Gratis
Apoyo
There are 6 color coded course that get progressively more challenging as you go:
Green = Minimum Elevation/Minimum Skill
Blue = Medium Elevation/ Medium Skill
Silver = Advanced Elevation/Medium Skill
Red = Advanced Elevation/Advanced Skill
Tickets and Height Requirement Notes
Kids 7-11
Children on these courses are required to be able to reach the tips of their fingers to a height of 4’7″ (140cm) while keeping their feet flat on the ground
Junior 9
Height Requirement: Adventurers on the Junior Course are required to be able to reach the tips of their fingers to a height of 5’9″ (175cm) while keeping their feet flat on the ground.
Adult 12
Height Requirement: Adult Course adventure seekers are required to be able to reach the tips of their fingers to a height of 5’11” (180cm) while keeping their feet flat on the ground
(An adult 18 must accompany any minors 12-14 on the Adult courses)
What To Wear
Long hair MUST be tied back so as not to get caught on any equipment.
Sturdy closed-toed sport sandals/shoes/boots are required and should be worn securely.
NO jewelry. Necklaces/bracelets can get caught in equipment.
Avoid loose clothing. Fitted apparel, worn tight to the body is best to climb.
Note: Guests not wearing the appropriate clothing may be refused access to activities to ensure that safety guidelines are met.
DON’T FORGET WAIVERS: Please fill out your waiver so you can experience the thrill of our tree top adventure. All Climbers must have signed waiver.
UNDER 18: Waiver must be signed by a parent or legal guardian.
SAFETY EQUIPMENT- Climbers must have a 44 inch waist or smaller to be able to use our required safety equipment.
WEIGHT LIMIT There is no weight limit to participate on our courses.
Shakespeare's Globe Exhibition is the world's largest exhibition devoted to Shakespeare and the London in which he lived and worked. Housed beneath the reconstructed Globe Theatre on London's Bankside, the exhibition explores the remarkable story of the Globe, and brings Shakespeare's world to life using a range of interactive displays and live demonstrations. Visitors to the exhibition can discover how shows were produced in the theatres of Shakespeare's time, from writing and rehearsals to music, dance and performance. There are opportunities to learn about the traditional crafts and techniques used during the process of rebuilding the Globe; to find out how special effects were produced in Shakespeare's time, to listen to recordings from some of the most memorable Shakespearean performances ever, or join the cast and add your own voice to a scene recorded by Globe actors; to create your own Shakespearean phrases in the word jungle; to watch a sword-fighting display and browse the costume collection, where you can learn about the extraordinary methods used in creating clothes 400 years ago. A visit to the Exhibition includes a guided tour of the theatre where expert guide-storytellers provide fascinating half hour tours of the auditorium, taking visitors on a journey through time back to Elizabethan London as well as the reconstruction process of the 1980's-90's and how the wooden 'o' works today as an imaginative and experimental theatrical space. An exhibition visit and theatre tour lasts about one and a half hours. Information sheets are available in English, large print, German, French, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Russian, Polish, Romanian, Chinese and Japanese. NB: There is no access to the theatre during matinee performances. Visitors will be taken to the nearby archaeological site of the Rose Theatre, Bankside's first playhouse.
Shearwater is a classic Newport-style schooner yacht, only recently recognized as a national landmark in 2009. The vessel was built by Rice Brother Corporation in East Boothbay, Maine, back in a time when yachting was a rare combination of elegance and adventure; Rice Bros. were well known for building luxury pleasure yachts and produced some 4,000 hulls over a period of 64 years. The keel was laid down on January 4, 1929 and a news clip from the Boothbay Register reflects alongside a photograph "Tyler Hodgon at the old Tide Mill is getting out timbers for the schooner to be built at Rice’s. Vessel to be built of native white oak." Traditionally built from hand-hewn native white oak, she was the last boat to be constructed at that yard - likely due to the ensuing Great Depression brought on by the Stock Market Crash that occurred later that autumn. East Boothbay was a small coastal town with shipbuilding being its only industry. About 40 workmen were employed for the construction of SHEARWATER. Her designer Theodore Donald Wells was born in Hudson Falls, N Y on October 22, 1875. He was a naval architect and marine engineer, a member of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers and also the Institute of Naval Architects London. His education included post-graduate work at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. He began his career as a member of the firm Herreshoff and Wells, N. Y. City in 1902. Working with Herreshoff no doubt had an influence on his designs, which bear similarities to many of the famous Herreshoff designed yachts of that time. From 1903 to 1907 he worked for Wintringham and Wells and then began practicing his profession under his own name. Mr. Wells joined the Navy Department in March 1917 and became Superintending Constructor of the Baltimore District U. S. N. Notable yachts designed and constructed under his supervision are "Viking" a 272 foot steel motor yacht built for George F. Baker in 1929 by Newport News and "Karina" a three masted schooner built for Robert E. Tod in 1932 by Staten Island Shipbuilding. Mr. Tod was a well-known offshore yachtsman as was his former yacht ‘Thistle", which competed in the Emperors Cup ocean race. SHEARWATER was launched on May 4, 1929 and photographs in the Boothbay Register reflect her graceful and elegant lines. Her first Captain, Leon Esterbrook of Edgarton, MA, arrived to take charge of the fitting out. Her owner Charles E Dunlap was a member of the Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club, Oyster Bay, NY and this became SHEARWATER’s first homeport after her completion in late September 1929. It was there in Oyster Bay that she first started to thrill those who sailed in luxury aboard her and those who were privileged to crew her on race day. Since her launching and documentation in Lloyd’s Register of American Yachts in 1929, she has had a colorful history and has been carefully maintained and restored to standards that few contemporary vessels are able to match and is truly a piece of American Maritime History. On November 7, 1942 SHEARWATER was requisitioned by the War Shipping Administration and became a member of The United States Coast Guard’s Coastal Picket Patrol during World War Two. She was painted gray and bore the numbers CG67004. Based at Little Creek, Virginia she patrolled the waters east of the Chesapeake Bay entrance and south towards Cape Hatteras. Her skipper during that period reflected on how they used their free time while out on submarine patrol to race against other yachts and in his own words "sailed in tandem with the schooner Lord Jim, racing in and out of port, up and down the east coast and winning." She was designed and built as a gaff rigged schooner but during this period was changed to a Marconi rig. She carries over 2,550 square feet while under full sail. A true veteran world cruiser, she first transited the Panama Canal in July 1946 and in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s completed a two and a half-year global circumnavigation. In December 1971 Mrs. John B. Thayer of Rosemont, wife of a former trustee and treasurer, donated SHEARWATER to the University of Pennsylvania’s Institute of Environmental Medicine. She was used by the university as a laboratory for research on physiological responses to the stresses of living and working underwater. Captained by James Shearson, she was fitted with compressors, generators, monitoring instruments and a small decompression chamber. She has participated in many Ancient Mariner and Classic yacht races in U S waters as well as racing in the Bay of Islands in New Zealand while on her circumnavigation in the early 1980’s. It is rumored she was once dismasted in the famous Newport to Bermuda race. She was last raced by the current owners in San Diego in May 1995 in the American Schooner Cup and finished second overall. She entered the yacht charter industry in 1966 whilst on the West Coast sailing to the Channel Islands and was again used to generate income to keep her shipshape while owned by the University of Pennsylvania. During the chartering industry’s infancy in the Caribbean, SHEARWATER was known as the " Queen of the Fleet". Today she continues this tradition offering the most unique sailing experience and has passed rigid Coast Guard inspections and can carry up to 49 passengers. We welcome you to join us for an excellent opportunity to experience the ambiance of a vintage sailing vessel while delighting in the splendors of The Manhattan sky-line, the Statue of Liberty or the beauty of the oceans beyond.
Get tickets to one of the year's most anticipated Broadway shows that follows the story of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus at ShowTickets.com.
Puede visitar el enlace para ver la ruta del Bus Turístico
Línea Roja
1. Old Town Square
2. Na Florenci
3. Mala Strana
4. Castillo de Praga
5. Monasterio de Strahow
6. Estadio de Strahow
7. Isla de Kampa
8. Hlavni Nadrazi
9. I.P. Pavlova
10. Estación de Tren Central
Línea Azul
1. Old Town Square
2. Intercontinental Hotel
3. Mala Strana
4. St Nicholas
5. Isla Kampa
6. Cementerio Judío
Los pasajeros pueden subir y bajar en cualquiera de las 10 paradas disponibles en la Ruta Roja y de las 6 paradas de la Ruta Azul.
Si lo prefiere puede quedarse en el autobús y realizar la ruta completa: Línea Roja (90 minutos) Línea Azula (50 minutos)
Información Adicional:
Se debe imprimir el vale e intercambiarlo por un billete de bus de City Sightseeing en: Oficina Central, Grevin Museum, Celetna 15, Prague 1, 11000.
Los audiocomentarios están disponibles en los siguientes idiomas: inglés, español, alemán, italiano, francés, ruso y checo.
Los autobuses son accesibles para gente en silla de ruedas.
Aspectos destacados
Junto a unas vistas increíbles, usted y su familia experimentarán exposiciones interactivas e inmersivas.
Aprenderá lo diverso y extraño que es nuestro mundo.
Con más de 20 galerías temáticas que abarcan 2 pisos, esta atracción familiar en Times Square es el museo Ripley más grande de toda América del Norte.
La atracción de Nueva York es el hogar de las exposiciones interactivas más sorprendentes.
La entrada incluye
Entrada a Ripley's con acceso a más de 500 exhibiciones únicas e increíbles.
Algunas de las exposiciones incluidas:
The Little Apple - A New York Experience
The Impossible LaseRace™
The Black Hole
Smash and Dash
Baseball Exhibit
La entrada NO incluye
Transporte
Comida y bebida
Aparcamiento
Ya sea examinando una vaca de 6 patas, un mechón de pelo de Elvis, 24 cabezas encogidas, una pequeña sección del muro de Berlín o una jirafa albina de tamaño natural, un recorrido por este museo le demostrará que la realidad es más extraña que la ficción.
Venga y descubre los misterios de la ciudad de Nueva York.
