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“Here fishy, fishy, fishy..!” My trip to the aquarium in New Orleans!

Nov15
by Lin on November 15, 2011 at 4:43 pm
Posted In: Blog

Nicki and I had planned on taking a cemetery tour one afternoon while celebrating our honeymoon in New Orleans. I mean, what better way to celebrate a new marriage than by visiting a graveyard, right?

Well, after hopping on a trolley at the hotel and going for what we thought would be a quick trolley ride on the St. Charles Line we ended up back at Canal Street with only about 20 minutes to get down to the French Quarter in time to sign up for the tour. We could probably make it, but didn’t want to push it. Our feet were still hurting from our excursion to the French Quarter on Halloween and the day before that (a story for another time).

We decided to visit the aquarium instead and headed down Canal Street towards the Mississippi River. Along the way we stopped in at a tourist info center and went ahead and purchased our aquarium tickets and reserved our places for a cemetery tour the next day- my birthday, which seemed appropriate. New Orleans has got the tourism thing down! Lots of info shops and booths around the city. If you want to see New Orleans, they’ve got a tour for you!

After purchasing our tickets we walked down to the Riverwalk and took a few pics. I really enjoyed their riverside area, and look forward to going back and ride the Algiers Ferry across the river or check out some of the shops we didn’t have time to go in this trip.

I would love to take a riverboat ride and I really want to go tour Mardi Gras World next time we’re in New Orleans. (I’ll be doing a future post of FREE things to do in New Orleans soon!)

We were a bit hungry by this time. We’d missed breakfast since we slept in a bit. Halloween was the night before and we got in a wee bit late. We had a few wedding cupcakes with us on the trip and that was what we had before heading out that morning. We decided to have lunch by the river at Poppy’s The Crazy Lobster. We sat right down, but it did take a bit to get waited on. We kept ourselves entertained by watching the Algiers Ferry dock and then head back across the river for more passengers and cars (free for pedestrians and $1 for cars).

There were also a few barges and other boats traveling up and down the river, and several pigeons and some sea gulls flying around near the ferry landing. The weather was nice and there was also a guitar player outside on the patio area which went great with the river view. There was a pigeon who came over and enjoyed a few fries near our table who was fun to watch, too.

Our food finally arrived, and was very tasty, but we kind of had to hurry. We’d spent more time walking and waiting than we had planned on and needed to get a move on to have enough time to enjoy the aquarium.

The Aquarium of the Americas is located on the Riverwalk and near where we had lunch so it was just a walk up the ferry entrance, over the R/R tracks, and around the corner to the aquarium entrance. Since we had per-purchased our tickets earlier in the day we were able to walk right in.

The only aquarium I’ve been to before is the one at the Memphis Zoo. While the zoo itself is awesome, the aquarium is kinda lacking and tiny. They have piranhas, electric eels, and a few other cool fish, but they are all in pretty small tanks. This building didn’t look too big so I wasn’t really expecting a whole lot. I figured the IMAX probably took up most of it. Wrong!

As we entered to the right was the gift shop- which looked very inviting, and above our heads were several ginormous sharks hanging from the ceiling! Ok, so far so good- things look promising for seeing some real sharks here!

The first aquarium we encountered was very big and you could walk through the middle of  it. I’m a bit claustrophobic but the walkway was wide enough and tall enough for me to not feel closed in, which was very nice. What was even cooler was that it had a bunch of stingrays swimming around in it!

I love stingrays and they seemed to be flying though the space- sometimes in formation. Things were looking up- and I had to several times to watch the fish swim from one side of the huge tank to the other.

Past that was a circular room which had several smaller tanks- some in the walls, and a couple in the middle of the room. You could also see through other sides of the large tank we had walked though.

After exploring that room for a bit, we entered a doorway which had an escalator leading up a floor or two. It was a bit warmer and muggier from the last room, but not uncomfortable.

At the top of the escalator was a few large tanks with giant catfish! There was also a few other tanks around, piranhas, a waterfall, lots of trees, some birds, plus what looked to be a tree hut.

We climbed the stairs up to the tree hut and explored the top area of this part of the aquarium across wooden bridges. We had a bird hop down in front of us which gave us a bit of a jolt. It was not what I was expecting to be in an aquarium, but a lot of fun.

The next section had penguins and we got there for feeding time, and apparently in time what comes after- poop time! Yep, got to witness what happens when a penguin goes in the water. It was pretty funny to watch the other penguins try to avoid the floating smoke cloud of crap. Each of the penguins had a color coded “arm band” with their names on them. There was a zoo keeper there to answer questions from the crowd. Nobody had to ask where/how does a penguin go to the bathroom.

Across from the penguin area was Shark Cove! I love sharks- have since I was a kid. Won’t go into the ocean or watch JAWS while in a swimming pool because of them, but I dig watching sharks…from a safe distance.

There was a tank about the size of our bedroom filled with sharks. Some were about a foot long, some 3-4 feet long.

We didn’t see any this big, but the ones we saw hanging at the front entrance were behind us, along with a shark size guide. There was also a face painter and a souvenir photo area nearby.

We walked a little further past the food court and saw the parakeet area. We bought a feed stick for a dollar and walked in I was immediately swarmed by a flock of colorful tiny birds! Good thing I don’t have Ornithophobia or get freaked out by Hitchcock’s movie “The Birds“. Getting the feeding stick was more than worth the $1 we spent on it. We watched as one little boy walked in, then screamed and dropped his stick as soon as a bird landed on it! Many of the birds were on it in an instant and a feathered feeding frenzy began. A few minutes later I found out how parakeets poop when some went splat on my ear! Luckily there were paper towels and hand sanitizer nearby.

After coming back inside we saw an incredible view of the Mississippi River from the food court windows. We took a few shots there and then proceeded around the corner where I saw more sharks! This time some really big ones in a tank under us.

Down that hall was a tank with some otters in it, more wall tanks with various fish, and a frog room. There was a large frog prince in the middle, a Kermit The Frog near the ceiling, some info about frogs on the walls, and some tiny colorful live frogs in terrariums. Nicki was fond of the frog prince- hope she’s not already having second thoughts about our marriage!

One of my favorite areas in the aquarium was the seahorse exhibit. They were pretty amazing. They had a few different species of seahorses and seadragons there. It was interesting to watch them use their tails to hold onto branches or intertwine with each other.

From what I read there, seahorses are very faithful mates. Nice to hear as a newlywed!

They had a lot of interactive and play areas for kids, and I was glad they let the big kids play, too!

The only time I got claustrophobic was when I went up a tube inside one of the round tanks. It was a bit snug and obviously built for smaller humans. I took a couple quick pics and made my escape.

One thing I did enjoy was Stingray Bay where I got to pet a couple live stingrays. They were a big slimy and rubbery feeling- but very cool!

We saw a few albino gators at the aquarium. This big boy was HUGE!

Apparently albino alligator births aren’t that rare, but them growing up and surviving in the wild without natural camouflage is. Just too easy for predators to pick them off while the gators are young.

As we passed the white alligator we walked past more tanks with big fish and some more large windows with another great view of the river.

There was also a shack with some kind of eagle or hawk above tethered to a perch. We weren’t sure he was alive until he stood up, flapped his wings, and let out a slight screech. That gave us a bit of a shock! Third time birds had scared us at the aquarium.

Next to him and the shack was the entrance for the jellyfish area of the aquarium. Down the stairs we went.

At the bottom of the stairs there were some smaller tanks with jellyfish in them, a large deep sea diving suit, and a humongous tank with large tuna and SHARKS!!! The tank was as big as the whole Memphis Zoo aquarium back home!

It was awesome to watch the sharks swim along the glass in front of us. Not sure how many different kinds of sharks were swimming around inside and I didn’t get a chance to ask, but I saw at least 3-4 different species. All were pretty good sized!

It was soon almost closing time so I made a quick pass through the main gift shop near the exit. Lots of cool items and fun displays. Nicki saw a “Harry Otter” shirt in one of the other gift shops upstairs that was cute. It was hard to believe we were at the aquarium for a little over 3hrs, and we could have stayed longer if the employees didn’t have to go home.

It was well worth checking out- hope you have or get to someday. More pics and stories from our New Orleans adventure to come!

Lin

 

Audubon Aquarium of the Americas
1 Canal St., New Orleans, LA 70130 [Map It]
(504) 581-4629, (800) 774-7394
www.auduboninstitute.org

Neighborhood: Central Business District/Downtown
Attraction Type/s: Museum, Aquarium

Description: Looming large against the Mississippi River is the extraordinary Audubon Aquarium of the Americas which houses 15,000 sea life creatures, representing nearly 600 species, living happily in a state-of-the-art facility.

└ Tags: Aquarium of the Americas, Canal Street, catfish, fish, geek travel blog, Geeker, Have Geek Will Travel, Kermit The Frog, Lin Workman, Memphis, Memphis Zoo, Mississippi River, New Orleans, Nicki Howe, Ornithophobia, parakeets, penguins, piranhas, Poppy's The Crazy Lobster, riverboat, Riverwalk, sea dragons, sea horses, sharks, stingrays
Comments Off on “Here fishy, fishy, fishy..!” My trip to the aquarium in New Orleans!

“Location, location, location!” Touring a cemetery in New Orleans for my birthday.

Nov08
by Lin on November 8, 2011 at 1:44 pm
Posted In: Blog

Recently Nicki and I got married and went on our honeymoon in New Orleans. It was kind of a three celebrations in one trip- our honeymoon, Halloween, and my 45th birthday.

I’ll be posting about a lot of our trip in N’awlins over the next couple weeks, but first up is the cemetery tour we took on my birthday (also Day of the Dead). We were going to take the tour a day earlier (All Saint’s Day– and my mother’s birthday) but after a long trolley ride/tour on the St. Charles Line (the oldest continuously operating streetcar in the world) we were going to be cutting it close and would have to rush to get down to the French Quarter. Instead we decided to hit the aquarium that day and do the cemetery tour the next (All Soul’s Day) , which worked out much better time wise for us.

We reserved our tour passes when we bought our aquarium tickets- lots of tourist info booths and offices around town. The next morning (my birthday!) we got up early, did breakfast in the hotel (waffles!), stopped by the Walgreens on Canal Street to pick up some fresh batteries and a new memory card for my camera, and headed down Bourbon Street. By this time I had finally learned my way around town, and of course it was our last day there.

We were running a few minutes early so we did a quick walk through Jackson Square and took a few pics. I could have spent a whole day at each part of New Orleans we visited- but really loved the French Quarter. The architecture, art, people, and shops all were fun to see and experience.

We went back to Rev. Zombie’s Voodoo Shop and waited for our guide and the rest of the tour group to arrive. While we waited Nicki and I took some photos of the area and watched people going to work, make deliveries, power-wash the streets and sidewalks, or tour the city on foot or carriage. I think I enjoyed taking shots of the side streets even more than Bourbon Street. Not as much traffic and some really unique buildings.

Rev. Zombie’s Voodo Shop is just off Jackson Square located behind St. Louis Cathedral, and across the street from Pat O’Brien’s– where I discovered the power of a Hurricane on Halloween, but that’s another story! 6 other tourists and our Haunted History tour guide “Ernie” arrived shortly after we got there. After receiving our Haunted History sticker passes we headed down St. Peter Street towards St. Louis Cemetery #1 with Ernie in the lead.

As we walked Ernie encouraged us to ask questions and reminded us that this area isn’t just a touristy location, but a neighborhood as well. We passed a few of the home owners along the way and Ernie seemed to know them all and was happy to greet each one with a smile along the way.

One of our first stops was Louis Armstrong Park and Congo Square on N. Rampart Street located in the Tremé neighborhood. This is where we get our first introduction to Marie Laveau– the Voodoo Queen of New Orleans! We learned a lot about her and the folks that gathered here back when slavery was legal. I won’t go into all of it (Ernie tells it better), but I did learn she had a daughter named “Marie”, was a free woman of color, Catholic and a hairdresser! (Wait a minute…Gail Simone was a hairdresser, too..!)

After we left the park we walked up N. Rampart Street past the police station and around the corner to the Basin Street Station Tourist Info Center. It was formerly the Southern Railway Freight Office Building and has a lot of great railroad memorabilia and some cool models.

Some of the coolest items there were a set of railroad lanterns, which reminded me of Martin Nodell and the origin of the original golden age Alan Scott/Green Lantern. He got the idea for the character while on a Manhattan subway and noticed the train man on the tracks waving a lantern, going from red to green- with green meaning “go”.

The info center also has a huge map of New Orleans which Ernie used to show us the layout of the city, where it gets its nicknames of “The Crescent City” and “The Big Easy“, and told us more about it’s people including more about Marie Laveau and Bernard de Marigny. He brought the game of craps (or crapaud – a French word meaning “toad”) to the US even thought apparently he wasn’t that good at it! After Ernie’s history lesson we then got a chance to check out the info center’s displays, gift shop, and its restrooms!

After the pit stop we headed across the street to the St. Louis Cemetery #1. It is the oldest and most famous of about 15 above-ground cemeteries in and around New Orleans (there is also a St. Louis Cemetery #2 and #3). I designed monuments and tombstones “for a living” for 5 years and I’ve always loved exploring old cemeteries– in the daytime! Luckily for me this tour got started at 10am.

Once inside the cemetery Ernie showed us some of the wall vault tombs and also explained “shake and bake” to us. If you’ve been to New Orleans in the summer and/or had Shake ‘n Bake Chicken you can probably figure that one out for yourself. If you haven’t, let’s just say it gets real hot there and even hotter in the tombs which become brick ovens in the New Orleans heat.

The tombs in New Orleans cemeteries are used again and again, and it is a common practice to bury all the members of a family—or multiple families—in the same tomb. You can also rent tombs! Ernie told us New Orleans was green before green and explained their usage of vaults, crypts, and mausoleums– or “apartments”, “condos”, and “houses” as he also called them. A very efficient use of real estate and recycling for sure, and they do call the cemeteries “Cities of the Dead“!

We followed Ernie further into the cemetery to the most famous tomb there- and one of the most visited graves in the world– voodoo priestess Marie Laveau!

There is much debate as to whether or not the Glapion family crypt is THE Marie Laveau’s final resting place, there’s another there (above pic), and other possible locations, but seeing the markings of three X’s on the tomb (an “X” represents crossing over) and money left behind there many believe it is her’s and hope that Laveau’s spirit will grant them a wish.

“Paying respects” or “desecration“…? Well, Ernie and I will let you decide when you visit.

Next to her tomb is Ernest N. “Dutch” Morial, the first African-American mayor of New Orleans. The convention center is named after him.

Apparently this one is the future home of actor Nic Cage.

Next was the largest tomb/mausoleum in the cemetery. This one was featured in the movie “Easy Rider“. Ernie’s got some good stories about that movie being filmed at St. Louis Cemetery #1, his beverage choices for viewing that movie, and a possible explanation of what happened to the statue’s missing heads!

We found out not all graves in New Orleans are above ground like I had been told. There is a Protestant section located in the back of the cemetery that has below ground graves. The rear of the cemetery is near the Iberville Projects, an area that was known as “Storyville“- a red light district named after city alderman Sidney Story. We heard a good “story” about that, too!

“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You are like whitewashed tombs, which look beautiful on the outside but on the inside are full of dead men’s bones and everything unclean.” Matthew 23:27

Not all the tombs in the cemetery were white-washed. A few tombs around the cemetery are painted, yellow, blue, and other colors.

We saw several crypts with wrought iron gates, including this one with Masonic markings on it. Nicki later had to explain why a Freemason entombed in a Catholic cemetery was a big deal. Apparently that’s unusual…but Ernie had a good explanation for it, and I’ll let him tell you! 😉

There were many of the tombs that had seen better days, and in need of some repairs. There were also some newer looking ones as well. We learned that once a name plate was full and room for additional names were needed a new stone replaced the old, and the old one was placed next to the tomb.

It was only a two hour tour and we saw a lot, but I could spend a whole day exploring this cemetery. I plan to on my next trip to New Orleans– along with #2 and #3! Yep, Nicki and I had so much fun on our NOLA trip we were making plans to come back before we left “The Big Easy“!

St. Louis Cemetery No. 1
Basin at St. Louis St.
New Orleans, LA 70112 [Map It]
(504) 482-5065

Neighborhood: Treme
Hours: M-Sat. 9-3; Sun. 9-12
Free Parking: No
Handicapped Accessible: Yes

Attraction Type/s:  Cemetery
Admission Cost: Free

New Orleans Cemeteries – www.neworleansonline.com/neworleans/attractions/cemeteries

Haunted History Tours
97 Fontainebleau Dr. New Orleans -70125
Phone: 504-861-2727
TOLL FREE 1-888-6GHOSTS
FAX 504-861-1444
http://www.hauntedhistorytours.com/
Email: webmistress@hauntedhistorytours.com
Guides are fully licensed by the City of New Orleans – Recommended by the New Orleans Convention & Visitors Bureau

RESERVATIONS REQUIRED (Please arrive 30 minutes prior to departure time)

When: 10 AM & 1:15 PM. No afternoon tour on Sundays!
Where: Rev. Zombie’s Voodoo Shop, 723 St. Peter St. (between Royal Street & Bourbon St.)
How Long: 2 hours
How Much: $20.00 per person. $17.00 Students/Seniors

For tour reservations call: 504-861-2727

Reserve Online- www.hauntedhistorytours.com/Voodoo

Ask for Ernie– he’ll be glad you did!

└ Tags: above ground tombs, Audubon Aquarium of the Americas, Basin Street Station, birthday, Bourbon Street, cemeteries, craps, Ernie the tour guide, French Quater, Gail Simone, geek travel blog, Geeker, Glapion family crypt, Green Lantern, Halloween, Haunted History Tours, Have Geek Will Travel, honeymoon, Hurricane, Lin Workman, Louisiana, LSU, Marie Laveau, New Orleans, Nicki Howe, NOLA, Pat O'Brien's, Rev. Zombie's Voodoo Shop, Shake 'n Bake Chicken, St. Charles Line streetcar, St. Louis Cathedral, St. Louis Cemetery, tourism, tourist, trolley tour, Tulane, voodoo priestess, Voodoo Queen of New Orleans, white-washed tombs
2 Comments

In your face 3-D! My trip to American Paper Optics

Oct31
by Lin on October 31, 2011 at 9:21 am
Posted In: Blog

I’ve loved 3D and optical “tricks” since I was growing up in Utah. One of my favorite restaurants there had place mats with puzzles and optical illusions. I also loved it when one of the local television stations here in Memphis would have a special showing of a 3D movie for Halloween. I’d put on my paper glasses with the red/blue lenses and park myself in front of the TV and would wow and ah for the next couple hours. More recently I’ve gotten into ChromaDepth 3D and do a lot at one of the haunts here in town- Haunted Web of Horrors.

But do you ever wonder where all those paper glasses come from? Some friends and I did after a trip to Florida, and we found out it’s actually very close to home!

A few years back some of my Nightmarez…STAGE FRIGHT! (now Haunted Web) haunt co-horts and I made a trip down to Busch Gardens’ Howl-O-Scream in Tampa. While we were there we met Robbi Parsons Lepre– an awesome lady who turned out to be Director of Theatrical Services at Busch Gardens. When she found out we were haunters we hit it off. We told her about our charity haunt and raved about Howl-O-Scream and how much fun we were having there.

We were wanting to catch a show called “FIENDS” and there was one showing left that night, but it was on the other side of the park. Robbi showed us a short cut and later arranged for one of the “Naughty Nurses” in the show to come out and take a photo with us (can’t find the photo right now but the one above is one I took at the show and they were in 3D, sorta- enjoy!). The next year Robbi met us after the dinner show with some Howl-O-Scream t-shirts and asked if we’d like to go through the haunts with the fire marshal as he did his inspections. We said, “Sure!” We were impressed at how little the fire marshal found that needed changed, and how quickly the Busch Gardens crew got the corrections made of the few things he did want to see done. They know their stuff and it was a great learning experience for us.

While we were at Howl-O-Scream that year we got to go through a new 3D haunt. They gave us some paper  ChromaDepth glasses as we entered and were blown away by the 3D effects in the haunt. The glasses had clear lenses and made the bright neon colors pop off the walls, props, and actors in the haunt. On the way out they had a bin you could toss your glasses in, but I held on to my pair. There was a web address on the side of the glasses I wanted to check out when we got back home- www.3dglassesonline.com. It turns out that the website belonged to American Paper Optics in Bartlett, TN- about a mile or two up the road from our haunt! We had traveled to Florida to find out about a company right here in our own back yard. We contacted them and got a tour.

That next Halloween season we incorporated 3D into our haunt. It didn’t take long to get the hang of how ChromaDepth 3D worked, at least for what we needed it to do. I was also surprised at how different effects, depth, and layers could be achieved with the black light paint and how you painted it on the walls or objects. Red appeared closest to you, then yellow, green, and finally blue. Other colors like orange, teal, and purple fell in between depending on how much of the other colors were in them- more red they were closer, more blue they seemed farther away.

Add black between the colors and you get a layered effect. Fade the colors together and get a smooth transition- especially when using an airbrush.

And with ChromaDepth, size does matter and affect how you see the object- bigger for close objects and smaller for further ones. Add red to the bigger objects and throw some blue on the smaller ones or in the background and the 3D effect comes right off the walls or floors and seems to float in front of your eyes.

We invited APO’s owner John Jerit and his employees out to visit the haunt- many had never been to a 3D haunt before. When I asked John how they all liked it he said many of them wouldn’t come back. I asked, “Why- did they not enjoy it?” He said, “No- you scared them too bad. They’ve been talking about it all week!” Well, I guess we did our job too well! The next year we got a 3D Vortex tunnel and have added more effects each year.

A few years ago Haunted Web expanded into their current location and decided to open two haunts in one- an asylum called Tormented, and a separate 3D haunt- Dark Matter (less gore, more sensory effects- and clowns!) It worked out great for Haunted Web and really helped with adding to the amount of foot traffic and money raised at the haunt. Each year more and more is added and builds on the 3D experience. This year a 3D laser was added to the mix, along with a 3D midway and rotten cotton candy body bags.

Recently I had seen some buzz on the internet and in some local Memphis magazines about John and American Paper Optics, so I decided to give him a yell and see about taking a tour of their new location which was just around the corner from where I had toured a few years before. He sent me some samples and magazines featuring the company and invited me out to see the new digs. The company has really grown! The company started 20 years or so ago after John had received some fireworks glasses in the mail. John bought 7000 of the glasses to sell at Memphis in Mays fireworks display, and then 13000 more later for a festival in Little Rock. He’s been selling them ever since all over the world and is now the world’s largest manufacturer of paper 3D eyewear. A few years ago he sold 70% of the company to a private equity group, but retained 30% and stayed on as president to run the day to day operations- and kept his 3D glasses desk!

One of the first things you notice when you enter APO is part of John’s art collection. He’s a big fan of folk art and it shows- mostly in the hallways and his office. I enjoyed learning about some of his favorite pieces and some of the stories behind them and the artists that created them. He only collects non-trained/self-taught artists which was very interesting to hear.

Another part of the tour that was a lot of fun was their meeting room. It had a big 3D TV at the far end, a large conference table running down the middle, and a spinner rack ,
shelves, and displays along the walls on the left and right side of the room. I felt like a kid in a 3D candy store!

I had always thought of APO as just a 3D glasses company- and the majority of their business is, but they do so much more as I quickly found out.

Magazine ads, toys, tees, promo items, mailers, plus glasses for fireworks, eclipses, secret codes, Christmas lights and more filled the room. Many with more than just the typical red/blue anaglyphic 3D effects. John explained some of the differences in 3D technology and the glasses to me, then loaded me up with some items before we headed around the corner to the warehouse.

It was impressive! They went from about 13,000 sq ft to 27,000 (approximately 5,ooo is office space). The storage part of the warehouse looked as big as the old warehouse and production facility I had been to, and we still hadn’t made it to the new production area yet. When we got there it was big, too- and the company had more than doubled the machines than the last time I was there, and they were all making glasses. There was even an area in one corner where they were being assembled by hand- and quite rapidly I might add! They had also been running two shifts. Again, very impressive.

John showed me some of the new items they had been working on, and then loaded me up with more samples to take home- mostly geeky stuff from 3D games, movies, and such. Also gave me a few magazines and an amazing 3D hardback book- “3D Sports Blast!” by David E. Klutho. The photos inside the book are awesome, and some of the best 3D photos I’ve seen. We then went back to his office where he showed me some new 3D technology that doesn’t require glasses! It reminded me of moving lenticular effects, but waaaaay better. Keep your eyes out for it. He also hooked me up with some heart effect glasses for my wedding. They are like the fireworks and Christmas glasses, but when you look at lights red glowing hearts appear. Can’t wait to see those on everybody at the reception!

If you’ve got a haunt and have thought about adding 3D, or have a business and thought about advertising using 3D, then give John and American Paper Optics a call. I highly recommend them!

American Paper Optics, LLC
The world’s largest manufacturer of paper 3D eyewear.
2995 Appling Road, Suite 106
Bartlett, Tennessee 38133
USA
Toll Free: 800-767-8427
International: 1-901-381-1515
Fax: 901-381-1517

E-mail- sales@3dglassesonline.com

└ Tags: 3D, American Paper Optics, APO, BUSCH GARDENS HOWL-O-SCREAM (Tampa), ChromaDepth, Dark Matter, Dr. Hacker, haunted house, Haunted Web of Horrors, Lin Workman, Memphis, Nightmarez, Tormented
1 Comment

Tricks and Treats for Halloween- Spooky fun this weekend around the Mid-South!

Oct26
by Lin on October 26, 2011 at 2:27 pm
Posted In: Blog, Uncategorized

My favorite time of the year has arrived!

Halloween is this weekend and there’s plenty of scary treats to be had around Memphis and the Mid-South area. Lots of folks will be hitting the streets the next few days in search of a good scare. If you need some suggestions to fill your scare-schedule here are some of my suggestions…


HAUNTEDWEB OF HORRORS *Voted Best Haunt in Memphis in 2010!*
Location: 700 North Germantown Parkway
Dates and Times: October 7-8, 14-15, 20- 22, and 27-31, 2011 Doors open from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. on weeknights and 7:30 p.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday nights.
Admission: $10 per haunt or $18 for both haunts. Tickets available on-line or at the door. R.I.P. Passes $30 available only at the door and allow you to skip the lines.
Description: The Hauntedweb of Horrors serves up two separate haunts: Dark Matter – This visual thrill of darkness and light, coupled with 3D glasses, is designed to frighten you out of your mind. In Tormented you’ll enter Dr. Hacker’s twisted insane asylum, then get discarded into the Dark Bayou where you must escape a hillbilly nightmare.
Web Address: www.hauntedweb.com

GORE-DOVA
Location: 8100 Macon Station, Suite 101 in Cordova
Dates and Times: Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays in October plus Halloween night.
Admission: $10 per person
Description: Gore-Dova, the newest haunt on our list, will include a vortex, claustrophobia squeeze, and other scary effects.


HAUNTED MAZE (Agricenter)
Location: 7777 Walnut Grove Road in Memphis
Dates: Friday and Saturday nights in October, 2011
Times:7:00-10:00 p.m.
Admission: $10 for adults 13 and older and $8 for kids 6-12
Description: The Corn Maze at the Agricenter International is a maze of twists and turns through a corn field. On Fridays and Saturdays in October, the Maze is haunted with spooks and ghouls designed to scare you silly.
Web Address: www.midsouthmaze.com


ZOO BOO
Location: Overton Park in Memphis, TN
Dates and Times: October 28, 29 and 30, 2011 5:30p.m.-9:30p.m. each night The Haunted Hayride begins at dusk- 6:30pm
Admission: Advance Tickets: $10 Members, $13 Non-members; Day of Event: $12 Members, $15 Non-members
Description: Family friendly event featuring: Not-So-Haunted-Tour of Primate Canyon, Ballet Memphis Performances, Playhouse on the Square, FRED’S Trick-or-Treat Stations, David Winker’s Icemen (NEW), Straw Maze (NEW), Magic Shows, Dracula’s Disco, Painted Pumpkin Patch, Haunted Hayride, Zoo Boo Photos (additional fee applies), Singing Pumpkins, Animals of the Night exhibit, and more!
Web Address: www.memphiszoo.org/zooboo

THE THEATER OF TERROR
Location: The Cinema Southaven 2010 Stateline Rd West in Southaven, MS
Dates and Times: October 27-31 7:00p.m.-12a.m. each night
Admission: $7 per person
Description: “We brought them out of the movies…they broke out of their cages..!”
Web Address: www.TheCinemaSouthaven.com

HAUNTED MAGNOLIA MANOR
Location: 418 North Main Street in Bolivar, TN
Dates and Times: October 14-15, 21-22, and 28-31, 2011 with tours at 7:00 p.m., 8:00 p.m., 9:00 p.m., and 10:00 p.m. each night
Admission: $20 per person
Description: This is a tour through a historic bed and breakfast in Bolivar, Tennessee that has had numerous ghost sightings and reports of other paranormal activity. This year, three teams of paranormal investigators will be on hand to detect any activity and to answer any questions. After the tour, board a bus for a ride past other haunted places in Bolivar.
Web Address: www.magnoliamanorbolivartn.com


TRAIL OF TERROR (CEDAR HILL FARM)

Location:Cedar Hill Farms; 008 Love Road; Hernando, MS 38632
Dates: October 7-8, 14-15, 21-22, 28-29, 2011 Times: 6:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. (Event does not begin until it is dark)
Admission: $10.00 per person
Description: The Trail of Terror is a haunted walk through the dark woods with spooks and scares around every corner. This event is not recommended for children under 10, pregnant women, or people with heart conditions.
Web Address: www.cedarhillfarm.com

TRAIL OF TERROR (JONES ORCHARD)
Location:Jones Orchard; 6880 Singleton Parkway, Millington, TN 38053
Dates: Friday and Saturday nights in October plus October 30 and 31, 2011.
Times: 7:00 p.m. — 11:00 p.m.
Admission: $10 for Trail of Terror, $16 for both Trail of Terror and Terror at 2596, and $20 for Trail of Terror, Terror at 2596, and corn maze (the corn maze is not haunted).
Description: The Trail of Terror is a haunted walk through the woods and corn fields with features such as Claustrophobia, Suspension Bridge, Claustrophobia II, and Black Hole
Web Address: www.jonesorchard.com

TERROR AT 2596
Location: Terror at 2596 has moved! Its new location is at Jones Orchard, 6880 Singleton Parkway in Millington.
Dates: October 7-8, 14-15, 21-22, 28-31, 2011
Times: 7:00 p.m — 11:00 p.m.
Admission: $8 per person
Description: Terror at 2596 is an outdoor walk-through haunted attraction that promises two acres of pure heart-pounding scares.
Web Address: www.angelfire.com/yt/TerrorAt2596 or www.myspace.com/terror2596

MEMPHIS CORN MAZE
Location: 8980 Center Hill Rd., Olive Branch, MS (Mailing address is 14281 State Line Rd., Olive Branch, MS 38654)
Dates: September 25 – November 6
Times: SATURDAYS: 10 AM-10PM & SUNDAYS: 1PM-6PM
Admission: Children: 2-12 years old- $6, Adults: 13 and over- $8, under 2 years old- FREE with one paid admission. Last ticket sold one hour prior to closing time.
Description: Admission includes: 1. hayrides to and from the Maze, 2. both the huge eight acre Maze and the Mini-corn maze, 3. Maze gamesheet and secret decoder maps, 4. the Fun Zone play area, 5. the Picnic area, and 6. access to the Pumpkin Patch. Pumpkins are purchased individually. Bring your own flashlight or rent one at the farm. Farm Market with pumpkins, gourds, straw and cornstalks; Gift Shop; and Concessions available on WEEKENDS. Secret map decoder glasses for sale.
Web Address: www.memphiscornmaze.com memphiscornmaze@gmail.com

TRICK-OR-TREAT OLD TOWNE
Location: Old Towne streets in Olive Branch, MS
Dates and Times: October 29 1p.m.-3p.m
Admission: ???
Description: Family friendly event featuring: costume contest, scavenger hunt, costume parade down Pigeon Roost Rd., Jack-o-lantern contest, chili cook off, and more!
Web Address: www.olivebrancholdtowne.com

2nd ANNUAL MONSTER BASH
Location: The Children’s Museum of Memphis 2525 Central Avenue, Memphis, TN 38104-5926
Dates and Times: Sat, October 29, 10am – 1pm
Admission: Ages 1-100: $10, Children* under 1: FREE. Museum Members are admitted in accordance with the membership policies. 901-458-2678
Description: Family friendly event. Enjoy lots of spooky crafts and goopy experiments. Vote in the CMOM Staff Costume Contest. Don’t forget to wear your own costume to take part in a special drawing to win a museum membership for your family! Don’t miss this ghoulish good time! The event is included with museum admission.
Web Address: www.cmom.com

FRIGHT NIGHT V
Location: Latimer Lakes Park in Horn Lake, MS
Dates and Times: October 28-29 Dusk until Midnight
Admission: ??? 662-393-9897
Description: Featuring: Spook Trail, Haunted Hayride, Headless Horseman, and more!
Web Address: www.hornlakechamber.com

MDA 2nd annual Spooktacular
Location: The Mid-South Dressage Academy, Clifton Farms in Hernando, MS
Dates and Times: Oct 29 3-6pm
Admission: Free
Description: This seasonal event is free family fun out at the barn and will be held rain or shine. Pony rides, face-painting, carnival games, trick or treating and much more! Costumes are highly encouraged. Drawings and door prizes will be held throughout the event. Call 662-4490968 for more information.
Web Address: www.midsouthdressageacademy.org

BOO-FACTORY ON ELM STREET
Location: Gale Center, 2601 Elm Street in Hernando, MS
Dates and Times: Sunday, Oct 30 “Bad Dream” 3-6pm  and “Nightmare” 7-10pm
Admission: $3 “Bad Dream” (suitable for young children)  and $5 “Nightmare”
Description: “Join us for FUN and FRIGHT!!” Put on by Hernando Parks & Recreation
Web Address: www.cityofhernando.org/city-departments/parks-department/

DEVIL’S DUNGEON
Location: 510 Davidson Street in Nashville, TN 37213
Dates and Times: October 28-29 Dusk until Midnight
Admission: $15 on-line or at the door. 615-256-0053
Description: Devil’s Dungeon spans over 25,000 square feet and has over 30 scenes (20+ brand new for the 2010 season)
Web Address: www.devilsdungeon.net

SLAUGHTERHOUSE
Location: 423 6th Avenue South, Nashville,Tn 37203
Dates and Times: Friday, Saturday and Sunday Nights 7p.m.-1a.m. Friday And Saturday, 7p.m.-11p.m. Sunday
Admission: $15 plus FREE PARKING!!! 615-248-0019
Description: Nashville’s Longest Running Haunted Attraction
Web Address:www.slaughterfest.com

NASHVILLE NIGHTMARE
Location: 1016 Madison Square, Madison, TN 37115
Dates and Times: Friday/Saturday 8P.M-1A.M, Sundays 7:30 – 10:30, Monday (Halloween Night) 7:30P.M-10:30P.M.
Admission: $15 general admission for both haunts, Slash Pass $25 615-75BLOOD or 615-752-5663
Description: Nashville Nightmare is a brand new Haunted Attraction for the 2011 season and consists of two Attractions in one location; The Madison Square Mortuary and Graves Manor.
Web Address:www.nashvillenightmare.com  Email: info@nashvillenightmare.com

NECRO-POCALYPSE
Location: Monster Mountain Haunted Attraction in Hendersonville TN  15 to 20 minutes from Nashville
Dates and Times: Every Friday & Saturday night starting Sept 9th & also open on Oct 31st (Halloween Night)  7PM-10PM
Admission: $15 615-338-4632
Description: NECRO-POCALYPSE: Rise of the Dead , and a Brand New Attraction for 2011- Death Yard’s Monster Midway! A terrifying twist on face painting, carnival games, and paintball!
Web Address: www.monstermountain.net

HAUNTVILLE HAUNTED HOUSE
Location: 118 Midtown Court in Hendersonville, TN 37075
Dates and Times: Friday/Saturday (only) 7P.M-1A.M, Sunday (Oct30) and Monday (Halloween Night) 7P.M-10P.M.
Admission: $15
Description: The only indoor haunted house in Sumner County!
Web Address: www.hauntvilletn.com

RUBY FALLS HAUNTED CAVERN
Location: Ruby Falls, 1720 S. Scenic Hwy in Chattanooga, TN 37409- just minutes from downtown Chattanooga.
Dates and Times: Friday, October 28 through Monday, October 31, 2011 Final Night of Fright: Friday, November 4, 2011. On site ticket sales begin no earlier than 7:30pm. The attraction opens no later than 8:00pm. Ruby Falls Haunted Cavern is open until 10:00pm on Sundays and until 11:00pm on Fridays & Saturdays. Will stay open later to accommodate patrons on busy nights.
Admission: $22 including tax Buy Online and save $2 on tickets by purchasing online. 423-821-2544
Description: Descend 26 stories underground…where no one can hear you scream!
Web Address: www.hauntedcavern.com

If you’re in or near Orlando or Tampa Bay, FL-

BUSCH GARDENS HOWL-O-SCREAM (Tampa): www.howloscream.com

UNIVERSAL’S HALLOWEEN HORROR NIGHTS:  http://www.halloweenhorrornights.com

Not in the mid-south? Then check out www.HauntWorld.com to find Haunted Houses, Haunted Attractions, Corn Mazes, Haunted Hayrides, Ghost Tours, Paranormal Investigations, Pumpkin Patches, Kids Events, and more by city or a state near you.

I’ll have a special Halloween blog in 3-D next week, and the following week I’ll share with you some of my Halloween adventures in New Orleans with the new Mrs. Workman!

Beast Wishes!

Limb

└ Tags: 2nd ANNUAL MONSTER BASH, 3D, Agricenter, BUSCH GARDENS HOWL-O-SCREAM (Tampa), CEDAR HILL FARM, DEVIL'S DUNGEON, Dr. Hacker, Fiends, Florida, FRIGHT NIGHT V, geek travel blog, Geeker, GORE-DOVA, Halloween, HAUNTED MAGNOLIA MANOR, HAUNTED MAZE, Hauntedweb of Horrors, HAUNTVILLE HAUNTED HOUSE, Have Geek Will Travel, JONES ORCHARD, Lin Workman, MDA 2nd annual Spooktacular, Memphis, Mississippi, Monster Mountain Haunted Attraction, NASHVILLE NIGHTMARE, Naughty Nurses, NECRO-POCALYPSE, Ruby Falls Haunted Cavern, SLAUGHTERHOUSE, Tennessee, TERROR AT 2596, THE THEATER OF TERROR, TRAIL OF TERROR, TRICK-OR-TREAT, TRICK-R-TREAT, UNIVERSAL'S HALLOWEEN HORROR NIGHTS, ZOO BOO
1 Comment

A Haunting We Will Go, A Haunting We Will Go…

Oct21
by Lin on October 21, 2011 at 4:09 pm
Posted In: Blog

I love monsters and scaring people- always have. I’ve been around haunted houses since I was a kid in the 3rd grade. My first one was back in the mid seventies in the basement of a Mormon church in Utah- I was Dracula, a very short and blond Dracula.

Since then I’ve volunteered at a few Jaycees haunts around Memphis, gone on tours of haunts across the country, and even helped teach a few seminars on haunting at HAuNTcon one year.

 

I also helped start a haunt here in Memphis, TN with some fiends– uh, I mean “friends”. It started off as Nightmarez…On The Square and was located in Overton Square in midtown Memphis back in 2001.

My friends and fellow Ronald McDonald House volunteers Todd Patton, Patrick French and I had been part of the RMH’s special events crew (also known as “The A-Team“, fool!) and had helped to put on events like The Big Scoop Ice Cream Festival, Radiothons, and Oscar Night America Parties. Todd had done haunts before with the local Moose Lodge and wanted to do one as a fundraiser for the kids and families staying at the Memphis Ronald McDonald House.

Patrick and I were immediately on board, and we went about recruiting more RMH volunteers, friends, co-workers, sponsors, and Moose Lodge members to join in. The haunt (and first Kidz Day -a less scary version of the haunt for kids to Trick-R-Treat in) were a hit and was able to raise just over $20,000 for the RMH, even in spite of the 9/11 tragedy just a month prior.

The next year in 2002 it moved across Shelby County out to Bartlett, TN on Stage Road and became Nightmarez…STAGE FRIGHT!. The haunt went from being around 2000 sq ft to about 7000-8000 square feet with an additional 2000 sq ft for a lobby, which was nice for the crowds on cold and wet nights, or for having radio folks broadcast from live.

I did an art show for the lobby featuring some of my “Monsterpieces” that year and the following year when Nightmarez moved into an old Walgreen’s location a mile or two up the street and added 3-D effects and glasses to it’s mix I got to try my hand at 3-D art. It was a blast! In 2004 the haunt moved to a new location just up from the 2003 one and stayed there for the next two years. It was in the same shopping center and the haunt increased in size (and donations) again, but stayed close to Stage Road and kept the Nightmarez…STAGE FRIGHT! name. 2004 also saw Youth Villages become the haunt’s charity and has been ever since. A couple of free mini comic cons called “TIMMYCON” were held there, as well as an expanded Kidz Day. CBS even came out and filmed a football TV promo at the haunt while it was at this location.

2005 was the last year for Stage Fright and their yearly Kidz Days, and there was no haunt for the group in 2006. Todd had moved to Chattanooga (and later ran the Ruby Falls Haunted Cavern and Con Nooga) and Patrick went up to Lebanon, TN (near Nashville) to run a haunt there. That year for the first time in a few years I actually went out for Halloween with some friends to tour Elmwood Cemetery here in Memphis. (I’ll have to blog about that place sometime!)

In 2007 Patrick and his scare crew were back in the Memphis area, but this time they were located in the Trinity Commons Shopping Center on the very busy Germantown Parkway in Cordova, TN (a suburb of Memphis). It was an old Malco movie theater location and the haunt was renamed Nightmarez Haunted Attraction /Nightmarez Haunted Houses. The movie theater had moved up the street and the space had been gutted and turned into a couple other shops, but a 13,000+ sq ft section of it in the back of the shopping center was a great big empty box just waiting to be filled with spooky stuff.

The new location proved to be a good move. In 2008 the haunt remained at the same Trinity Commons location, but got a new name and website- Haunted Web Of Horrors. Being in the same location for two years was not only helping grow their customer base, but was also helping to keep costs down- and donations to Youth Villages up.

The new location and name stuck. The haunt also started adding outdoor entertainment and scares for people waiting in the ever growing queue lines.

Back in 2007 the haunt’s new Germantown Parkway location was big enough to house 2 separate haunts, and that’s just what Haunted Web did- one gory asylum haunt called Tormented and one 3-D attraction called Dark Matter.

If you love blood and guts and not knowing what is waiting around each corner then Tormented is for you, ya sicko!

Tormented starts off as a visit to the doctors office (Dr. Hacker’s office), but ends after a “Wrong Turn” into the bayou and a tour of a cannibal family’s shack where you are not only their guest for dinner, but you ARE dinner! This family will make you want to skip eating in and make a run for the exit!

But try not to run- it’s dangerous and you’ll miss all the good stuff! Take your time and look around at all the detail the Haunted Web scare crew has put into the haunt- it’s amazing how much work goes into making something look so neglected!

In Tormented, the doctor will kill you now!

Want scary, but with less blood and an added dimension..? Step right up into the 3-D experience of Dark Matter!

Once you enter the vortex tunnel and start to explore your new 3-D environment, Dark Matter may seem like all fun and games, but looks can be deceiving- and very dark!

Things start to deteriorate rather quickly and before you know it you’re surrounded by killer klowns!

But it’s all in fun and for a great cause- Youth Villages. Proceeds from Haunted Web go to benefit Youth Villages in Memphis, and as a bonus, Youth Villages has a grant from the Day Foundation that will match all of the proceeds raised from the Haunted Web Of Horrors!

Last year Patrick and the Haunted Web Scare Crew donated $78,000 to Youth Villages and plan to it (or more) again this year. With the crowds I saw opening weekend they’re on track to do it!

The lines can get long so wear comfortable shoes and clothing, bring some friends, and get their early- or try buying your tickets on-line.

Don’t want to wait your turn? Then try one of their R.I.P. Passes and skip the lines! ( R.I.P. fast passes will be sold at the haunt only- not available online.)

But be warned…some nights there are some surprises waiting for you in the queue line!

Hope to scare you there!

Limb

 

HAUNTEDWEB OF HORRORS

*Voted Best Haunt in Memphis in 2010!*

Location: 700 North Germantown Parkway in the Trinity Commons Shopping Center
Dates and Times: October 7-8, 14-15, 20- 22, and 27-31, 2011 Doors open from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. on weeknights and 7:30 p.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday nights.
Admission: $10 per haunt or $18 for both haunts. R.I.P. Passes cost $30 each and allows you to move to the front of the line at both haunts! (R.I.P. Passes not available online.)
Description: The Hauntedweb of Horrors attraction serves up two separate haunts: Dark Matter – This visual thrill of darkness and light, coupled with 3D glasses, is designed to frighten you out of your mind. In Tormented you’ll enter Dr. Hacker’s twisted insane asylum, then get discarded into the Dark Bayou where you must escape a hillbilly nightmare.
Web Address: www.hauntedweb.com
Contact: info@hauntedweb.com
For more haunts in the Memphis area check out about.com or my Have Geek Facebook or Twitter pages (@Have_Geek).
└ Tags: 3-D, 3D, charity haunt, Dark Matter, geek travel blog, HAuNTcon, haunted house, Hauntedweb of Horrors, Have Geek Will Travel, insane asylum, Killer Klowns, Lin Workman, Memphis, MidSouth Cartoonists Association, Moose Lodge 153, Nightmarez, Ronald McDonald House, Tormented, web comic, Wrong Turn, Youth Villages
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