Helping you discover the world & share your experience.
Login    Sign Up

Alcatraz with Kids: 5 Insider Tips

  • Alcatraz medical wing - The Alcatraz hospital is especially spooky at night. Photo by Jeremey Clark. (Photo by Alisson Clark)
  • Alcatraz - The Alcatraz night tour offers smaller crowds - and spectacular sunsets. (Photo by Alisson Clark)
by Alisson Clark
From Family Travel
September 2, 2011

From appearances on “Mythbusters” to a cameo in the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater video game, the spooky cells and windswept vistas of Alcatraz Island are enjoying a renewed moment in the pop-culture spotlight. If you’re considering taking your family to The Rock, these tips will help you get the most out of your trip.

Try the night tour for smaller crowds. While planning our Alcatraz trip, I asked a park ranger - the island is part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area - how he would recommend seeing the park. (One of the great things about being a travel writer is having an excuse to ask questions like this.) His advice: On a given day, 5,000 visitors or more might stream through the corridors of the prison, but the night tour is limited to about 600, enabling rangers to offer talks and programs not available during the day. Not only are the crowds easier to manage with kids, but the smaller numbers make for a more intimate experience: At one point, my husband, son and I found ourselves all alone in a spooky, lantern-lit room of the hospital ward. We could truly feel the isolation of The Rock, which made for some spine-tingling memories.

Plan ahead for food and drink. If you’re one of those parents who won’t venture forth without snacks for the smalls (and who isn’t?), it’s worth noting that there’s no food in the park: Not only are there no concessions, but food and drinks other than bottled water are not allowed beyond the landing dock. Counting the ferry ride to and from the island, you’ll be touring for several hours, so one solution is to snack on the ferry. The ferry concession sells hot dogs, sandwiches, snacks and drinks, but lines can get long once the captain makes the “no food on the island” announcement, so if you go this route, line up soon after getting on the boat. A great alternative is to pack food from one of the many vendors along the Embarcadero. Don't miss the local shops in the Ferry Building, where you'll find everything from fresh-baked bread and handmade chocolate to artisanal meats and cheeses.

Book your tour early. Only one company, Alcatraz Cruises, offers transportation to the park, and tours can book up weeks in advance. You can print passes at home or visit the will call window, but don’t wait until you arrive in San Francisco to book your tour, or you might wind up with some disappointed kiddos.

Don’t count kids out of the audio tour. I wasn't sure the audio tour that comes with the ferry ticket would hold our 10-year-old’s interest: He’s usually intent on exploring at his own pace and not being shackled to a guided tour. But the newly redone audio tour’s mp3-player interface and engaging content, from cellblock life to escape plots to some of The Rock’s famous inmates kept him – and all of the kids we saw -- riveted. The best part: Instead of a dry, academic-sounding narration, the tour is voiced by the officers and inmates who lived here. On the night tour, you can complete the 45-minute audio tour and still have time to wander the prison and the grounds and hear ranger presentations about the island. Don’t miss the talk about escapes from The Rock, which details how inmate managed to escape and swim all the way to San Francisco, only to be scooped up and delivered right back to Alcatraz. The kids in the audience were agape.

Dress in layers. This goes for San Francisco in general, but it’s doubly true at Alcatraz, where chilly winds can send you scurrying for the shelter of gift shop when you’d rather be snapping family photos on the stunning grounds of the island. Even on a sunny day, a hoodie or windbreaker is a must, not just on the island but also on the top deck of the ferry, where you’ll get the best views and photo opps.

This story first appeared on GeekMom.com.

 

 

Share and discuss this story with your friends

Alisson Clark icon

Alisson Clark

Alisson is a freelance writer and journalism teacher based in Florida. Her first trip out of the country was to the Bahamas at age five, where she told everyone who would listen that she was from another country. No one was impressed, but the trip did leave a lasting impression of the transformative power of travel. Her writing appears in National Geographic Traveler, the St. Petersburg Times and mental_floss as well as newspapers, magazines and web sites in the U.S., Canada and Australia.



Located: Gainesville USA
Likes: outdoors, family travel, Florida, off the beaten path
Website: http://alissonclark.webs.com

More stories by Alisson Clark

The Pearl of Florida's Gulf Coast

The Pearl of Florida's Gulf Coast
We’re kicking back in a hot tub with a view of the beach, a breeze from the Gulf of Mexico rustling in the crowns of overhanging coconut palms, thinking things couldn’t get much more perfect. That’s when a bright orange butterfly flits overhead, completing the color palette of...

New Novel Samples "Sweetness" of Cape Cod, Paris

New Novel Samples "Sweetness" of Cape Cod, Paris
If your summer travel plans don't include trips to Paris and Cape Cod, Kristin Harmel's latest novel, "The Sweetness of Forgetting," may be the next best thing. The book, out Aug. 7, takes readers to both locales with the kind of detail that could only come from a writer who's...

Museum Showcases Gilded Age Opulence (Not Plants)

Museum Showcases Gilded Age Opulence (Not Plants)
While planning a girls' getaway to Tampa, Florida, I suggested to the gals that we visit the Henry B. Plant Museum , a former Gilded Age hotel restored to its 1891 glory. I was surprised, however, when the friend who shares my predilection for costume dramas and period novels sounded less than...

Outfitting a Floating Hotel on the Amazon

Outfitting a Floating Hotel on the Amazon
It's a steamy 85 degrees in the Peruvian Amazon, and as we end the afternoon's excursion and climb from the skiff back aboard the riverboat Aria, most passengers have their minds on three things: cold air-conditioning, a hot shower and the tall, cool glass of fruit juice handed to each...

Luxury Buses Let You Ride in Style

Luxury Buses Let You Ride in Style
My cruise was departing from Miami, a six-hour drive from home, and I wanted to arrive in style. So, naturally, I took the bus. Surprising? Definitely. But the proliferation of luxury bus lines has caused travelers to reconsider everything they know - or think they know - about bus...

Chillin' at Sunny San Juan's Marriott Resort

Chillin' at Sunny San Juan's Marriott Resort
We've been at the San Juan Marriott Resort for about five minutes before my son coins a new tween phrase: “I’m ROFLing in awesomeness.” I’m not 11, but I have to admit, I’m ROFLing in awesomeness too. In tweenspeak, ROFLing is usually reserved for a fit of...

Experience Cuban Culture in Florida's Ybor City

Experience Cuban Culture in Florida's Ybor City
When I mentioned to friends that I was headed to Ybor City, a historic area of Tampa, Florida, I got some puzzled looks in return. That’s because for most people, Ybor (pronounced EE-bore, but more fun than it sounds) is known as a nightclub district where college kids go to party. Not...

Exploring Florida the Geek-Chic Way: On a Segway

Exploring Florida the Geek-Chic Way: On a Segway
Cruising through the downtown streets on a Segway, you feel a lot like the nerdy kid from high school arriving at the 20-year reunion in a Porsche. Heads turn, jaws drop, and the admiration is palpable, although it’s accompanied by an undeniable whiff of geek-chic. Scoffers tend to...

Minifig Madness at Legoland Florida

Minifig Madness at Legoland Florida
Legoland Florida had just opened for the day, and we were hot on the trail of the park’s retail manager. We had reason to believe he had the much-desired mobster minifig, and if we could find him, that minifig would be ours. Trading minifigs -- those adorably top-heavy Lego figures --...

Big Thrills (Literally) in Columbia, S.C.

Big Thrills (Literally) in Columbia, S.C.
A 40-foot kid lured my family to Columbia. The oversized child in question was the star attraction of EdVenture, the largest children’s museum in the South. Doubling as an interactive playground, the three-story sculpture known as Eddie reveals the inner workings of the human body as...

Recent Activity & Recommendations