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  • The Florida Times-Union

    What is there to do in Jacksonville when it rains? We have some suggestions.

    By Tom Szaroleta, Jacksonville Florida Times-Union,

    2 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4e8Ofx_0uUj7bkN00

    There's no shortage of things to do in Florida. You can go to the beach, ride a bike, visit the zoo, play golf, work in the garden, hang out in a park.

    Unless it rains.

    Of course, you can still go to the beach, ride a bike, visit the zoo, play golf, work in the garden or hang out in a park in the rain, but it won't be nearly as much fun. Add in a little lightning, and you can't do any of those things.

    So when Mother Nature ruins all your big plans and sitting on the couch all day just won't cut it, what are you supposed to do?

    Too hot?Fun things to do and places to cool off in Jacksonville

    Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

    Museums

    Nothing beats the heat like a slow stroll through a quiet museum. Jacksonville has several to choose from.

    Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens

    829 Riverside Ave., (904) 356-6857, cummermuseum.org

    The Cummer is a traditional art museum, with galleries filled with paintings, sculpture and a world-class porcelain collection. Admission is $20 for adults, $15 for students, but you can get in free from 4-9 p.m. on the fourth Friday of the month and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the first Saturday of the month.

    Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville

    333 N. Laura St., (904) 366-6911, mocajacksonville.unf.edu

    MOCA Jacksonville is downtown on Laura Street, facing James Weldon Johnson Park. It is owned and operated by the University of North Florida and has a rotating series of shows in its galleries. Don’t miss Project Atrium, in which artists from around the world create pieces specifically for the 40-foot-high walls around the museum’s main staircase. Admission is $10 for adults, $6 for students and seniors.

    Museum of Science & History

    1025 Museum Circle, (904) 396-6674, themosh.org

    Kids will love MOSH, on the Southbank of the St. Johns River. Plans are in the works for a new MOSH, but the old one works just fine for now. Kids can learn about sea life, health, electricity and local history while pushing buttons and pulling levers on the interactive displays. There’s also a planetarium and a large gallery that is used for traveling exhibits. Admission is $19.95 for adults, $16.95 for kids.

    The Beaches Museum

    381 Beach Blvd., Jacksonville Beach; (904) 241-5657, beachesmuseum.org

    The Beaches Museum in Jacksonville Beach is dedicated to the history of Jacksonville's beach communities, with a permanent collection and a second gallery that hosts rotating exhibitions. There's an old post office, a steam locomotive, a railroad depot, a chapel and a heritage garden on the grounds. It's free.

    Eartha M.M. White Museum

    613 W. Ashley St., (904) 354-4162, clarawhitemission.org/museum

    The Eartha M.M. White Museum on Ashley Street recounts the remarkable life of White, an educator, businesswoman and philanthropist who was one of the founders of Jacksonville's Clara White Mission for the homeless and hungry.

    The Ritz Museum

    829 North Davis St., (904) 807-2010, ritzjacksonville.com

    The Ritz Museum celebrates Jacksonville's Black history through a permanent exhibition, "Lift Ev'ry Voice," and a rotating series of visiting shows. Admission is $8.

    Hands On Children's Museum

    8580 Beach Blvd., (904) 642-2688, handsonchildrensmuseum.org

    The Hands On Children's Museum is just what it sounds like, a place where kids can turn knobs, push buttons and climb on stuff.

    Ice skating

    Community First Igloo

    3605 Philips Highway, (904) 399-3223, communityfirstigloo.com

    The old Jacksonville Ice & Sportsplex had the only sheet of ice for miles, but not a lot else was going on there until the city's professional hockey team took over. The Jacksonville Icemen pumped $18 million into the facility, now known as the Community First Igloo. It has two full-sized ice rinks, e-sports arcade, a bar and cafe, along with hockey leagues and learn-to-skate sessions. They offer public skating sessions nearly every day. It costs $15 to skate, and skate rentals are $5. They also offer eight-week learn-to-skate classes and a figure-skating academy.

    Trampoline parks

    Indoor trampoline parks are a great place to take the kids to burn off excess energy. Most have games built in — dodgeball, basketball and the like. You’ll probably have to sign an injury waiver before entering, and some require special socks for jumpers.

    Altitude Trampoline Park

    1214 Beach Blvd, Jacksonville Beach, (904) 801-1859, altitudetrampolinepark.com

    Bravoz Entertainment Center

    14985 Old St. Augustine Road, (904) 300-0070, bravoz.com

    Flight Adventure Park

    7022 A.C. Skinner Parkway, (904) 551-4035, flightadventurepark.com

    Pump it Up

    11840 Beach Blvd., (904) 646-1441, pumpitupparty.com

    Surge Adventure Park

    9292 Arlington Expressway, (904) 374-5682, surgefun.com

    Urban Air Adventure Park

    9950 Southside Blvd., (904) 712-4457, urbanair.com

    Indoor skydiving

    iFly

    10579 Brightman Blvd., (904) 712-3388, iflyworld.com

    Skydiving sounds like a lot of fun, except for that whole stepping out of the airplane and falling thousands of feet thing. That’s not an issue at iFly, which uses four fans in a recirculating wind tunnel to create a powerful column of rising air in a flight chamber. Flyers sign a waiver, take a short instruction course, don a flight suit over their clothes and fly for about 60 seconds with an instructor. Anyone over age 3 and under 260 pounds can fly. There are more than 80 iFly locations worldwide, including Jacksonville, Tampa, Orlando and Fort Lauderdale. $79.99 for two flights, although cheaper rates are available on some weekdays.

    Indoor go-kart racing

    K1 Speed

    6601 Executive Park Court N., (904) 425-5005, k1speed.com

    Remember driving go-karts powered by a lawnmower engine? Loud, smelly, not very fast but plenty fun. Those are long gone, in favor of electric vehicles that silently dash around the track at 45 mph. That’s why they are equipped with safety harnesses and roll bars and why drivers are required to wear a helmet. They also have junior karts, which will hit 25 mph, for ages 8-12. Races last 7-12 minutes. One race in an adult kart starts at $28.95.

    Indoor pickleball

    Toon Town

    1726 E. Church St., (904) 634-7188, jaxtoontown.com

    Developers turned an old warehouse near EverBank Stadium into an indoor entertainment center, with six indoor pickleball courts.

    Rock climbing gyms

    If you're going to be climbing the walls anyway, you might as well do so in a place built for just that. Most gyms offer lessons and programs for kids.

    Beaches Rock Gym

    14 W. 3rd St., Atlantic Beach; (904) 222-0707, beachesrockgym.com

    The Edge Rock Gym

    3563 Philips Highway, (904) 683-2512, theedgerockgym.com

    Stone Climbing

    115 Strongway Court, St. Augustine; (904) 217-4139, stoneclimbing.com

    Vertical Motion's Kidzone of OP

    1035 Blanding Blvd., Orange Park; (904) 579-4848, verticalmotion.net

    Indoor golf

    Topgolf

    10531 Brightman Blvd., (904) 328-2002, topgolf.com

    Strictly speaking, you're not indoors when you're on the range at Topgolf. But you are out of the rain, and big fans keep it cool while you shank a few into the nets, so that's close enough. Topgolf is target golf, where players hit toward targets from elevated platforms. Will it help your game? Probably not, but they have a full restaurant and bar and you'll never have to hunt for your ball in the woods. You can rent a bay that holds up to six people for $16-$62 per hour, depending on the day and time.

    Go to the movies

    Streaming services put a big hurting on the movie theater business, and the coronavirus pandemic nearly finished it off. But theaters are dry and air-conditioned, so they're a great way to kill a few hours.

    AMC Classic Yulee

    96012 Lofton Square Ct., Yulee; amctheaters.com

    AMC Fleming Island

    1820 Town Center Blvd, Fleming Island; amctheaters.com

    AMC Orange Park

    Orange Park Mall, amctheaters.com

    AMC Regency 24

    9154 Regency Square Blvd., amctheaters.com

    Cinemark Jacksonville Atlantic North

    11567 Atlantic Blvd., cinemark.com

    Cinemark Tinseltown

    4535 Southside Blvd., cinemark.com

    Regal Avenues

    9525 Phillips Highway, regmovies.com

    See a concert

    With the exception of a handful of bleacher seats at the top of the St. Augustine Amphitheatre, every seat at every full-time concert venue in Northeast Florida is under cover.

    VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena

    300 A. Philip Randolph Blvd., (904) 630-3900, vystarveteransarena.com

    Home to concerts, comedy shows, hockey and indoor football games. Capacity is 12,000-15,000.

    Daily's Place

    1 Daily's Place, dailysplace.com

    Amphitheater attached to EverBank Stadium. Seats are all under cover but some walkways aren't. Capacity is around 5,500.

    The Florida Theatre

    129 E. Forsyth St., (904) 355-2787, floridatheatre.com

    Historic downtown movie house that holds concerts and comedy shows. Capacity is around 1,850.

    The Moran Theater

    300 Water St., (904) 633-6110,jaxevents.com

    Riverfront venue that holds touring Broadway shows, concerts and comedy shows. Capacity is 2,900.

    Jacoby Symphony Hall

    300 Water St., (904) 354-5547, jaxsymphony.org

    Home to the Jacksonville Symphony. Capacity is 1,800.

    The Ritz Theatre

    829 N. Davis St., (904) 807-2010, ritzjacksonville.com

    City-owned venue built on the site of a '20s movie house that holds plays, concerts and comedy shows. Capacity is 400.

    Thrasher-Horne Center

    283 College Drive, Orange Park; (904) 276-6815, thcenter.org

    Home for concerts, comedy shows and plays. Capacity is 1,728.

    St. Augustine Amphitheatre

    1340C A1A S., St. Augustine; (904) 209-3746, theamp.com

    Outdoor amphitheater has a section of seats that are not under cover, but all of the others are. Capacity is 4,100.

    Ponte Vedra Concert Hall

    1050 A1A N., Ponte Vedra Beach; (904) 209-0367, pvconcerthall.com

    A former church converted into a county-owned concert venue. It is closed for renovations until 2025. Capacity will be around 600 seated, 1,100 standing.

    Go bowling

    Batt Family Fun Center

    1838 Cassat Ave., (904) 389-2360, battfamilyfuncenter.com

    32 lanes, video arcade, mini bowling, mini golf, laser tag.

    Beach Bowl

    818 Beach Blvd., (904) 900-2695, beachbowljax.com

    24 lanes, video and VR gaming.

    Bowlero

    11141 Beach Blvd., 904-642-0460, bowlero.com

    10333 San Jose Blvd., (904) 268-1511, bowlero.com

    32 lanes and video arcade at each location.

    Duck Pinz

    27 N. 3rd St., Fernandina Beach; (904) 432-8246, duckpinzfernandina.com

    Cocktail lounge with bowling lanes.

    Jax Lanes Bowling Center

    8720 Beach Blvd., (904) 641-2222, jaxlanesbowlingcenter.com

    Locally owned center with bowling, video arcade, pool tables.

    King Pins Bowling Center

    5310 Lenox Ave., (904) 394-0895, facebook.com

    20 lanes, arcade games.

    Main Event

    10370 Phillips Highway, (904) 260-7500, mainevent.com

    Bowling lanes, video games, pool tables, laser tag.

    Splitz

    6155 Youngerman Circle, Orange Park; (904) 272-2695, bowlsplitz.com

    26 lanes, video game arcade, laser tag.

    Yulee Bowling and Amusements

    850822 U.S. Hwy 17, Yulee; (904) 225-1077, yuleebowlingandamusements.com

    The former Nassau Bowling Center is under new management.

    Visit a library

    Duval County

    303 N. Laura St., (904) 255-2665, jaxpubliclibrary.com

    In addition to books, Jacksonville's Main Library downtown has an art gallery, a huge archive, meeting rooms and equipment for digitizing old tapes and records. The library has 21 branches around Duval County.

    Clay County

    1895 Town Center Blvd., Fleming Island; (904) 278-3720, claycountygov.com

    Branches in Orange Park, Fleming Island, Green Cove Springs, Keystone Heights and Middleburg.

    Nassau County

    25 N. 4th St., Fernandina Beach; (904) 530-6500, nassaureads.com

    Branches in Fernandina Beach, Yulee, Hilliard, Bryceville and Callahan.

    St. Johns County

    1960 N. Ponce De Leon Blvd., St. Augustine; (904) 827-6940, sjcpls.org

    Branches in St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra Beach, Anastasia Island, Fruit Cove and Hastings.

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