Taking the Kids: To See the Best and Brightest Holiday Lights

Taking the Kids: To See the Best and Brightest Holiday Lights
Blossoms of Light, Denver Botanic Gardens. Courtesy of Denver Botanic Gardens. © Scott Dressel-Martin.
Tribune News Service
Updated:

Maybe it’s your family tradition to return to the same holiday lights display every year — often the weekend after Thanksgiving when everyone is desperate to get out of the house and whining about eating more leftovers. Maybe you seek out a new one where you are visiting friends and relatives.

One thing is certain: Post-pandemic, these displays, whether in big cities, smaller towns, resorts, at theme parks, zoos, botanical gardens or museums are bigger and better than ever. (If you can, book tickets in advance so you won’t be disappointed.)

If you are in Brooklyn, The Lights of Dyker Heights attracts 100,000 visitors to stroll past amazing private house decorations. Bring a few dollars to donate to a local charity.

McAdenville may be a small town in North Carolina but its free Christmas Town USA, in its 67th year, boasts hundreds of holiday trees lit with 1.5 million red, white and green lights. (Dec. 1 through Dec. 26)

When I was a kid, we always made a trek from the suburbs to see the lights along New York’s Fifth Avenue and the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree (the tree will be lit with more than 50,000 LED lights on Nov. 30) and see the world’s largest Menorah at Brooklyn’s Grand Army Plaza. The New York Botanical Garden’s adorable Holiday Train Show (miniature NYC landmarks made entirely out of plants) is back this year from Nov. 18, 2022 through Jan. 14, 2023. (Visit NYC & Company for current details.)