gardening crafts - Learn basic garden design - Explore the world of insects For ages 7-11 Cost: $125 per child/per session Snacks provided. Campers must bring a brown bag lunch and drink.

Register online at www.okc.gov/active Will Rogers Gardens 3400 NW 36th St Oklahoma City, OK 73112 405-297-1392

@okcparks For more information about programs and activities, call 405-297-2211

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exploring oklahoma with children

Welcome SPRING at Grand Lake BY MAE KIGGINS - CONTRIBUTING WRITER

PHOTO COURTESY OF GRAND LAKE ASSOCIATION

Beautifully situated on the banks of Grand Lake O’ The Cherokees, Grove offers an array of activities that will satisfy the outdoor enthusiast, the history buff or the casual sightseer. Only three hours from Oklahoma City, the charming Oklahoma town is close enough for a day trip but offers plenty of activities to keep you entertained for days. We sent OKC outdoor enthusiast Mae Kiggins to explore the area with her two kids and report back on the top family destinations.


Coming Soon... Grand Lake O’ The Cherokees State Park Swimming, jet skiing, parasailing, cruising and sailing are just a few of the activities available on the 46,000 acres of water at Grand Lake. The 1,300 miles of shoreline make it a perfect destination for young swimmers who just want to dip a toe or do a little splashing. The water is surrounded by three state recreation areas offering hiking trails, picnic areas, public restrooms, new playgrounds, camping, docks and plenty of options for fishing. The following information can help you determine which area is right for your family.

Honey Creek Area This recreation area is located in the town of Grove. It is beautifully wooded and surrounded by the lake on two sides. Don’t miss the flowering dogwoods and redbuds scattered along the hiking trails in the spring. Other activities include a swimming pool, new playground, docks, plenty of lakeside picnic areas and restrooms. This area is located at 901 State Park Rd. in Grove and can be reached at 918-786-9447.

Bernice Area The highlights of this recreation area are a beautiful nature center, a paved hiking trail with stunning lake views and a swimming area ideal for hot days. This area is perfect for stopping by on your way into Grove from Oklahoma City, as it is located about 17 miles northwest of Grove. The nature center here offers many interactive exhibits and a chance for your kids to learn about Oklahoma’s native ecosystems. They have some live animals and the park naturalists are happy to answer questions. The naturalists can also give visitors directions to the wildlife feeding area and viewing towers along the nature trails.

Spring Break Camps!

June - August

Each themed camp includes • Art lessons • • Games • • Stories • • Music • • Activities • And ton of smiles, laughs and FUN!

Call ahead during the off season to check the nature center’s hours. Just across the parking lot from the nature center is the hiking trail. The trail is paved, making it great for wheelchairs and strollers. (Bonus: the kids don’t get as dirty walking on a paved trail.) This area is located at 54101 E. Hwy 85 A in Bernice and can be reached at 918-257-8330.

Twin Bridges Area

PHOTOS ON THIS PAGE BY MAE KIGGINS

One unique feature of this recreation area is the camping huts. They aren’t furnished but they do offer more protection from the elements than a tent. They are equipped with lights, a fan and a picnic table inside and a barbecue grill, fire pit and picnic table outside. The huts are set up on the bluff above the lake, but the steep banks are fenced so kids are less likely to fall and get hurt. The new playground is right next to campground and the restrooms are some of the cleanest your family will ever encountered at campgrounds. Call ahead for hut reservations. This area is located at 14801 S. Hwy 137 in Fairland and can be reached at 918-542-6969.

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Voted Best Art Studio/ Art Lessons


Grove is the largest town on Grand Lake. It is the recreation hub for its eastern shore. Downtown Grove offers an array of shopping and free parking. It is the perfect place to pick up a souvenir or last-minute fishing gear. Here are some of the top spots you should consider visiting on your Grand Lake vacation.

Har-Ber Village Har-Ber Village is an interactive museum that takes visitors back to Oklahoma during the mid-1800s to early 1900s with relocated historic buildings, trade demonstrations and hands-on activities for kids. Nicely situated on the shores of Grand Lake, there are plenty of open spaces for picnics and enjoying the outdoors. Many of the exhibits have been recently renovated to include more activity stations for kids. On April 24-25, the Village hosts Civil War Days. Visitors will meet soldiers from both the Union and Confederate camps and see demonstrations on life for soldiers and civilians during the Civil War. Friday is mainly for school groups while Saturday’s event is for the public.

Can’t make it to Grove this spring? Plan a trip this summer or fall to catch one of these exciting events: On June 6, Har-Ber Village will host Cherokee Heritage Days. This event is a wonderful opportunity to learn more about the history of the Cherokee Nation. Visitors will enjoy Cherokee music, games and traditional crafts. Har-Ber Village adds to the historical feel and with more than 100 buildings, there is something for everyone. For more information visit www.har-bervillage.com.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF HAR-BER VILLAGE

Grove hosts its largest annual event, the Pelican Festival, on Oct. 9-10. The Festival celebrates the migration of the American White Pelican to Grand Lake. This year, the festival will be hosted at the Wolf Creek Park and Boating Facility. The event includes a plethora of local arts and crafts vendors housed in a large tent, a carnival boasting beautiful lake views from the top of the Ferris Wheel and plenty of family-friendly entertainment including a parade and a car and motorcycle show. Har-Ber Village will be offering free admission for the entire day and the Queen Paddleboat will be running pelican watch tours for a fee. The Pelican Festival is a fun-filled event for the whole family.


Lendonwood Gardens This eight-acre botanical garden is a mustsee for Grove visitors. It offers six distinct gardens, each with its own theme and unique vegetation. The garden boasts 250 varieties of rhododendrons that bloom during April and May. There are plenty of benches and

pavilions for relaxing and getting out of the sun. The garden is free but a $5 donation is recommended. It is open year-round during daylight hours. Find more information at www.lendonwood.com.

PHOTO COURTESY OF LENDONWOOD GARDENS

Zena Suri Alpacas If you are looking for a unique experience, this is the place. The farm offers tours of the facilities where you meet, feed and touch unique farm animals. The facility is home to more than 60 alpacas and a handful of llamas. All the animals are well-trained and tours are available to fit almost any schedule. Whether you have 20 minutes or 2 hours, you will learn more about and get to know these gentle animals. The mission of the farm is teaching, learning and enjoying

alpacas and llamas. Tours are free for families and small groups. Call ahead to schedule large groups. After the tour, relax in a rocking chair on the front porch, enjoy a picnic on the grounds or browse the gift shop for alpaca products. The farm is in Zena, about seven miles from Grove. If you can’t make it out to the farm, stop by their shop in Grove called Fuzzy to Fabulous. Find more information at www.zenasurialpacas.com.

Queen Paddleboat Rides For a one-of-a-kind experience, board an old-fashioned paddleboat for a sight-seeing tour with the family. This is the perfect activity for a spring or summer visit (it is closed during the winter months). The Queen has been offering tours on Grand Lake since 1945. Call 918-786-4272 for information and tour times. When traveling to Grove, keep in mind that I-44 is a toll road. Bring cash and change if you don’t have a Pike Pass. You will be charged every time you exit, even if it is just for bathroom breaks. If you are looking for a day or weekend trip, consider Grove and Grand Lake O’ The Cherokees. You won’t be disappointed. Happy trails!

Northeast Oklahoma’s

GREEN COUNTRY

PHOTO BY MAE KIGGINS

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GreenCountryOK.com


calendar

april

events this

OUR CALENDAR MAKES IT EASY TO FIND FAMILY FUN IN OKC. FIND MORE AT WWW.METROFAMILYMAGAZINE.COM/CALENDAR

89ER DAYS—APRIL 14-19

The annual 89er Days Celebration in Downtown Guthrie commemorates the Land Run of 1889 and the birth of Guthrie. The five-day celebration features a Chuckwagon Feed with a complete western-style dinner. It also features plenty of music you can tap your toes to, a huge midway-themed carnival, 1889-style baseball game, a festive parade, an action-packed rodeo, classic cars and motorcycle display and old-fashioned barn dance. Your kids will love going back in time at this exciting historic experience. Most events are FREE. Tuesday-Sunday. Hours vary. MORE INFORMATION: WWW.89ERDAYS.COM PHONE: 282-2589 Photo courtesy of 89er Days

KIDS FEST—APRIL 18

Kids Fest 2015 at Cox Convention Center (1 Myriad Gardens) is MetroFamily Magazine’s annual family event with dozens of booths featuring fun and educational activities for kids. Booths will feature hands-on experiences for your kids to enjoy while you learn about unique family-friendly services and attractions in the metro area. Bring your kids to pet exotic animals, explore a real ambulance and even meet their favorite princess or super hero. Enjoy the Safety Village hosted by Safe Kids Oklahoma, along with face painting, roaming characters, door prizes and live music. Adults, $5; children are FREE. Find coupon for adult admission on page 36. 11am-4pm. www.metrofamilymagazine.com/kids-fest MORE INFORMATION: WWW.METROFAMILYMAGAZINE.COM Photo courtesy of MetroFamily Magazine

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calendar FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS—APRIL 21-26

Since 1967, Arts Council Oklahoma City’s Annual Festival of the Arts at Festival Plaza & the Myriad Gardens (301 W Reno) has been the city’s “rite of spring.” The 49th annual Festival of the Art promises to continue this rich tradition. Every year, the Festival attracts up to 750,000 people over six days with FREE admission, amazing art from more than 200 artists, fantastic food, exciting entertainment and fun activities. The Youth Plaza will include many activities for children and families like face painting, the Youth Art Sale, Young at Art Mart and the Children’s Art Field. All proceeds support Arts Council Oklahoma City’s yearround, free and low-cost programming. Tuesday-Saturday, 11am-9pm; Sunday, 11am-6pm. MORE INFORMATION: WWW.ARTSCOUNCILOKC.COM PHONE: 270-4848 Photo courtesy of Arts Council OKC

OKC MEMORIAL MARATHON—APRIL 26

Voted one of the 12 ‘must-run’ marathons in the world by Runner’s World magazine, the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon is a huge annual attraction in downtown Oklahoma City. From its inaugural race in 2001 with just shy of 5,000 participants, this year’s race is expected to host more than 25,000 runners and walkers from every state and several countries. Featuring a full, half & relay marathon, a Memorial 5K and a kids marathon, the mission is to celebrate life and honor the memories of those who were killed in the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. The race is the largest fundraiser for the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum. Race begins at 6:30am at 5th and Harvey Avenue and ends at 7th and Broadway. MORE INFORMATION: WWW.OKCMARATHON.COM Photo courtesy of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum

FESTIVAL OF THE CHILD—MAY 2

Yukon comes alive for children and families at the Festival of the Child at the Yukon City Park & the Yukon Community Center (2200 S Holly Ave). This one-day event celebrates children with more than 50 areas of fun activities including kayaking, moon bounces, crafts, pony rides and storytelling. The event will even feature a special area designed just for toddlers. Don’t miss this chance to celebrate children in the Oklahoma City metro with special attractions just for them. Activities are hosted rain or shine and are geared for kids 12 & under. Admission is $5 in advance and $7 the day of the event. Adults are FREE. MORE INFORMATION: WWW.CITYOFYUKONOK.GOV PHONE: 354-8442

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events this THROUGH APRIL 9 Cinderella Confidential at Oklahoma Children’s Theatre (2501 N Blackwelder Ave) features a twist on the classic fairy tale as two investigative reporters compete for the scoop of the century. Adults, $10; Students, $8; Kids (2-12), $7. See website for show times. 606-7003, www.oklahomachildrenstheatre.org

THROUGH APRIL 11 Jackie and Me at Oklahoma Children’s Theatre (2501 N Blackwelder Ave) features the story of 10-year-old Joey as he meets one of baseball’s greatest players, Jackie Robinson. Adults, $12; Students, $10; Kids (2-12), $9. See website for show times. 606-7003, www.oklahomachildrenstheatre.org

APRIL 2 • THURSDAY Alton Brown Live! The Edible Inevitable Tour at Civic Center Music Hall (201 N Walker) features a two-hour extravaganza that is fun for the whole family with musical numbers that take a comedic look at food. $42.50, $57.50. 8pm. www.altonbrowntour.com

APRIL 3 • FRIDAY Oklahoma City Blue vs Idaho Stampede at Cox Convention Center (1 Myriad Gardens). Ticket prices vary. 7pm. 208-4800, www.nba.com/ dleague/oklahomacity Ariana Grande, The Honeymoon Tour at Chesapeake Energy Arena (100 W Reno) features pop music’s biggest star of the year on her first North American headlining tour. $26.50 - $66.50. 7:30pm www.chesapeakearena.com

APRIL 4 • SATURDAY FREE Annual Easter Egg-stravaganza at Southern Hills United Methodist Church (8200 Penn Ave) features a traditional Easter egg hunt with separate hunts for different age groups ranging from toddlers to age 12. Lunch will be provided. 10am-noon. 681-5515. FREE Made in Oklahoma Festival in Downtown Seminole (Main St, Seminole) features food, wine, crafts and a number of other products that are Oklahoma grown and Oklahoma made. Children can enjoy jumping in the inflatables and parents can stop by the popular wine-tasting tent to sample locallyproduced wines. 9am-5pm. 382-3640, www. seminoleokchamber.org

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Easter Egg Hunt at Myriad Botanical Gardens (301 W Reno). The Children’s Garden will be dotted with hidden eggs, two of which are special prize eggs containing a $200 SaveAbles Kids Club account with Tinker Federal Credit Union. Preregister. Members, $5; Non-members, $10. Ages 4 & under, 10am; ages 5-10, 10:30am. 4457080, www.oklahomacitybotanicalgardens.com FREE Easter Celebration at the Chickasaw Cultural Center (867 Cooper Memorial Rd, Sulphur) features make and take crafts, an appearance by the Easter Bunny and an egg hunt. The hunts are separated by age and begin around 1 p.m. 10am-5pm. 580-622-7130, www. chickasawculturalcenter.com FREE Story Hour at Cuppies & Joe (727 NW 23rd St). Children listen to a story while parents enjoy coffee and conversation. Also held April 18. 10-11am. 528-2122, www.cuppiesandjoe.com Easter Celebration at Orr Family Farm (14400 S Western Ave) includes three Easter egg hunts for children 11 years old & younger throughout the day as well as pictures with the Easter Bunny and general admission activities. Egg hunts at 11:30am, 1:30pm & 3:30pm. $10.50. 10am-6pm. 799-3276, www.orrfamilyfarm.com FREE Easter Egg Hunt at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church (10600 N Council Rd) features an egg hunt and a carnival as well as a visit from the Easter Bunny and lunch. For kids through 5th grade. 11am. 721-0590, www.stpaulsokc.com Doggie Easter Egg Hunt at Myriad Botanical Gardens (301 W Reno) features an egg hunt for the pooches. Some eggs will have treats and some will have pup prize stickers. Preregister. Members, $5; Non-members, $10. 3pm. 445-7080, www.oklahomacitybotanicalgardens.com FREE Migratory Birds Discussion at Martin Park Nature Center (5000 W Memorial Rd). Kids and adults are invited to learn more about the challenges that face migratory birds. 3-3:45pm. 297-1429, www.okc.gov/parks Bird Egg Hunt at Martin Park Nature Center (5000 W Memorial Rd). Learn what wild bird eggs look like while you hunt for replicas of real bird eggs. $5. Preregister. 3-5pm. 297-1429, www. okc.gov/parks Easter Train at the Oklahoma Railway Museum (3400 NE Grand Blvd) features a train ride with the Easter Bunny. The train leaves Oakwood Depot at 9:15am, 11:15am, 1:15pm & 3:15pm. 13 & up, $12; 3-12, $5; Under 3, FREE. 424-8222, www.oklahomarailwaymuseum.org


april

events this FREE Saturday for Kids at the National Cowboys & Western Heritage Museum (1700 NE 63rd St). Kids learn how to create a four-patch quilt block to make a scrap bag. Preregister. 10amnoon. 478-2250, www.nationalcowboymuseum.org

APRIL 5 • SUNDAY Hopabaloo at the Oklahoma City Zoo (2101 NE 50th St) features brunch with the Easter bunny and a day of fun including an egg hunt with prizes for kids ages 3 to 6. Preregister. Zoo admission included. Preregister. Adults, $20; kids (3-11), $15, kids 2 and under, FREE. 11am-3pm. 425-0262, www.okczoo.com

Oklahoma City Thunder vs Houston Rockets at Chesapeake Energy Arena (100 W Reno). Ticket prices vary. Noon. Also held: 4/7 vs San Antonio Spurs; 4/10 vs Sacramento Kings; 4/13 vs Portland Trail Blazers. 208-4800, www.nba. com/thunder

APRIL 6 • MONDAY FREE Admission to the Sam Noble Museum of Natural History (2401 Chautauqua Ave, Norman). Museum admission is FREE on the first Monday of each month. 10am-5pm. 325-4712, www. snomnh.ou.edu

(THROUGH APRIL 7) APRIL 6-7 FREE Oklahoma Native American Youth Language Fair at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History (2401 Chautauqua Ave, Norman). Students across Oklahoma honor their native languages through written, spoken and visual arts. 10am-5pm. 325-4712, www. snomnh.ou.edu

APRIL 7 • TUESDAY FREE LEGO® Store Monthly Mini Model Build at the LEGO® Store at Penn Square Mall (1901 NW Expressway). Kids can build a LEGO® UFO while supplies last. Ages 6-14. 5pm. 8409993, stores.Lego.com

our summer program can help make your child better prepared for school this fall

It’s a fact of life. Many children tend to regress during their summer vacation from school. The J. D. McCarty Center for children with developmental disabilities’ summer program can help reduce or eliminate the loss of skills before returning to school in the fall. Our summer program is a 30-day inpatient admission for intensive therapy designed to keep them on track.

J. D. McCarty Center for children with developmental disabilities

2002 E. Robinson Norman, Oklahoma 73071 405.307.2800 www.jdmc.org

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For more information about our summer program call 405.307.2800 and ask to speak to a social worker.

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events this dive in!

Summer is cool when you spend it with OKC Parks & Recreation. Join us for day camps, sports programs, swimming fun and more.

Summer day Camps • Performing Arts Day Camp • Recreation Day Camp • Sports Day Camp • Play in the Park

aquatics

• Spraygrounds, pools & family aquatics centers • Swimming lessons, swim teams • Summer Splash Aquatic Day Camp • Dive-in Movies, Soaked Cinema Youth & adult sports leagues now forming. Call 405-31.MOVES to sign up!

DON'T MISS!

The OKC Parks & Recreation

"Summer Kick-Off"

Saturday, May 30 from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m at Will Rogers Family Aquatic Center Visit www.okc.gov/parks, or sign up to receive parks emails at okcparks@okc.gov

@okcparks For more information about programs and activities, call 405-297-2211

Read Across Oklahoma at the Oklahoma City Zoo (2101 NE 50th St). Enjoy a day of storytelling, reading-related activities, dancing and meeting PBS Kids characters. 425-0262, www.okczoo.com FREE Be Red Cross Ready Workshop at the SOKC Library (2201 SW 134th St). Learn how to be prepared for potential emergencies. 7-8pm. 979-2200, www.pioneerlibrarysystem.org Homeschool Day at Harn Homestead (1721 N Lincoln Blvd). Students experience life as it was 100 years ago with hands-on activities like shelling corn, making rope and playing with oldfashioned toys. $3-$8. 10am-1:30pm. 235-4058, www.harnhomestead.com Oklahoma City Barons vs San Antonio Rampage at the Cox Convention Center (1 Myriad Gardens). Ticket prices vary. 7pm. Also held: 4/14 vs Hamilton Bulldogs; 4/17 & 18 vs Iowa Wild. www.okcbarons.com

APRIL 9 • THURSDAY Opening Night at the Chicksaw Bricktown Ballpark (2 S Mickey Mantle Dr). The Oklahoma City Dodgers open the 2015 season against the Round Rock Express. Prices vary. 7pm. 218-1000, www.okcdodgers.com

APRIL 9-12 FREE Oklahoma Centennial Horse Show at State Fair Park (3001 General Pershing Blvd). See beautiful horses showcase their skills in performances like the Western pleasure riding, walk & trot and the Morgan Challenge Cup. See website for a full schedule of events. 903-882-4755, www.okcentennial.com FREE Screening of the Children of the Civil Rights Documentary at the Metropolitan Libraries focuses on a group of kids who conducted sit-ins for six years in downtown Oklahoma City. See website for show times. www.metrolibrary.org FREE Sugar & Spice Children’s Consignment Sale at Firelake Arena (18145 Rangeline Rd, Shawnee) features gently-used spring & summer clothes, nursery items, furniture, toys and maternity items. See website for sale schedule. www.sugarandspicesale.com

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APRIL 10-12 Southwest Street Rod Nationals at State Fair Park (3001 General Pershing Blvd) is Oklahoma’s largest gathering of pre-1984 automobiles & street rods featuring more than 1,900 specialty automobiles, a street rod parade, swap meet, arts & crafts, children’s games and more. 13 & older, $15; kids (6-12), $6; 5 & under, FREE. Friday & Saturday, 8am-5pm; Sunday, 8am-3pm. www. nsra-usa.com

APRIL 10 • FRIDAY FREE 2nd Friday Norman Art Walk in the Norman Arts District (downtown Norman) features a monthly celebration of the arts in Norman. 6-9pm. www.2ndfridaynorman.com

APRIL 11 • SATURDAY FREE OKC Hot Wheels Association Show at The Crown Center (13300 S Western Ave) features 40-plus tables of collectibles for sale or trade as well as raffles and pizza. 9am-3pm. www. greaterokchotwheels.com The Color Run Shine Tour at Remington Park (1 Remington Pl), in partnership with the Oklahoma City Zoo, features a paint race that celebrates health and individuality. This 5K includes special sparkle attractions on the course, photo ops and new shine elements at the Finish Festival. $35 & up. 9am. www.thecolorrun.com/oklahoma-city/ FREE Arts Trek at the Mabee-Gerrer Musuem of Art (1900 W MacArthur St, Shawnee) combines an arts festival with a performance walks. 10am-4pm. 878-5300, www.artstrek.org FREE Hello Spring! Activities at Myriad Botanical Gardens (301 W Reno) features live musical performances by Sugar Free All-stars, Spaghetti Eddie and the Lyric Theatre’s Academy Kids, kite demonstrations by the Tulsa Wind Riders, games, bubble activities, face painting, live animals and vendors. 11am-1pm. 445-7080, www.oklahomacitybotanicalgardens.com Science on Saturdays at Science Museum Oklahoma (2100 NE 52nd St) offers an exciting science adventure on select Saturdays this spring. Members, $20; Non-members, $25. 1-4pm. 6026664, www.sciencemuseumok.org


(THROUGH APRIL 12) Oklahoma Sooner Spring Football Game at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium (180 W Brooks Ave, Norman) will kick off at p.m. Before the game, fans can enjoy the Great Food Truck Tailgate featuring tailgate cuisine from area food trucks, live music and kids’ amusement rides. All seating is general admission for the Spring Game. $5 before April 9; $10 after; kids (5 & under), FREE. 2pm. 325-2424, www.soonersports. com FREE Hound Hunt at Edmond Dog Park (E 33rd & Rankin). Dog owners can bring their dogs to the park to hunt for treats. 2pm. 359-4630, www. edmondok.com/parks/rec Opening Day at Frontier City (11501 N I-35 Service Rd). $28.99 for guests over 48”; $26.99 for

under 48”, 2 & under, FREE. 10:30am-8pm. 4782140, www.frontiercity.com

APRIL 11-12

FREE Miniature Gardening at the Bethany Library (3510 N Mueller Ave, Bethany). Learn how to utilize unusual objects for containers and to select plants suitable for miniature gardens. Then, make your own miniature garden to take home. All supplies provided. For ages 12-18. 2-3pm. 789-8363, www.metrolibrary.org

Redbud Classic at Nichols Hills Plaza (Avondale & Western Ave) features a a 10/33/50 mile Bike Tour, a 10K, a 5K, a kids fun run, a two-mile walk, stroller derby and the Redbud Dash, the official race after-party. The after-party will have food trucks, beverages, free family-friendly games and activities and live entertainment. $10-$35. 8428295, www.redbud.org

Greater Oklahoma Bluegrass Music Society Concert at the Oklahoma Country-Western Museum & Hall of Fame (3925 SE 29th St, Del City) features three professional bluegrass bands in concert, each playing 45-minute sets. Adults, $8.00; kids (12 & under), free. 6:30-9:15pm. 677-7515, www.gobms.org

El Reno Community Chorus Concert at Redlands Community College Cultural Arts Center Theatre (1300 S Country Club Dr, El Reno) presents A Time for Alleluia and will include an Easter cantata by the Community Chorus & guest performances. Adults, $5; students, $3. Saturday, 7:30pm; Sunday, 2:30pm. 570-2428

Moore Norman Technology Center presents an exciting summer education program for girls and boys 9- to 14-years-old.

SUMMER YOUTH ACADEMY 2015

Enrollment Dates by Age Group: 9 to 11 yrs. Thurs., April 9 | 12 to 14 yrs. Thurs., April 16 Review classes online and plan your SYA schedule soon!

All classes are held at MNTC’s Franklin Road Campus. 4701 12th Ave. NW, Norman, OK 73069 mntc.edu | 405.364.5763, ext. 7260

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events this APRIL 12 • SUNDAY Oklahoma Eating Disorders Association NEDA Walk at Chesapeake Boathouse (725 S Lincoln Blvd) is a community awareness event in support of the National Eating Disorders Association. Proceeds support programs that work to eliminate eating disorders. $10 & up. Noon-3pm. 418-4448, www.nationaleatingdisorders.org Make Promises Happen Day at Frontier City (11501 N I-35 Service Rd) is a day of safe fun for special needs guests & their families, provided by Central Christian Camp. A portion of the proceeds benefit the “Make Promises Happen” program. Tickets, $13, must be purchased in advance. Meal deal available for $11. Noon-8pm. 282-2811, www.centralchristiancamp.org FREE Super Sonic Make & Take at Oklahoma Contemporary (1146 N Broadway). Explore Orly Genger’s Terra sculpture in a super-sized make & take including multiple arts activities, face painting and more. 1-4pm. 951-0000, www. oklahomacontemporary.org

APRIL 14 • TUESDAY Story Time Science at Science Museum Oklahoma (2100 NE 52nd St) returns to the Sideshow Science Stage the second Tuesday of each month. FREE with admission. 602-3760, www.sciencemuseumok.org Oklahoma Community Orchestra A Season for All Ages Concert No. 4 at Hardeman Auditorium at Oklahoma Christian University (2501 E Memorial Rd) features the Young Artist Competition Winners, which are outstanding college and university students. $12.50 in advance, $15 at the door. 7:30pm. 425-1990, www. okorchestra.org FREE Poetry & Palette at the Almonte Library (2914 SW 59th St). Learn how art and literature weave together as the class combines a poem into the process of creating artwork. A professional artist will teach you how to paint your own version of a work of art. For ages 12-18. Preregister. 606-3575, www.metrolibrary.org

APRIL 14-19 89er Days Celebration in Downtown Guthrie (various locations) celebrates the Land Run of 1889 and the birth of Guthrie featuring a westernstyle dinner, carnival, 1889-style baseball game,

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parade and family- friendly rodeo. Most events are FREE. See website for full list of events. Hours vary. 282-2589, www.89erdays.com

APRIL 15 • WEDNESDAY FREE Family Picnic Celebration at the North Lawn of the State Capitol (2300 N Lincoln Blvd) features a fun environment for families to socialize while learning about various resources and behavioral health services available in the community. A box dinner will be provided at 4:30pm. 1:30-4:30pm. 522-4151, www.ok.gov/ odmhsas/

APRIL 16 • THURSDAY Third Thursday at Gaylord-Pickens Oklahoma Heritage Museum (1400 Classen Dr) offers a story & craft time for families to enjoy together. $3; kids (6 & under), FREE. Museum admission included. 10am. 235-4458, www. oklahomaheritage.com

APRIL 16-19 20th Anniversary Oklahoma City Bombing Project at Burg Theatre (2501 N Blackwelder Ave) features a new theatrical production that explores the Oklahoma City bombing through interviews and historical records. $12. Thursday, Friday & Saturday, 8pm; Sunday, 2pm. 208-5227, www.okcu.edu

APRIL 17 • FRIDAY FREE 3rd Friday Block pARTy in downtown Shawnee (Main St) features local restaurants, art galleries and merchants, as well as live musicians and performers. 5-8pm. 432-4131, www. seffshawnee.org FREE Premiere on Film Row in the Film Row District of Downtown Oklahoma City (W Sheridan Ave between Dewey and Shartel) happens the third Friday of each month with film screenings, music, art exhibitions and food trucks. 7-10pm. 235-3500, www.filmrowpremiere.com FREE Movie Night in the Park at Chitwood Park (W First St & Story St, Edmond). Families can bring blankets and chairs to watch an outdoor screening of Maleficent. Concessions available for $1. Movie begins at dark. 359-4630, www. edmondparks.com


l

(THROUGH APRIL 18 ) FREE “fresh stART” Art Show at The Homeless Alliance (1724 NW 4th St) features more than 20 artists who are experiencing homelessness in an exhibit titled the “Meeting the Masters.” Participating fresh stART artists receive 90 percent of the proceeds from the sale of their artwork. Noon-8pm. 415-8410, www. homelessalliance.org

APRIL 17-19

APRIL 18 • SATURDAY

Oklahoma City Ballet present Nine Sinatra Songs at the Civic Center Music Hall (201 N Walker). Choreographer Twyla Tharp puts her spin on the music of the legendary Frank Sinatra. $21 & up. Friday & Saturday, 8pm; Sunday, 2pm. 843-9898, www.okcballet.com

2 Minute 5K and Kiddie K at Stars & Stripes Park (3701 S Lake Hefner Dr) features a Kiddie K and a 5K benefiting the YWCA’s programs to help victims of sexual assault. $15-$35. 7am-noon. 9481770, www.ywcaokc.org

Jingle-Jangle Mingle at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum (1700 NE 63rd St) is a kick-off event honoring award winners and Hall of Fame inductees featuring entertainment, hors d’oeuvres and an autograph session of honorees and special guests. Preregister. Members, $35; non-members, $45. 5:30-7:30pm. 478-2250, www.nationalcowboymuseum.org

FREE Sweet Repeats Children’s & Maternity Consignment Sale at the Edmond Armory Building (600 S Byrant, Edmond) features children’s and maternity clothes along with toys, shoes, books, bedding and baby gear. Select items half-price on Sunday. Friday, 9am-6pm; Saturday, 9am-3pm; Sunday, noon-3pm. 706-5712, www. sweetrepeatskidsconsignment.com

FREE Norman ‘89er Day Parade in Downtown Norman (Main St from Pickard to Crawford Ave, Norman) celebrates the history of Norman with horses, wagon trains, classic cars and more. 10amnoon. www.visitnorman.com

COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS AND DESIGN • UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL OKLAHOMA

SUMMER ARTS CAMP 2015

THEATRE THEATRE ARTS ARTS

*High School Drama Workshop I June 8-12 – “Hairspray, Jr.” Ages 13-18. Classes in props, music, movement and acting. *Drama Day Camp I July 6-10 – “Peter Pan, Jr.” Ages 7-12. Classes in acting, make up, scenes, movement, and music. Drama Day Camp II – July 13-17 – “Into the Woods, Jr.” Ages 7-12. Classes in acting, make up, scenes, movement, and music. High School Drama Workshop II July 20-24 – “Willy Wonka, Jr.” Ages 13-18. Classes in props, music, movement and acting. Drama Day Camp III July 27-31 – “Annie, Jr.” Ages 7-12. Classes in acting, make up, scenes, movement, and music. *Productions presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI.

MUSIC MUSIC

Flute Camp – June 15-18 Ages 11-16. Daily master classes, music theory, flute choir and performances. ACM@UCO Rock Camp I – June 15-19 Ages 10-18. Daily techniques jam sessions coached by ACM@UCO faculty. Jr. High All-State Choir – June 15-19 Grades 7-9. Focusing on All-State audition music, group activities, and sectionals. Summer Jazz Workshop – July 5-10 Ages 14-18. Daily master classes, combos, improv, theory and jazz history. High School All-Sate Choir – July 6-10 Grades 10-12. Focusing on All-State audition music, group activities, and sectionals. Strings Chamber Music – July 13-17 Ages 11-18. Placement Auditions on July 11. Daily theory small groups and ensembles. ACM@UCO Rock Camp II – July 13-17 Ages 10-18. Daily techniques jam sessions coached by ACM@UCO faculty.

MUSIC/ART/DANCE MUSIC/ART/DANCE

Summer Opera Workshop – July 20-25 Grades 9-12 & Incoming UCO Freshman. Daily voice and movement classes. Residential w/room and board. Music Bridge Workshop – July 27-29 Incoming UCO music majors. Daily music theory, aural skills, and chamber music. Day workshop or residential options available. High School Art Workshop – July 20-24 Ages 15-18. Daily classes in art history, drawing, painting, sculpture and professional networking opportunities. Dance & Down Syndrome “Teen Beach” – June 8-12 Ages 13+. Daily jazz class, rehearsals and music class. Summer Dance Workshop – June 15-19 Ages 12+. Classes in Jazz, Ballet, Contemporary and Hip-Hop. ALDRIDGE FOUNDATION

www.ocae.net • Early Bird Discounts if enrolled by April 30 • 405-974-3784 METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015


Madonnas of the Prairie: Depictions of Women in the American West

Hosted by the Museum and organized by the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon, Texas, this exhibit features more than 100 works focusing on women in the late 19th century through the present as seen through the talents of multiple artists.

saturday, april 4

Saturdays for Kids Four-Patch Quilt Block

10:00 a.m. - Noon Marna Davis will instruct how to create a hand-pieced, basic fourpatch quilt block. Free for children and familes. All supplies are furnished. Reservations requested by noon on April 3, call (405) 478-2250, Ext. 264.

tuesday, april 28

Brown Bag Program Lasting Letters Noon - 1:00 p.m.

Without letters, journals and diaries, past times and people would be unknown. Luann Sewell Waters will delve into letters and what they mean.

and there is always more!

Family-Friendly activities at the cowboy

through may 10

history art shopping

april

events this Kids Fest 2015 at Cox Convention Center (1 Myriad Gardens) is MetroFamily Magazine’s annual family event with dozens of booths featuring fun and educational activities for kids. Enjoy safety village hosted by Safe Kids Oklahoma, along with face painting, roaming characters, door prizes and live music. Adults, $5; children are FREE. Find coupon for adult admission on page 36. 11am-4pm. www. metrofamilymagazine.com/kids-fest FREE Earthfest at Martin Park Nature Center (5000 W Memorial Rd) features crafts, kid activities, nature games, adventure hikes and eco-friendly fun for the entire family. 1-4pm. 2971429, www.okc.gov/parks Daughter Mama Skate-O-Rama at Star Skate (2020 W Lindsey St, Norman) features food, drinks, party favors and prizes, luau-style. Guests are encouraged to dress the part. Proceeds benefit the Mary Abbott Children’s House $8 in advance, $10 at the door. 5-7pm. www.facebook.com/ daughtermamaskateorama FREE Heard on Hurd in Downtown Edmond (Broadway, Main & Hurd, Edmond) is a monthly pop-up celebration featuring local musicians, food trucks and shopping. 6-10pm. 715-5121, www.facebook.com/heardonhurd FREE Air Force Academy Band Community Concert at Yukon Fine Art Auditorium (850 Yukon Ave, Yukon) features an evening of jazz music. 7-8:30pm. 354-8937, www.cityofyukonok. gov Sick & Tired: Stand-up Comedy by Parents for Parents at the Fine Arts Institute of Edmond (27 E Edwards St, Edmond) is a two-hour stand-up comedy showcase features five OKC comedians. Show is PG-13, smoke-free and a selection of beer, wine and soft drinks will be available. Two free drink vouchers per ticket. $14/single, $25/ couple. 8-10pm. 206-2494, www.facebook.com/ realBenFlint

APRIL 19 • SUNDAY

1700 NE 63rd St. Oklahoma City, OK (405) 478-2250

www.nationalcowboymuseum.org

Day of Remembrance at the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum (620 N Harvey). State and local dignitaries, family members, survivors, rescue workers and visitors gather to remember those who were killed, those who survived and those changed forever by the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah

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APRIL 2015

Federal Building. Open to the public and no admission is charged. 8:45am. 235-3313, www. oklahomacitynationalmemorial.org FREE Pitch, Hit & Run Competition at the Yukon Community Center Ballfields (2200 S Holly Ave, Yukon). Boys and girls ages 7-14 compete in a local competition of the MLB’s Youth Skills Challenge. The winners of each event and an overall winner will go on to compete in regional competition. 1-3pm. 354-8442, www. cityofyukonok.gov FREE 20th Anniversary Concert: “We Rise to Bless You Still” at First Presbyterian Church (101 NW 25th St) features a 168-voice choir presenting music, readings, reflections and prayers in remembrance of the 20th anniversary of the bombing. 5-6:30pm. 615-9103, www. liturgyandarts.org

APRIL 20 • MONDAY “Disable the Label” Disability Awareness Day at the Oklahoma State Capitol (2300 N Lincoln Blvd) is a day of advocacy for the services making a difference in the lives of those with disabilities. Noon-4:15pm. 951-3478, www.okdrs. org

APRIL 21 • TUESDAY Tiny Tuesdays at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art (415 Couch Dr) features a come & go Earth Day recycled art project geared towards kids ages 2 to 5 with a parent or caregiver. Dress for a mess! FREE with admission. 10am-noon. 236-3100, www.okcmoa.com

APRIL 21-26 FREE Festival of the Arts at Festival Plaza & Myriad Botanical Gardens (301 W Reno) features more than 200 artists along with food and entertainment. Proceeds support Arts Council Oklahoma City. Tuesday-Saturday, 11am-9pm; Sunday, 11am-6pm. 270-4848, www. artscouncilokc.com

APRIL 23 • THURSDAY The StepCrew at Armstrong Auditorium (14400B S Bryant Rd, Edmond), presents the a Celtic song & dance group performing Irish Stepdance, Ottawa Valley Stepdance and tap. $23 & up. 7:30pm. 285-1010, www.armstrongauditorium.org


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(THROUGH APRIL 24) APRIL 23-24 FREE Choctaw Frontier Days at Choctaw Creek Park (2001 N Harper Rd, Choctaw) is an educational festival tailored to school children featuring historical presentations, cowboy & cavalry encampments, American Indian fancy dancers, gun fights and old fashioned games. Food and merchandise vendors will be on site. 9am-2pm. 390-8198, www.choctawcity.org/land-run/

APRIL 23-25 FREE Norman Music Festival in Downtown Norman (Main St & Jones Ave) is an indoor & outdoor, three-day independent music festival featuring more than 200 performers presenting a variety of music genres, poetry, comedy and a

Little Rocker Stage where kids can jam out to the musical acts, get a rock star hairdo and create their own art. www.normanmusicfestival.com

APRIL 24 • FRIDAY FREE H&8th Night Market in Midtown Oklahoma City (815 N Hudson) is a monthly, family-and-pet-friendly street festival built around a lineup of the city’s top gourmet food trucks. 7-11pm. 633-1703, www.h8thokc.com

APRIL 24-25 Family Invertebrate Fossil Field Trip at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History (2401 Chautauqua Ave, Norman). Journey into Oklahoma’s Paleozoic past with a look at museum

specimens & a trip to find marine fossils to take home. For ages 7 & up with an adult. Preregister. Members, $90 per adult/child pair; non-members, $110. 325-4712, www.snomnh.ou.edu

APRIL 24-26 Iron Thistle Scottish Festival at the Kirkpatrick Family Farm (1001 S Garth Brooks Blvd, Yukon) is a celebration of Scottish culture featuring a caber toss, Celtic wares, live music and performers, Scottish & American cuisine and kids’ crafts & activities. Friday admission is FREE. Saturday & Sunday: 10 & older, $5; 9 & under, FREE. Saturday, 10am-6pm; Sunday, 10am-5pm. 834-1876, www.unitedscotsok.com/iron-thistle

Be a part of OKC's best children’s and maternity consignment SALE • April 26-May 2 Stop by and visit us!

Oklahoma State Fair Park

Check us out on facebook at facebook.com/JBFofOKC

Cox Pavilion Building Shop Sun 12p-9p • Mon 10a-9p • Tues-Thurs 10a-4p • Fri 10a-9p • Sat 10a-2p Sell your kids’ items as a consignor and earn up to 70%! Save money and make money with JBF! It’s all here under one roof! Smart! Many items discounted an additional 50% off on Friday and Saturday!

jbfsale.com

shop. sell. save. smart!™

Free Admission with this ad on SUNDAY, APRIL 26 METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

Consignor registration and details available onlne

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APRIL 2015


april

events this APRIL 24-MAY 8

APRIL 30 • THURSDAY

The Emperor’s New Clothes at Oklahoma Children’s Theatre (2501 N Blackwelder) is a Caribbean musical adaptation of the classic Hans Christian Andersen fairytale. See website for a list of show times. Adults, $10; Students, $8; Kids (2-12), $7. 606-7003, www. oklahomachildrenstheatre.org

Jimmy Wayne Songs & Stories for Oklahoma’s Kids at The Venue at Crossings Community Church (14600 N Portland Ave) features Jimmy Wayne, a former foster kid turned country music singer, songwriter and author, in concert. Benefits Deaconess Pregnancy & Adoption Services. $25 donation. 7-9pm. www.deaconessadoption.org

APRIL 25 • SATURDAY

Home Free in Concert at Rose State College Performing Arts Theatre (6420 SE 15th, Midwest City) features the winners of NBC’s The Sing Off. VIP tickets include a meet & greet with the band. $30 in advance, $33 day of show; VIP, $100. Doors open at 7pm. 8-11:30pm. www. squarepegconcerts.com

Science on Saturdays at Science Museum Oklahoma (2100 NE 52nd St) offers an exciting science adventure on select Saturdays this spring. Members, $20; Nonmembers, $25. 1-4pm. 6026664, www.sciencemuseumok.org

APRIL 26 • SUNDAY Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon in downtown Oklahoma City invites runners and the community to come together in support of a Run to Remember benefiting the Oklahoma City National Memorial. $15 & up. 6:30am. www. okcmarathon.com

FREE Little Read Program “Catwings” at the SOKC Library (2201 SW 134th St) features a special story time with author Ursula Le Guin and her children’s book “Catwings.” Activities include crafts and treats. Preregister. 4:30-5:30pm. 979-2200, www.pioneerlibrarysystem.org

MAY 1 • FRIDAY

Open

Party for the Planet at the Oklahoma City Zoo (2101 NE 50th St) features a family-fun Earth Day celebration featuring live entertainment, keeper connections, and a Dr. Pepper I Spy Zoo Safari for children 11 and under. FREE with admission. 11am-3pm. 424-3344, www.okczoo. com

FREE First Friday Gallery Walk in the Paseo District (NW 30th & 27th St, Walker & Hudson Ave) features 75 artists, guest artists’ exhibits, refreshments, live music and food trucks. 6-10pm. 525-2688, www.thepaseo.com

Explore with us all summer or enroll in one of our June or July programs especially for 4-12 year-olds.

Listen to Your Mother at the Will Rogers Theatre (4322 N Western Ave) features live readings on the beauty, the beast and the barely rested of motherhood, in celebration of Mother’s Day. A portion of the ticket proceeds will benefit Reach Out and Read Oklahoma. Adults, $20; Students with ID, $10. 2:30pm. www. listentoyourmothershow.com/oklahomacity/

Oklahoma Home School Convention at Cox Convention Center (1 Myriad Gardens) is designed to equip, inform and encourage both new and experienced homeschoolers in their homeschooling journey. The conference will also feature children and teen programs. Families, $59. 8am-5pm. 810-0386, www.ochec.com

APRIL 26-MAY 2

MAY 1-3

Just Between Friends Sale at State Fair Park (333 Gordon Cooper Blvd) features a consignment sale of toys, clothes, shoes and baby supplies. $3 entry fee on Sunday. Sunday, noon9pm; Monday, 10am-9pm; Tuesday-Thursday, 9am-4pm; Friday, 10am-9pm; Saturday, 10am2pm. www.okc.jbfsale.com

FREE Downtown Edmond Arts Festival in Historic Downtown Edmond (on Broadway between 2nd & Hurd ) features more than 100 artists, live entertainment, face painting, inflatables, sidewalk chalk activity and food vendors. Friday & Saturday, 10am-8pm; Sunday, 11am-5pm. 249-9391, www.downtownedmondok. com

Tues-Sat 10am-5pm and Sun 1-5pm

308 W. Franklin Lane, Stillwater, OK 405-533-3333

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MAY 1 & 2


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(THROUGH MAY 3) MAY 2 • SATURDAY Festival of the Child at the Yukon City Park & Community Center (2200 S Holly Ave, Yukon) celebrates children with over 50 areas of fun activities including kayaking, moon bounces, crafts, pony rides, storytelling and more. Activities are held rain or shine and are geared for kids 12 & under. $5 in advance; $7 day of; Adults, free. 10am-4pm. www.cityofyukonok.gov Lewis & Clark Journals at Martin Park Nature Center (5000 W Memorial Rd). Learn about the journals that aided in the expansion of our country and make your own Lewis & Clark journal. $4. 3-4pm. 297-1429, www.okc.gov/ parks/martin_park Cowboys of Color Rodeo at Jim Norick Area (3001 General Pershing Blvd) features over 200 culturally diverse cowboys and cowgirls battling it out in traditional rodeo events including bull riding, calf roping, steer wrestling, bronc busting and barrel racing. $12-$23. 7pm. 948-6800, www.okstatefair.com FREE Comic Book Day at participating retailers across the country offers a free comic book to all customers to introduce new readers to the comic book medium. Details at www.freecomicbookday. com

MAY 2 & 3 FREE May Fair Arts Festival at Andrews Park (201 W Daws St, Norman) features more than 30 artists and quality craftsmen, top area performers, artists demonstrations, children’s art activities, a student art show, great food and more. Saturday, 9am-7pm; Sunday, 11am-5pm. 321-9400, www.assistanceleaguenorman.org

MAY 3 • SUNDAY FREE Family Day at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art (415 Couch Dr) features live performances, films, hands-on activities, drawing in the galleries, family gallery experiences, story times, photos with Mr. Cherry Limeade and more. Admission and all activities FREE. noon-5pm. 236-3100, www.okcmoa.com

discovery-based programs for children 4-14!

A Walk in the Park at Wheeler Park (1120 S Western Ave) is a 5K and one-mile walk to benefit the Parkinson Foundation of Oklahoma. Prices vary. Register at 1pm. Event starts at 2pm. www.walkinthepark2015.kintera.org METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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2401 Chautauqua Ave., Norman, OK 73072-7029 | (405) 325-4712 | www.samnoblemuseum.org APRIL 2015

The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution. www.ou.edu/eoo. For accommodations on the basis of disability, please call (405) 325-4712.


april

events this

YOUTH CAMPS + CLASSES ENROLL NOW

FREE Evening Family Playtime at the Downtown Library (300 Park Ave) features an hour of family play time meant to help children build social skills, promote learning and discover that the library is a destination for fun. Mondays, 6:30-7:30pm. 231-8650, www.metrolibray.org

Youth Arts Classes Saturdays Summer Arts Camps 5/26 - 8/7 Ages 5-12 and 13-16 Learn more and enroll: oklahomacontemporary.org

or call: 405 951 0000

FREE Art Adventures at Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art (555 Elm, Norman), for ages 3-5. Young artists are invited to experience art through books. Visit site for full list of dates, books and activities.10:30am on Tuesdays. 325-3272, www.ou.edu/fjjma FREE Tuesday Noon Concerts at Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art (555 Elm, Norman) features 30-minute concerts performed by OU School of Music students and faculty. Noon on Tuesdays, 325-3272, www.ou.edu/ fjjma Tuesday Night Classics at Harkins Theatre (150 E Reno) features special presentations of classics films on the big screen. April 7, The Good, The Bad, & the Ugly; April 14, City Slickers; April 21, Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid; April 28, Blazing Saddles, May 5, Clueless. $5. 7pm. 231-4747, www. harkinstheatres.com Toddler Story & Craft Time at Unpluggits Playstudio (575 Enterprise, Edmond) features a different story each week & a related craft time. FREE with paid admission. Wednesdays, 11-11:30am. 340-7584, www.unpluggits.com

WEEKLY EVENTS

FREE Children’s Story Time at Full Circle Books (1900 NW Expressway). Saturdays, 10:15am. 842-2900, www.fullcirclebooks. com FREE Children’s Story Time at Edmond’s Best of Books (1313 E Danforth, Edmond). Saturdays, 11-11:30am. 340-9202. FREE Nature Story Time at Martin Park Nature Center (5000 W Memorial) for ages 2-6 features stories to help children discover the world of nature, followed by an activity or outdoor hike. Saturdays, 10am. 755-0676, www.okc.gov/parks FREE Storytime with Steve at Barnes & Noble (540 Ed Noble Parkway, Norman) features a silly story time with Steve Galindo. Saturdays, 11-11:45am. 579-8800. FREE Roller Skating Lesson at Skate Galaxy (5800 NW 36th St) offered each Saturday. Noon-12:45pm. $2 skate rental. 605-2758, www.skategalaxyokc.com All Star Bowling for Differently-Abled Individuals at AMF Windsor Lanes (4600 NW 23rd) invites differently-abled individuals and their friends and families to bowl on Saturdays. $8. Noon-1pm. 942-5545. Drop in Art at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art (415 Couch Dr) features hands-on art activities for all ages. FREE with paid admission. Saturdays, 1-4pm. 236-3100, www.okcmoa.com

FREE Bringing Books to Life in the lobby of the Crystal Bridge in the Myriad Garden (301 W Reno) every Wednesday. 10am, for ages 2-5. Books are nature-themed and based on the season. Children will also create a small craft after the story. 445-7080, www.myriadgardens.org

Discovery Times at Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History (2401 Chautauqua Ave, Norman) features interactive activities for preschool and elementary children. FREE with paid admission. Saturdays, 2pm; Sundays, 2:30pm. 325-4712, www.snomnh.ou.edu

FREE Crafts for Kids at Lakeshore Learning (6300 N May) hosts a different craft each week. Come-and-go, no reservation needed. Saturdays, 11am-3pm, ages 3 and up. 858-8778, www.lakeshorelearning.com

FREE Little Big Chefs Cooking Classes at Uptown Grocery (1230 W Covell Rd, Edmond) features easy recipes kids and adults can make together every Sunday. Preregister by Friday. Ages 5-8, 2-3pm; Ages 9-12, 3:30-4:30pm. 509-2700, www.uptowngrocery.com

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APRIL 2015


april

events this

ONGOING EVENTS

THROUGH APRIL 25 FREE First Fifty Years of Oklahoma Art at Gaylord-Pickens Oklahoma Heritage Museum (1400 Classen Dr) presents a special exhibit that showcases Oklahoma’s pioneer artists. Tuesday-Friday, 9am-5pm; Saturday, 10am-5pm. 235-4458, www. oklahomaheritage.com FREE Arbor Day Art Show at the Edmond Historical Society & Museum (431 S Boulevard St, Edmond) features the artwork of area 5th graders depicting the “Trees in Our Town.” Tuesday-Friday, 10am-5pm; Sunday, 1-4pm. 340-0078, www.edmondok. com

THROUGH MAY 2 FREE Small Town: Portraits of a Disappearing America Exhibit at Oklahoma Contemporary (3000 General Pershing Blvd) features the work of Brazilian-born photographer Alex Leme. Leme photographed Cotton Plant, a small town in rural northeast Arkansas, one of the fastest-growing communities in eastern Arkansas. Monday-Thursday, 9am-10pm; Friday & Saturday, 9am-5pm. 951-0000, www.oklahomacontemporary.org

THROUGH MAY 10 Beyond the Battlefield: Depictions of War at Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art (555 Elm, Norman) examines war and conflict as depicted by artists of the modern world. Particular focus on World War I, World War II and the Vietnam War. The paintings, prints and photography of this exhibition present a range of perceptions and opinions on war. Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, 10am-5pm; Thursday, 10am-9pm; Sunday, 1-5pm. 325-7696, www.ou.edu/ fjjma Ansel Adams: Masterworks—From the Collection of the Turtle Bay Exploration Park at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum (1700 NE 63rd) features a collection of 47 works by renowned photographer Ansel Adams which he called “The Museum Set.” 10am-5pm daily. 4782250, www.nationalcowboymuseum.org

Intent to Deceive: Fakes & Forgeries in the Art World at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art (415 Couch Dr) spotlights more than 60 works by some of the world’s most notorious con artists. Several ingenious forgers are profiled in this exhibition representing some of the most infamous scandals of our time. FREE with admission. Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-5pm; Thursday, 10am-9pm; Sunday, noon-5pm. 236-3100, www.okcmoa.com

Since 1925

With FOUR metro locations, a large medical staff & office hours including Saturdays, we make your treatment plan convenient for YOU

THROUGH MAY Chickasaw Cultural Center Dugout Canoes: Paddling through the Americas at Chickasaw Cultural Center (867 Charles Cooper Memorial, Sulphur) features a landmark exhibition with interactive play and videos that explore the history of dugout canoes. Monday-Saturday, 9am-5pm. 6277130, www.chickasawculturalcenter.com

THROUGH OCTOBER FREE Orly Genger: Terra at Campbell Park (NW 11th & Broadway) is an art installment presented by Oklahoma Contemporary. The outdoor sculpture piece is made of 1.4 million feet of recycled lobster-fishing rope and painted with terracotta-colored paint. 951-0000, www. oklahomacontemporary.org

Shrek the Musical at Pollard Theatre (120 W Harrison Ave, Guthrie) features everybody’s favorite ogre as he rescues a princess with the help of his friend Donkey. See website for show times. Students, $16.25; adults, $27.25. 282-2800, www. thepollard.org

APRIL 26-JUNE 14 FREE National Weather Center Biennale Art Exhibit at the National Weather Center (120 David L. Boren Blvd, Norman) features an international juried exhibition presenting “Arts Window on the Impact of Weather on the Human Experience.” Guest must present a photo id to view exhibit. Monday-Saturday, 10am-5pm; Sunday, noon-5pm. www.ou.edu/ content/nwcbiennale

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Call today to make an appointment with the Allergists at the Oklahoma Allergy & Asthma Clinic

405/235-0040 www.oklahomaallergy.com

APRIL 23-MAY 24

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

Gregory M. Metz, M.D., Richard T. Hatch, M.D., Warren V. Filley, M.D., and Shahan A. Stutes, M.D., (Seated, l-r) Stefanie E. Rollins, APRN-CNP, Karen L. Gregory, DNP, Patricia I. Overhulser, M.D., Florina Neagu, M.D., and Laura K. Chong, M.D.

APRIL 2015

at the Oklahoma Health Center 750 N.E. 13th Meridian Medical Tower (Across from Mercy Hospital) 13321 N. Meridian, Suite 100 Edmond at Fisher Hall 3560 S. Boulevard Norman Physician’s Building (Across from Norman Reg. Hospital) 950 N. Porter, Suite 102

Facebook for daily allergy reports


Play • Learn • Thrive

You are cordially invited to attend

Services Include:

Occupational Therapy SpeechLanguage Therapy Social Groups

Saturday, April 18

11am to 4pm at the Cox Convention Center

Enjoy over 60 booths with hands-on activities for kids • Inflatables • Safety Village presented by Oklahoma Safe Kids Coalition • Stage Entertainment by Spaghetti Eddie, Monty Harper, magician Joe Coover & more • Petting zoo by Extreme Animals •

We Specialize in Working with Children with: • • • • • •

Down Syndrome Autism ADD & ADHD Sensory Processing Disorder Cerebral Palsy Typical Children with: • Handwriting Problems • Speech-language Delays (and other types of diagnoses that may interfere with day to day skills) Blue Cross Blue Shield, Tricare, United Healthcare, Health Choice, Soonercare

(405) 840-1686 www.SensationalKidsOKC.com

NOW OPEN 2nd LOCATION

Serving Tinker AFB, South OKC & Moore! Sooner Business Park, 5701 SE 74th St, on NE corner of Sooner Road and I-240 14715 Bristol Park Blvd. - OKC/Edmond

Face painting • Door prizes AND MUCH MORE!

Kids are FREE and adults (18 and older) are just $5 each. THANK YOU to our PRESENTING SPONSOR

and our SUPPORTING SPONSOR

Save with this coupon!

Bring this coupon to MetroFamily’s Kids Fest to receive $1 off admission up to two (2) people! Adults (ages 18 and up) are $5 • Kids are FREE Saturday, April 18, 11am to 4pm at the Cox Convention Center More info at www.metrofamilymagazine.com/kids-fest. Only good for MetroFamily Kids Fest, 4/18/15. No cash value.

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APRIL 2015


Meet exotic animals at the Extreme Animals Petting Zoo.

Bring your camera and capture the fun of your child meeting one of their favorite characters from animated movies.

Every booth will include a fun hands-on activity for kids.

Face painting!

Hear Monty Harper and encourage your kids to clap, dance and laugh along with this award-winning singer.

Learn about bike, water and ATV safety through hands-on games at Safety Village, sponsored by Safe Kids Oklahoma.

Also on stage:

Professional magician Joe Coover will perform at 1:30 on the Kids Fest stage.

GO TO OUR WEBSITE to watch a video and learn much more: www.metrofamilymagazine.com/kids-fest METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015


mom gets the last laugh

Summer Camp Promises

ILLUSTRATION BY EMILY BALL, WWW.EMILYMGBA

W

LL.COM

hen I was going into the sixth grade, I went to my first weeklong overnight camp. I’d gone to several camps for a weekend or an overnight, but this was going to be a whole week away from my home…and more importantly, away from my little sister.

I went back year after year and each year was better than the year before.

The camp was (and still is) nestled in the foot hills of the Ozark Mountains in the eastern part of Oklahoma. The Illinois River borders it, which provides a fun experience with floating and river walking. A beautiful mountain with a carved-out trail borders it on the other side. Despite how much I really do despise mornings, I learned to appreciate the sunrise from a mountain top. I loved my experience— and, believe it or not, I missed my family just a little bit. Even my sister.

Nonetheless, she went.

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

When my sister was going into the sixth grade, four years later, she reluctantly agreed to go to camp. She’s more of a homebody than I’ve ever been. And while my stories of midnight serenades by the boys and my growing collection of friendship rocks found in the river were appealing to her, she was not convinced, as I was, that it would be the coolest place ever. And every night she called home (Collect—does anyone but a prisoner still do this?). And every night she cried to come home. And every night our mother consoled her and assured her that when she’d return at the end of the week, she will have had the time of her life. To a certain extent, our mom was right. We picked my sister up on Friday and on the two-hour drive home, she sang all the camp songs and regaled us with stories of cabin cheers. She had a notebook full of

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addresses from her new friends. She told us all about singing the “Elbows On The Table” song at dinner time and was very proud of the start of her friendship rock collection from the river. Then we got home. When she took her bag to her room, she pivoted on her heels and vowed to never leave home again. You see, while my sister was at camp, my mom cleaned her room. Prior to camp, my sister’s room had no floor. Well, no floor we could see. She had no less than a dozen baby dolls, forty-seven stuffed animals (not counting the ones under her bed), board games (including multiple versions of the game Life), several hundreds of 45-records (at least one of them was my copy of “Morning Train” by Sheena Easton). She had every notebook she’d ever owned or used or touched. She had colors and crayons and markers enough to cover the outside of our modest suburban home. She had at least ten pair of Underoos and mountains— mountains!—of dirty clothes, none of which offered the same sunrise experience she had at camp.

But during that week, my mom cleaned her room out. Mom kept most of her Cabbage Patch dolls, including the original one from Xavier Roberts’ first factory in Macon, Georgia. Mom kept my sister’s favorite stuffed clown (a creepy thing called Michael). Mom washed all the dirty clothes and folded all the clean clothes, then she did something these clothes hadn’t experienced perhaps ever. She put them away in the closet and the chest of drawers. Mom even made my sister’s bed and organized some knick-knacks on top of the bureau. My sister’s books found a cozy home on the book shelves, her notebooks and crayons and pencils found their spot in her desk. The room, y’all, looked, ummm … how shall I say this without hurting my sister’s feelings? I know—clean. And habitable. And the carpet looked practically new, even though it wasn’t. (That’s the plus side to having all of one’s belongings all over the floor—preservation of the carpet!) My mom joked that she took a half-dozen trash bags of items from my sister’s room to donate. My sister found no humor in it, felt broken-hearted at her missing things (although she couldn’t name one thing that

was missing) and, true to her word, she never went to camp again. In fact, she was 24 when she moved out. When my daughters went to summer camp last year, they left behind rooms that rivaled my sisters’ room of almost thirty-years ago. As I changed their sheets (once I found them crumpled at the foot of their beds), I contemplated cleaning their rooms. I knew it was be a good chance for me to purge items that they didn’t need without their lamentations over my discards. But, then I remembered that my sister didn’t ever go to camp again and didn’t move out until she was 24. My mom and dad had no week during the summer to just, ya know, take a break. So, I decided that my daughters’ rooms can be a mess for the next ten years or so. Heather Davis is a momma, a writer and a strong proponent of summer camp. She blogs at www.Minivan-Momma.com. She and her husband have two messy daughters and enjoy their free weeks during the summer.

Fill your summer with Adventure on the Oklahoma River! Reach for the sky on the SandRidge Sky Trail, high speed slide and zip line. Then get out on the water in a kayak or dragon boat. You’ll find all this and more in our camps for ages 8-16; full and half day options available. Visit us online at boathousedistrict.org to learn more!

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local shopping

Learn how one local woman is sharing her love of local food with the community by teaching everyone to grow their own.

BY HANNAH SCHMITT - MANAGING EDITOR PHOTOS BY HANNAH SCHMITT


W

alking through the sprawling vegetable garden that is CommonWealth Urban Farms just a few miles away from downtown Oklahoma City, Elia Woods can’t help but bend a knee every now and then to sample the fruit of her labor. A small nibble of a pea shoot or a spinach leaf brings a smile to her sunkissed face. “It’s a powerful thing,” she said of eating the food she grows herself. “There’s a deep disconnect that happens when you go to the grocery store and grab some food or pick up fast food and there’s a deep sense of connection and satisfaction that comes with being closer to your food source.” The garden is a combination of a backyard and an empty lot that takes up about oneseventh of an acre near the corner of Olie St. and N.W. 32nd St. It doesn’t look like much from the street, but walk past the small storage shed at the edge of the property and you see row after row of cultivated soil in different stages of use. Some rows look ready to be harvested while others are just barely sprouting produce that will be ready in early spring and others are being fed by winter cover crop. Woods started the idea of CommonWealth Urban Farms in December 2010 and began planting the following fall. By April 2012, she had successfully started a program of community supported agriculture, or CSA. She planted and tended to vegetables in the urban garden and grew a membership base of 25 to 30 families paying about $10 per week to pick up a weekly bag of the fresh produce. This spring, she’s preparing to take a year off from the traditional CSA model for some research and development of the business and to educate the public more about the benefits of home gardening. There are many ways to get involved with CommonWealth that range from attending a garden school on Saturday mornings to purchasing produce and flowers grown at the garden. Before the idea of CommonWealth really took hold, Woods had a long history with gardening. She was a home gardener for about 25 years before started volunteering at another Oklahoma City CSA, Guilford Gardens. Her friend Kamala Gamble had started the garden about a decade prior and was willing to teach Woods all about the business of growing and selling produce in an urban setting. “I didn’t start off wanting

“The best of the best of the best experience is when kids come over and ask, ‘Please can I eat some more greens?’” to sell vegetables, I just wanted to learn more,” Woods said. “Before I knew it, I was being hired to manage that CSA program.” Her first true passion was art and although she’d been a studio artist for many years, she reached a point where she wanted a change of pace. “The art was becoming more and more about the garden and I just sort of tipped over the top and went full on at the garden,” she said. This year, Woods is taking a bit of a different approach to the CSA model to give herself a year of less time harvesting and selling vegetables and more time researching and developing. She’s asking CSA members to join what she’s calling a Pollinator’s Circle to contribute to this year of research. Members of the Circle will pay $500 for the year to contribute to the future growth of CommonWealth. That money will still allow them to have a bag of fresh produce every week but they’ll have to harvest it themselves from the garden. The cost of the Circle membership also gives unlimited access to 30 weeks of gardening school classes led by Woods. The gardening school isn’t just open to these members, though. The classes will be hosted from 8:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. every Saturday morning for 30 weeks. Each class will cover a different gardening topic. The public is welcome to purchase every class for $200 or pay $10 per class. Attendees who stay after class and volunteer for two hours can enjoy the class at no cost. Woods welcomes all children to attend the

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gardening school and volunteer in the garden under the supervision of their parents. She’s found most older elementary school students and middle school students to be very fast learners in the garden and valuable workers. Volunteers at the garden do a variety of tasks including planting, harvesting, sifting compost and pulling weeds. Whether they’re helping at their gardens at home or at CommonWealth, Woods said she believes having kids participate in growing their own food is a profound and beneficial experience. She’s found the young volunteers enjoy learning new growing skills and having a taste now and again, too. “The best of the best of the best experience,” she said, “is when kids come over and ask, ‘please can I eat some more greens?’” Each 30-minute garden school course will be hands-on and offer practical advice to people starting home gardens. Woods hopes

i d e l a K p e a c s E er Cam! m

m m u S

chool in Edmond ary's S M . t at S

p

Science, arts and crafts, drama, PE and more! Ages: 3-11 Camp Hours: 8:30-2:30 Cost: $180 per week

(10% discount for all four sessions) Session #1: Session #2: Session #3: Session #4:

June 1-5 June 8-12 June 15-19 June 22-26

505 E Covell Rd Edmond 73034 405.341.9541 www.smesedmond.org

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to see more and more people take an interest in growing their own food. “I know from personal experience how being in the garden has affected me,” she said. “Growing my own food, it’s changed me in a way I’m really grateful for and I assume the same benefits will be happening for other people as they become gardeners or local food eaters or both.” Woods doesn’t use chemicals or fertilizers in her garden and shows home growers through her garden school how to do the same. She will teach gardeners how to keep soil biologically sound through natural methods and share her own trial and error experiences to get others on the road to success early. For a list of other topics Woods will cover in the weekly gardening school, visit the garden online at www. commonwealthurbanfarms.com.


Thinking about starting a garden at home? This is the first part of a four-part series about gardening with kids. Here’s what is coming up next:

May Learn the how-tos of

gardening with kids.

June Discover how local kids

are getting involved with gardening

July Prepare to cook and eat

what you’ve grown this year

A great way to get your kids excited about starting a garden is to visit gardeners and farmers at your local farmers market. Here are some local markets that start this month: Norman Farm Market at the Cleveland County Fairgrounds is open 8 a.m.-noon Saturdays and 4-7 p.m. Tuesdays. Runs the first Saturday in April through the last Saturday in October. 360-4721, www.clevelandcountyfair.org Edmond Farmers Market at Festival Marketplace (26 W 1st, Edmond) is open Saturdays, April 11 through Oct. 31, except May 2. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. 359-4630, www. edmondok.com OSU-OKC Farmers Market is held year-round on Saturdays at the Horticulture Pavilion (400 N Portland). The spring/summer hours are 8 a.m.-1 p.m. 945-3326, www.osuokc.edu/farmersmarket

Maleficent | April 17 | Chitwood Park | Dark Big Hero 6 | May 15 | Hafer Park | Dark

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Admission is free, concessions are $1 each. In case of inclement weather, movies will be shown at the MAC at 7pm. edmondparks.com | 405.359.4630 APRIL 2015

Follow us on


Summer Camps Guide

Our 2015 Summer Camp & Activities Guide is here to help you plan the best summer ever. Search for camps online at www.metrofamilymagazine.com/summer-camp-guide.

Venue

Dates

Fees

Details

Abrakadoodle OKC Mobile Art Program Art 405-818-5417, www.abrakadoodle.com/okmetro-oklahoma-city-register/

Contact

June-August

$15-$250

Half- & full-day themed art camps offered through Edmond Parks & Rec, Moore Parks & Rec, Mustang Parks and Rec, Norman YMCA and Abrakadoodle Art Studio. No scholarships or before/after care available.

Active Learning Services

Heritage Hall, 1800 N.W. 122nd St. 888-652-4377 www.activelearningcamps.com

Session I: June 8-12 Session II: July 13-17

Chess $265-$425; Video Game Creation $305-$490

Active Learning Camps for ages 6-16 offer professional chess instruction for kids of all abilities. Gamemaker and Kudo Video Game Creation camps for ages 7-16 provide campers the opportunity to create their own arcade, platform, go-kart or adventure style video game. Full- and half-day classes available. No scholarships or before/after care available.

Alliance Française d’Oklahoma City

PO Box 414, OKC, OK 73101 405-748-0868, www.afdokc.org Register at afdokc.org/education/ French-immersion-summercamp/

July 6-9 Register by June 29

$109/$99 with discount code “Alliance”

Colonie de vacances, a French summer day camp for 2nd-5th graders from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. Teaches vocabulary, games, songs & more. No scholarships available.

Arctic Edge Ice Arena Summer Sports Camp

14613 N. Kelly Ave. 405-748-5454 www.arctic-edge.com

May 26August 14 Register by May 27

$125-$145

Day camp for ages 7-14 with activities like ice skating, basketball, soccer, gymnastics, martial arts, hip hop and line dancing, swimming, arts and crafts. Camp is hosted from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Two snacks are provided each day. No scholarships or before/after care available.

ArtWorks Academy

3251 Market Pl., Ste. 130, Norman 405-397-1824 www.ArtWorksAcademy.com

June 22July 31

$65-$250

Visual and performing arts academy serving Norman, Moore and the surrounding communities offering day camps and classes in dance, musical theater, acting, visual art and music. Classes for ages 18 months to 18 years. Scholarships available. No before/after care available.

Building Minds, LLC

Multiple locations throughout the June 8August 13 metro and the state. 405-443-4530, www.building-minds.com

$150

Day camps for ages 5-13 using LEGO® bricks in hands-on building projects to teach about science, engineering and aviation concepts. No scholarships or before/after care available.

$225 for halfday camps, $395 for fullday camps

Beginner & intermediate horse day camps for ages 5-13 to learn about horses and receive riding instruction. No previous riding experience necessary. Full day camps go from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and are offered June 15-19, June 22-26, July 6-10 and July 27-31. Half-day camps are from noon to 3 p.m. June 1-5, June 8-12 and August 3-7. No scholarships or before/after care available.

Cadence Equestrian 14150 S. Air Depot Blvd., Center Edmond 405-348-7469 www.cadenceequestrian.com

June 15August 7

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Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Camp ClapHans

2002 E. Robinson St., Norman 405-307-2814 kcottrell@jdmc.org www.campclaphans.com

June 14July 22 Register by April 23

$325 per week Overnight camp for ages 8-18 with developmental disabilities. Five four-day sessions run from Sunday afternoon to Wednesday evening. 1:1 ratio of camp staff to campers. Activities include canoeing, fishing, archery, horseback riding, arts and crafts. Scholarships and before/after care available.

Camp DaKaNi

3309 E. Hefner Rd 405-254-2080 www.campdakani.org

June 1July 31

$180–$350

Day camps for ages 5-13 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. include zip-line, rock climbing, fishing, canoeing, kayaking, hiking and sports. Overnight camps for youth entering middle school through high school include rock climbing, repelling, team sports & games, fishing, archery and performance arts. Camp C.A.N.O.E. (Children with Autism Need Outdoor Experiences) open to children with autism in grades K-12. Scholarships and before/ after care available.

Camp McFadden

9137 E. Hartford, Ponca City 580-762-9955 www.campmcfadden.com

June 7July 24

$165 Short Session / $325 Full Session / $465 Week Teen Programs

Overnight camp for boys and girls ages 6-18. Activities include a ropes course and zip line, canoeing, kayaking, archery and shooting, swimming, fishing and Dutch oven cooking. Scholarships and before/after care available.

Child Care, Inc

Multiple locations 405-942-1250 www.childcareinc.com

May 1August 31

$120 per week

Day camp offering full-service care for ages 5-12 up to 10 hours per day, Monday–Saturday. Field trip/activity fee in addition to weekly tuition. No scholarships available. Before/after care available.

Climb UP

2701 Washington Dr., Norman 405-310-4648 http://climbupgym.com

June 1July 31

$145/week, $35/day

Day camp for ages 5-15 who meet daily to rock climb in a climate-controlled environment. Campers will receive instruction from certified instructors using climbing-related games and coaching. 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. or 1:30-4:00 p.m. Fee includes a snack daily and a camp shirt. No scholarships or before/after care available.

ClubZ! In-Home Tutoring

405-478-3515 www.clubztutoring.com/okc

June 1July 31 Enroll by May 15

Call for fees

Summer small group or one-on-one tutoring for grades K–12. All subjects taught by certified teachers. Jump Start Reading for grades 1-3; Art of Writing grades 5-12; Master Study Skills grades 5-12. No scholarships or before/after care available.

Dance Unlimited

514 S. Bryant, Edmond 405-844-9996 www.danceunlimitedpac.com

June 15August 13

Visit website.

Themed day camps for ages 3-11. Princess/Prince Camp-June 15-18 and Aug 10-13; Broadway Camp-June 29-July 2 and Aug 10-13; Under the Big Top Camp-July 20-23; Monster High Camp-Aug 3-6; Hip Hop HeroJune 15 and Aug 10. No scholarships available. No before/after care available.

D-BAT OKC

801 N.W. 122nd 405-694-4448 www.dbatokc.com

May 25August 21

$75-$320

Baseball/softball day camp for boys and girls ages 6-12. Camps run five days or fewer from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Qualified instructors provide lessons in fundamentals in an indoor field. Wear sneakers and bring baseball/softball equipment and sack lunch. Scholarships not available. Before/after care available.

Edmond Parks & Recreation

2733 Marilyn Williams Dr., Edmond 405-359-4630, www.edmondparks.com

June-August

$100–$300

Day camps for ages 2–12 with topics including video game design, web design, Abrakadoodle Art, Mad Science, Tippi Toes dance, Kindermusik, Kid Co. Theatre and Extreme Animals. Scholarships and before/after care available.

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Details


Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Details

Fine Arts Institute of Edmond

27 E. Edwards, Edmond 405-340-4481, www.edmondfinearts.com

June-August

$95–$220

Week-long day art camps for students ages 3-6 years and 1st-8th grades with hands-on opportunities in visual and performing arts. Scholarships available. Before/after care not available.

Firehouse Art Center

444 S. Flood, Norman 405-329-4523 www.normanfirehouse.com

June 1-July 31

$85–$160

Children’s Summer Art Program is a day camp for ages 5-13 offering five summer sessions running Monday-Friday, focusing on master artists, varied art techniques and the Oklahoma Standards for Fine Arts: Visual Arts. No scholarships or before/after care available.

Fun & Fit Summer Camp

5500 N. Independence 405-949-6888

May 26August 19 Enrollment fee increases April 5

$153/week

Day camp for grades K-8 Monday-Friday from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Teams are assigned by age and each team goes on two field trips per week to top local attractions like Frontier City and Andy Alligators. All field trip costs included in weekly tuition. Other activities include cooking, science, art and group games. Breakfast, lunch and snack served. DHS accepted.

Girl Scouts 6100 N. Robinson Western Oklahoma 405-528-4475 www.gswestok.org

May-August

$65-$445

Day camps for all ages with activities like archery, canoeing, hiking, crafts, riding horses & STEM. Scholarships available. No before/after care available.

The Goddard School

6001 E. Covell Rd., Edmond 405-330-1313, www. goddardschool.com

May 26August 14

Call for fees

Goddard Summer Camp is a day camp for children 6 weeks to 6 years old. Before/after care available. No scholarships available.

The Goddard School

17440 N. Western Ave., Edmond 405-348-4442 www.goddardschool.com

June 2August 15

Call for fees

Goddard Summer Camp is a day camp for children 6 weeks to 12 years old. Before/after care available. No scholarships available.

Harn Homestead Museum

1721 N. Lincoln Blvd. 405-235-4058 www.harnhomestead.com

June 1-5 Register by May 15

$175

Day camp with themed daily activities centering around pioneer life, insects, farm animals, nature and recycling for ages 6-11. Before/after care available. No scholarships available.

KaleidEscape at St. Mary’s Episcopal School

505 E. Covell, Edmond 405-341-9541 www.smesedmond.org

June 1-26 Register by May 15

$180/week

Day camp for ages 3-11 meeting 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. daily. Arts, crafts, drama, music, science, water play and PE are offered. Session 1: June 1-5. Session 2: June 8-12 Session 3: June 15-19 Session 4: June 22-26. Scholarships and before/after care not available.

Kanakuk Kamps

1353 Lake Shore Dr., Branson 417-266-3000, www.kanakuk.com

May 30August 8

$1,070 & up

Overnight camp for boys and girls ages 6-18 years old. Located in SW Missouri and committed to developing dynamic Christian leaders & offering more than 70 activities and sports. Scholarships available.

Kids Kamp Henderson Hills Baptist Church

1200 E. I-35 Frontage Rd., Edmond 405-341-4639 www.hhbc.com

August 3-6 Register by July 19

$275 now through May 31. $300 from June 1-June 30, and $325 after July 1.

Overnight camp hosted at Sky Ranch Cave Springs. No scholarships available. Led by Henderson Hills Baptist Church for kids who have completed 3rd, 4th or 5th grade. Scholarships and before/after care are not available.

Kumon Math & Reading

Edmond West: 245 S. Santa Fe, 405-216-9800; Edmond North: 775 W. Covell, 405-715-1111 www.kumon.com

Ongoing

$125 per subject per month

Day camp for preschool to high school students. Kumon will design an individualized lesson plan to help your child achieve success in math and reading and develop strong study skills and confidence. For remedial and advanced students. Scholarships and before/ after care not available.

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Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Details

Mad Science

Held at various locations throughout the OKC area. 405-285-9643 www.okc.madscience.org

June-August

$95–$125

Day camps for PreK–6th grade, held at various locations. Themes include LEGO® Mindstorms Robotics; Rocking Rockets and Aerodynamics, Secret Agents Lab, Chemicals, Cells and Crime (for 2nd-6th grade) and Jr. Explorers Club and Nature, Bugs and Blossoms (PreK to 1st grade). Scholarships and before/after care not available.

Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art

1900 W. MacArthur, Shawnee 405-878-5300 www.mgmoa.org

June 15August 1

Free-$60 (discounts available)

Week-long, two-hour creative arts camps for kids 8-13, each with a different theme and taught by artists. Primary Partners classes for tots with adult partner and Teen/Tween art and theater clinics also available this summer. Scholarships available. No before/after care available.

Marjorie Kovich School of Ballet

1312 S. Berry Rd., Norman 405-364-1818 www.mkovichballet.com

June 1August 6 Register by May 10. Late enrollment accepted but price may change

$25 +

One-week and one-day dance day camps for boys and girls ages 3-7. First session: June 1-5. Second session: June 8-12. Third session: June 29-July 3. Fourth session: July 20 -24. One-day camps: July 8, 14, 27, 28, Aug. 5, 6. Summer Intensive Workshops for three levels between ages 8 and 18: Ballet, Pre-Pointe/ Pointe, Modern, Jazz, Character are June 1-July 17. Ballet Classes Levels I & II for Teens/Adults June 1-24. Scholarships and before/after care are not available.

Missouri Military Academy

204 Grand, Mexico MO 65265 573-581-1776 missourimilitaryacademy.org

June 21July 18

$700-$3750

Five types of overnight camps for ages 8-17 offered where young people will learn leadership skills and improve academic skills. Leadership Camp, Confidence Camp, Summer Academy, ACT/SAT Boot Camp, Young Journalist Workshop. Scholarships available.

Moore Norman Technology Center

4701 12th Avenue N.W., Norman 405-364-5763 x7260 www.mntc.edu/sya

June 2-26

$75 per class or $140 for full-day MED or CSI Camps

Summer Youth Academy is a week-long day camp for ages 9-14 meeting from 9 a.m. to noon or 1 to 4 p.m. Scholarships available. Enrollment for ages 9-11 is April 9 at 7:30am and enrollment for ages 12-14 is April 16 at 7:30am. Before/after care not available.

North Penn Creative Kids Learning Center

May 252000 N.W. 150th St. August 15 405-254-3147 info@northpenncreativekids.com Enroll by May 15

Call for prices

Day camp offering a program in partnership with Amazing Athletes and Little Spanish Bridge. The weekly tuition includes registration, activity fee and a field trip. For ages 5-12. Scholarships and before/after care are not available.

OKC RIVERSPORT Adventure Camps

725 S. Lincoln Blvd. 405-552-4040 boathousedistrict.org

June 1August 7

$150-$300

Half-day and full-day week-long camps for ages 8-16. Morning Adventure campers focus on learning water safety and paddling skills in an assortment of recreational and racing kayaks, canoes, stand-up paddle boards and dragon boats. Afternoon campers split their week between the SandRidge Sky Trail and Youth Zone as well as an introduction to kayaking, dragon boating and stand-up paddle boarding. Scholarships and before/after care not available.

Oklahoma Center for Arts Education

University of Central Oklahoma 100 N. University Dr.,Edmond 405-974-3784 www.ocae.net

June 8-July 31

$150-$300 per week

Half-day or full-day week-long camps for ages 7+ covering topics including drama, art, chamber music, rock music, jazz music, choral music, opera music and dance. Scholarships and before/after care not available.

Oklahoma City Museum of Art

415 Couch Dr. 405-236-3100 www.okcmoa.com

June 2August 7

$120/ members, $130/nonmembers

Day camp offering a variety of age-appropriate, thematic four-day sessions based on the Museum’s exhibitions & permanent collections. Full-day camps are open to ages 4-16. Half-day camps available for ages 4-5. Scholarships and before/after care are available.

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Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Details

Oklahoma Children’s Theatre

2501 N. Blackwelder 405-606-7003 www.oklahomachildrenstheatre. org

May 26August 14

$100-$500

Half-day camps for ages 3 & 4, full-day camps for ages 5-13 in areas such as theatre, dance, magic, musical theatre, stage combat, film making, video game design and improv. Scholarships and before/after care are available.

Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center

3000 General Pershing Blvd. May 26405-951-0000 August 7 www.oklahomacontemporary.org

$170 per week

Day camp for ages 5-12 to experiment with and be inspired by a variety of contemporary artists. Camps, led by artists and educators, include drawing, painting, mixed media, ceramics, dance and theater. Scholarships and before/after care available.

Oklahoma History Center

800 Nazih Zuhdi Dr. 405-522-3602 www.okhistory.org

June & July

$35-$100

Family Space Camp is a one-day family event from 2 to 5 p.m. on June 27 where families will enjoy hands-on space learning. The History Pioneers Junior Curator Camp will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. July 6-10 and teach campers about creating and maintaining museum exhibits. Scholarships are available. Before/after care not available.

OU Sooner Flight Academy

1928 Goddard Ave., Norman 405-325-1635 flightcamp.ou.edu

June 1- July 17 Partial scholarship application deadline is May 1

$470–$625

Summer flight day camps for ages 6-18 to learn the principles of flight through hands-on activities demonstrating science, technology, engineering & math. Scholarships and before/ after care are available.

Quail Springs United Methodist Church Early Childhood Program

14617 N. Penn 405-755-9477 www.qsumc.org

June 2-4, June 9-11, July 7-9, July 14-16 Enroll by May 15

$255 + $25 Summer Splash program is open to children enrollment fee. ages 1-6. Camp goes from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Activities include music, stories, Bible time, cooking and art. Children may enroll in the full 12-day program or in either one of the 6-day sessions. Call for 6-day session pricing. Scholarships and before/after care are not available.

Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History

2401 Chautauqua Ave., Norman 405-325-1008 www.samnoblemuseum.org

June-July

$45-$70

Day camps for ages 4 (with adult)-14. A variety of camp sessions cover a range of sciencerelated topics. Scholarships available. Before/ after care not available.

Sierra Club Nature Camp

3739 Saint George Dr. 405-820-0682 http://oklahoma.sierraclub.org/ camp/OKCYukonNatureCamp. html

July 13-17 Enroll by July 6

$100

Day nature camp hosted at Kirkpatrick Farm in Yukon for ages 5-11. Older siblings are welcome to attend as helpers for a reduced fee. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Activities include swimming, cooking and learning all about nature. Scholarships and before/after care are available.

Soccer City

4520 Old Farm Rd. 405-748-3888 www.soccercityokc.com

June-August

$75–$150

Recreational & advanced soccer day camps for ages 4–16. No before/after care, no scholarships.

The Studio of the Sooner Theatre

227 E. Main St., Norman 405-321-9600 www.soonertheatre.org

June 1-July 31

$125-$425

Day camps lasting one, two and three weeks for ages preschool to 12th grade (half-day and full-day options available for preschool). Topics include musical theatre, theatre dance, voice, improvisation and acting. Scholarships and before/after care available.

SPARK Summer Program at First Presbyterian Church

1001 N.W. 25th 405-525-0018

June 1-July 29

$125 per week (4-5 days) or $25 per day (1-3 days)

Summer 2015 Raiders of the Lost Artifacts! is a day camp that includes swimming, field trips, classes, crafts & interactive learning. $55 enrollment fee, 15% discount for multiple children. Scholarships available; no before/after care.

Studio J School of Dance

420 S. Santa Fe Ave., Edmond 405-348-3377 www.studiojdanceok.com

June-August

$70–$250

Week-long ballet camps for ages 3-8 ending with a studio performance. Also, summer session dance classes for ages 3-18. Scholarships and before/after care are not available.

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Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Details

The Tristesse Grief Center

4646 S. Harvard Ave. Ste. 200, Tulsa 918-587-1200 www.thegriefcenter.org

June 5-7

Free

Sponsored by New York Life, Healing Hearts Camp is designed for children ages 8-18 who have experienced the death of a loved one. Campers will experience traditional overnight summer camp complete with bonfires, canoeing, swimming and a ropes course. The camp will also offer art and music therapy, as well as memorialization projects that help children work through their grief and honor the memory of their loved one.

Trinity School OKC 321 N.W. 36 St. 405-525-5600 www.trinityschoolokc.org

July 7-30 Register by May 22

$400–$675

Summer Academy is a day camp for grades K-12 focusing on intensive reading therapy, math and language arts through multi-sensory instruction. Before and after care available. Scholarships not available.

Twist and Shout

14801 N. Lincoln Blvd., Edmond 405-775-9491 www.shouterspirit.com

June-July

$100

Tumble and Cheer day camps Monday through Thursday in June and July for two hours per day. Scholarships and before/after care not available.

UW SPORTS CAMP at First Presbyterian Church of Edmond

1001 S. Rankin St., Edmond 405-341-3602 x267 www.fpcedmond.org

June 8-12 (9 am-12:15 pm) Register by May 29

$65

Day camp for kids ages 4-12. Offers sports instruction in soccer, basketball, cheer, football and special instruction for ages 4-5. Scholarships are available. Before/after care not available.

Velocity Dance Center

11122 N. Rockwell Ave. 405-721-8807 www.oklahomacitydancestudio. com

June-August

$40–$200

Dance day camps for ages 3+ with themes of Cinderella and Minions. Summer session classes also available for 3+ in ballet, jazz, tap & hip hop. Scholarships and before/after care not available.

82° Year Round Book Your School Group NOW

call 580-323-3555 xt. 9 for details Just 75 minutes west of OKC & a lot less expensive than Texas!

www.water-zoo.com

Be Lazy or Be Crazy at Water-Zoo BE YOU!

82° Year Round

OPEN weekends and most holidays. See our Calendar!

BUY YOUR TICKETS ONLINE AND SAVE!

Hotel Packages Available Holiday Inn Express 580-323-1950 Hampton Inn 580-323-4267 RV PACKAGES AVAILABLE! CALL: 580-323-9966

www.water-zoo.com METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015


Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Details

Victory Dance

4401 N. MacArthur Blvd. 405-717-1250 www.victorydance.tv

June 15July 31

$45-$75

Two-week summer sessions available for dancers ages 3-18 in ballet, jazz, tap and hip hop. Three-day camps available June 29-July 1 with themes like “Frozen,” Princess and Broadway. Enroll online beginning April 10. No before/after care or scholarships available.

Wake Zone Cable Park

3501 N.E. 10th St. 405-702-4040, www.cablewakezone.com

May-August

$180-$445 for day camps; overnight camps are $895/week.

Campers enjoy activities like kayaking, kneeboarding and stand-up paddle boards. Day and overnight campers will experience nature trail hikes, bonfire cooking, rope swings and zip lines. Offering half-day morning camps; afternoon camps; full-day camps; and overnight camps (Sunday to Friday) for ages 6+are $895/ week. Scholarships are not available. Before/ after care is available.

Westminster Presbyterian Church

4400 N. Shartel 405-524-2204 www.wpcokc.org

June 1-July 31 No camp the week of July 4

$400-$700

West Camp is for ages 7-10 and Jr. West Camp is for ages 4-6. Each themed week will be based on a Bible story and a core value. Fulltime camp is 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Part-time camp is 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. MondayFriday. Weekly focuses include nature, theater, animals, science and sports. Scholarships are available. Before/after care not available.

Westminster School

600 N.W. 44th St. 405-524-0631 www.westminsterschool.org

June 8-12 & 22-26

Varies

Day camps for 1st-6th grades. Building Minds presents LEGO® for 1st-5th grades to learn about flying machines and gravity (June 8-12, 9 a.m. to noon). Camp Invention for 2nd-6th grades will explore problem-solving skills (June 22-26, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.). No scholarships available. Before/after care available.

YMCA Camp Classen

10840 Main Camp Rd., Davis 580-369-2272, www.ymcaokc.org

June 7-July 25

$695 per week; $1095 for two-week session

Resident overnight camps in the Arbuckles of southern Oklahoma emphasizing learning skills, developing character, making friends, encouraging self-reliance & developing a love for nature. Scholarships available.

YMCA of Greater OKC

Various locations 405-297-7777 www.ymcaokc.org

May 26August 14

$90-$135 per week

Day camp includes outdoor activities, art, and more. Emphasis placed on creating memories and friendships. Scholarships and before/after care available.

Summer Activities Guide Venue

Contact

Dates

Bouncin Craze I & Bouncin Craze II

14901 N. Lincoln & 9333 W. Reno 405-607-2020 www.bouncincraze.com

Monday, $7.50 & up Wednesday & Friday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Tuesday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

Indoor inflatable fun, game rooms, crafts and snack bar. One Tuesday a month will be Water Day with a 40-foot Slip and Slide and 14-foot Party Blast Water Slide. Bouncin Craze II offers drawing, painting, coloring and chalk stations.

Chickasaw Cultural Center

867 Cooper Memorial Dr., Sulphur 580-622-7130 www.chickasawculturalcenter. com

Ongoing

One of the largest tribal cultural centers in the United States & shares the history of the Chickasaw people through art, exhibits & performances.

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

Fees

Free, some exhibits have fees.

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APRIL 2015

Details


Summer Activities Guide Venue

Contact

Dates

Fees

Details

Dodge City Paintball & Outdoor Laser Tag of OKC

N.W. 150th & Gregory Rd, Piedmont 405-373-3745 www.oklahoma-paintball.com

Saturday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.; weekdays, 5-9 p.m.

$16-$30

Eight field courses, low impact paintball, junior paintball for ages 5+, swingset, grills, allweather building. Group rates available.

Museum of Osteology

10301 S. Sunnylane Rd. 405-814-0006 ww.museumofosteology.org

Ongoing

Age 13+, $7 Ages 3-12, $6

Provides exhibits & activities to help visitors understand biology via skeletons of animals from around the world. Field trips for groups & camps.

Oklahoma History Center

800 Nazih Zuhdi Dr. 405-522-3602 www.okhistory.org

Year-round

$2

Attend Okietales from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. every Wednesday in June and July for reading and storytelling that exposes ages 5-9 to Oklahoma history. $2 admission includes museum admission.

RedPin Bowling Lounge

200 S. Oklahoma (Lower Bricktown) 405-702-8880 www.bowlredpin.com

Open Daily

$4-$15

Enjoy made-from-scratch food, wait-staff service at the lanes and kid-friendly features like automated bumpers and bowling ramps. Reservations accepted.

Skate Galaxy OKC

5800 N.W. 36th St. 405-605-2758, www.skategalaxyokc.com

June-August

$25 for unlimited day sessions

Summer public roller skating session from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., as well as private lessons and free Learn to Skate sessions Saturdays at noon.

Unpluggits Playstudio

575 Enterprise Dr., Ste. 110, Edmond 405-340-7584 www.unpluggits.com

June 1-July 31

$45

Workshops from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. for two days. On Monday, campers will build several projects and pick them up on Wednesday. One paint’n play admission to be used same day as camp is included. Ages 4 and up.

our child will make memories and masterpieces!

FESTIVAL OF THE CHILD Saturday, May 2, 2015 10:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M. Yukon City Park, 2200 S. Holly Ave. Storytellers, clowns, face painting, arts and crafts, drama and dress-up, petting zoo, pony rides, kayaking, moon bounces and more! Tickets on sale now! No tickets required for adults. Ticket outlets include the Yukon Community Center, Dale Robertson Center, Jackie Cooper Gym, both Children’s New World locations and YNB. cityofyukonok.gov 405.354.8442

/cityofyukonokgov @cityofyukonok @cityofyukonokgov

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resource 52

53 58

directories 52: Family Services Angels Foster Family Network 53-58: Summer Camps Active Learning Services (Chess/Video Game Creation) Arctic Edge Arts Trek (Mabee-Gerrar Museum of Art) ArtWorks Academy Building Minds Cadence Equestrian Camp DaKaNi (Camp Fire) Camp McFadden (at Kaw Lake) Child Care, Inc. Climb Up Dance Unlimited Fine Arts Institute Firehouse Art Center Healing Hearts Camp Integris Health Fun & Fit Camp Journey off the Map (Henderson Hills Baptist Church) North Penn Creative Kids Learning Center Oklahoma Sport Fencing OU Sooner Flight Academy Sierra Club Nature Camp Soccer City Camps & Summer Programs SPARK (First Presbyterian Church) Splash! (Quail Springs United Methodist Church Early Childhood Summer Programs) Studio J School of Dance Summer Camps & Programs Summer Academy (Trinity School) The Dance Department UW Sports Camp (First Presbyterian of Edmond) Victory Dance Summer Camps & Programs Velocity Dance Center Summer Camps & Programs

Wake Zone Summer Camps West Camp & Jr. West Camp (Westminster Presbyterian Church) Westminster School 59-60: Party Abrakadoodle Allison’s Fun Andy Alligators Bouncin Craze Jump!Zone Mad Science Mobile Laser Forces Paint ’N Station Paint Your Art Out Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History Skate Galaxy Water Zoo Indoor Water Park 60: Education Holy Trinity Lutheran School KUMON Learning Centers, Edmond 60: Special Needs Total POSS-Abilities 61: Family Fun Be Wild for Art Dodge City Paintball Paint Your Art Out Stafford Air & Space Museum Unpluggits Playstudio 62: Retail/Restaurants Green Bambino Jamberry Nails Jimmy’s Egg learning tree toys, books & games Once Upon A Child

58

59 60

60 60 61

62

Find more at www.metrofamilymagazine.com/directories/

YOU

Mark your calendar! Vendors: Reserve your booth today!

FAMILY SEVICES

COULD CHANGE

LIFE A CHILD’S

2015 Saturday April 18, 2015

Find out how at

www.AngelsFosterOKC.org

405.285.6193

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015

Cox Convention Center

CALL 601-2081 NOW


ARCTIC EDGE 12TH ANNUAL

Summer Day Camp for ages 7 & up May 26th - August 14th, 7:30am - 5:30pm Register early to ensure your camper’s spot! All counselors are First Aid & CPR Certified DHS Approved

Ice Skating • Basketball • Swimming Martial Arts • Workout Class • Gymnastics Line & Hip Hop Dancing 14613 N. Kelly • 748-5454 • arctic-edge.com

405.721.1830

Camp DaKaNi

Summer Camp 2014 Register Today! campdakani.org

For more information call [405] 254 2080

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015

SUMMER CAMPS

the coolest camp around


Spend the days outdoors!

SUMMER CAMPS

Sierra Club Nature Camp

- catch bugs - swim - cook $100 includes lunch, snacks & a shirt July 13-17, 9AM-4PM - Ages 5-11 Kirkpatrick Farm in Yukon Contact Traci 405-820-0682 or Email naturecampokc@gmail.com for information

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015


• Birthday Party Packages • Indoor Soccer Leagues

Check our website for details and enrollment! soccercityokcity.com Six different weekly camps for ages 4-16 4520 Old Farm Road, OKC held from June through August. (west of Meridian, south of 122nd) $95/camp; half-day sessions held from 9-12 & 1-4.

1/5 vertical: 2.25” X 6.418”

Also enroll for Lil Kickers Summer Session June 8-August 29

405-748-3888

Call TODAY!

Child Care with a

Creative Twist!

Adventure Camp 3 to 6 day camps for ages 6-18

Canoeing, kayaking, fishing, camping, archery, zip line, ropes course and more... Two week teen kayak trips available

Sign Up Today! Mention this ad for a $ 10 discount.

405-254-3147

North Penn Creative Kids Learning Center, 150th & Penn

Discover a summer of art classes, including drawing, painting, collage, sculpture, and more for ages 5 - 6, 7 - 9, and 8 - 13. DATES Session I: June 1 - June 5 Session II: June 8 - June 19 Session III: June 22 - June 26 Session IV: July 6 - July 17 Session V: July 20 - July 31 Children’s Summer Art Show 2015 August 7 - August 22, 2015 Reception: Friday, August 7, 6 - 8 PM

Infants - School age

Now Enrolling for Summer Program K - 5th grade

Enrollment begins April 6, 2015

Located along the west shores of Kaw Lake (near Ponca City)

580-762-9955 • campmcfadden.com

For information about Kaw Lake, phone the Kaw Lake Association:

580-762-9494 or 877-671-6985 kawlake.com

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015

SINCE 1971

normanfirehouse.com | 405.329.4523

SUMMER CAMPS

Enroll NOW for summer camps!


SUMMER CAMPS

Full-Day Camps

9am - 3pm each day Cost $395/child June 15-19, June 22-26, July 6-10, July 27-31

Half-Day Camps

12pm - 3pm each day Cost $225/child June 1-5, June 8-12, Aug 3-7

Cadence Equestrian

14150 S. Air Depot Blvd - Edmond 348-7469 CadenceEquestrian.com

Start the Spark For your student at Trinity’s Summer Academy

Multi-Sensory Instruction with Certified Teachers Grades K-12

July 7-30, 2015* Tues/Wed/Thurs

Power-Up Classes:

• Intensive Reading/ Language Arts & Math • Intensive Reading Therapy (small group and private) • Summer Fun

Serving intelligent children who learn differently

321 NW 36th • OKC 405-525-5600

www.trinityschoolokc.org

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015


WESTMINSTER

CREATING FRIENDSHIPS ONE STEP AT A TIME

11122 N Rockwell Ave Ste A-11 OKC

Pre-K and Kindergarten • Grades One through Eight 600 NW 44 Street • OKC • 405.524.0631 • westminsterschool.org

405-721-8807

info@oklahomacitydancestudio.com

www.oklahomacitydancestudio.com

SAVE $ 25!

Splash!

AND SO MUCH MORE!

June 2, 3, 4 and 9, 10, 11 • July 7, 8, 9 and 14, 15, 16 9:00am - 2:00pm, Ages 1 through 6

Stories Cooking Art Specials Bible Time To enroll call Quail Springs United Methodist Church

Early Childhood Program 405-755-3258 METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015

JUNE, JULY, AUGUST REGISTER EARLY LIMITED SPOTS AVAILABLE 3501 NE 10TH/OKC (2 MILES EAST OF BRICKTOWN)

SUMMER CAMPS

WE ARE...


SUMMER CAMPS

BUILDING MINDS

Camp

Jr.

&

Building Success Through Hands-On Learning Fun

Summer Camps with Lego® bricks!

Camp

Enroll your child today for Westminster’s Summer program for ages 4-10! In this eight week Christ focused program your child will learn about God through Legos, Exotic Animals, Snow Cones, Sports, Reading and Science.

www.Building-Minds.com

405-443-4530

Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn. –Benjamin Franklin

Call 405-524-2204 for more information. Space is limited so register soon!

Oklahoma Sport

Fencing

24 NW 144 Circle, Edmond oksportfencing.com 755-4195

New members save 25% with this ad.

Ballet, Pointe, Jazz, Tap, Hip Hop, Acro, Acting & Music Theatre

Summer Camps for ages 3-11 • Princess/Prince Camp • Broadway Camp • Under the Big Top Camp • Monster High Camp • Hip Hop Hero

844-9996

*All enrollment can now be completed online!

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015


MOONBOUNCES • SLIDES • OBSTACLE COURSES • WATER SLIDES

PARTY GUIDE

PICK-UP A MOONBOUNCE FOR ONLY $165 FOR THE ENTIRE WEEKEND!!

For more info, call or log on to

www.AllisonsFunInc.com (405) 447-1118

Skate Galaxy OKC 5800 NW 36th St Oklahoma City, OK 405-605-2758 www.skategalaxyokc.com

S E PARTIE AWESOM N PLAY PE GREAT O RENA A BIGGEST

$2 OFF

Open Play 1 per child Exp. 05/2015

Book your party online for a Free JZ T-shirt! (405) 200-1691 Palagio Shops - SW 104th & Western www.jumpzoneparty.com Join Club JZ for Discounts

!

ES

I RT

PA

• Party Rooms • Cubs Cove • Water Slides • Wave Pool • Splash Zone • Lazy River And Much More!

BOOK NOW! water-zoo.com

580-323-9966 x1 METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015

82º year round!


PARTY GUIDE

Math. Reading.

Confidence.

A unique method with benefits for today, and for life. Schedule a free placement test now at your local Kumon Math & Reading Center:

EDUCATION

405.715.1111 • kumon.com/edmond-north EDMOND - WEST • 2nd & Santa Fe Ave.

405.216.9800 • kumon.com/edmond-west

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

©2014 Kumon North America

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APRIL 2015

SPECIAL NEEDS

EDMOND - NORTH • Covell & Kelly


FAMILY FUN

• Canvas Painting Party • Teen Parties

• Birthday Parties • Bridal Parties • Walk-in Anytime

paintnstation.com Paint your own pottery studio 7906 N. May, OKC • 842-7770

New Low Impact Paintball

Named One of the “Must See” Attractions in Oklahoma!

PERFECT FOR YOUNGER PLAYERS

Stafford’s flown Apollo X spacesuit

Get ready for Mother's Day May 10th

Great Affordable Family Outing! Named Smithsonian Affiliate, 2011 Unique Gift Shop (580) 772-5871 www.staffordmuseum.org

3000 E. Logan Rd - Weatherford, OK 73096

FUN FOR ALL

AGES!

New Jr. Paintball! (5yr+) 8 Field Courses! New Picnic Area! New Playground! All-Weather Building! Birthday Parties! (405) 373-3745

DodgeCityPaintball.com 16425 NW 150th in Piedmont Open Year Round, Groups & Walk-ons Welcome! METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015

ceramics paint-n-take indoor playground birthday parties


RETAIL/RESTAURANT

Celebrate Earth Day with April 20-26: Bring by a recyclable item from our list and get a 15% off shopping pass to use multiple times during this special week.

We BUY & SELL gently used kids’ stuff.

All details at www.green-bambino.com We pay CASH on the spot for kids’ clothing, shoes, toys and baby gear. Plus we’ve got everything your kids need at prices that can’t be beat!

5120 N Shartel Ave. (405) 848-2330

13801 N Pennsylvania Ave • N Oklahoma City 73134 405.286.3114 • www.OnceUponAChildOKCNorth.com

Thunder Up!

all your children’s best toys are at learning tree for children birth - 14 yrs

Do you want the

MANICURED LOOK for twice the wear and half the price?

T-shirts in sizes 6 months to 4T

7638 N. Western, OKC • 405-848-1415

Contact me today!

www.got2lovemynails.jamberrynails.net

405-408-6077

Ms. De, Jamberry Independent Consultant on FB. ALSO: WONDERFUL product for a Jamberry Birthday Beauty Day! Jamberry is a rapidly-rising, four-year-old company that has shot to #10 in Home Party Rankings (www.homepartyrankings.com Feb 2015). Untapped income potential. Contact me for more details.

METROFAMILY MAGAZINE

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APRIL 2015




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