Choose from 5,104 Fun Things to Do in Niagara Falls & Around
EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum
- EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum is especially fascinating for anyone with Irish ancestry.
- Book tickets in advance during busier times of the year.
- The exhibition is wheelchair accessible.
Entopia
- Entopia is a must-see for families and animal lovers.
- Choose to visit independently or with a private tour.
- Plan to spend two to three hours exploring the farm and its many exhibits.
- Entopia is accessible to wheelchairs and strollers.
Erechtheion
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ESCAPE Adventureplay
- ESCAPE Adventureplay theme park is a must for families with kids and adventure travelers.
- Remember to bring a sun hat, sunglasses, and sunscreen.
- Wear light, comfortable clothing for sports activities, as well as sneakers or other closed-toe shoes.
- Lockers are available for rent.
- Most of the park’s attractions are not accessible to wheelchair users.
Estancia el Cuadro
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Essl Museum
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Epidaurus Theater
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Ersfjordbotn
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Erasmusbrug (Erasmus Bridge)
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Estádio da Luz
- The Stadium of Light is a must visit for soccer fans and sports lovers.
- Wheelchair-accessible seating is available on the ground floor.
- The stadium is also home to a slew of bars and two panoramic restaurants.
Emirgan Park
The Yellow, Pink and White Pavilions within the park were restored in the late 1970s and then opened to the public. The Yellow Pavilion stands in the center of the park, overlooking the Bosphorus, and features traditional Ottoman architecture and rich interior decorations. The Pink Pavilion is also a typical Ottoman house and is often used for weddings or other events. Not far from the Yellow Pavilion, the White Pavilion was built in a neo-classical style and is now a cafeteria and restaurant. Together with the jogging trails and picnic areas, the pavilions make the park a popular weekend destination for Istanbul residents.
Home to a special tulip garden since the 1960s, Emirgan Park is a great place to visit in April, when it hosts an annual international tulip festival.
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End of the World Train (Tren del Fin del Mundo)
- The train is a must-do for families with kids and history buffs.
- A one-way train ride lasts about an hour and round-trip transport takes an hour and 45 minutes.
- The price of the train ticket does not include entrance to the national park.
- Don’t forget to dress in layers; the train is heated but it’s often chilly outside.
Esplanade Theatres on the Bay
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Essence of Fiji Rejuvenation Center
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Esmeralda Lagoon (Laguna Esmeralda)
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Emirates Stadium
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End of the World Museum (Museo del Fin del Mundo)
The museum focuses on Ushuaia’s natural and indigenous history, including a menagerie of stuffed animals and the tools used to hunt them.
The collection is displayed in a series of interconnecting rooms, starting off with travelers and ethnography, including mementos of past visitors such as the shipwrecked figurehead of the HMS Duchess of Albany, which came to grief off the coast of Tierra del Fuego in 1893.
The grocery store exhibit is a hit with kids of all ages, displaying the essential shopping items of Ushuaia’s far-flung citizens in times gone by.
Seabirds like albatrosses and petrels are featured in the Birds of Fire room, along with penguins, shorebirds, ducks, swans, flamingos and waterfowl.
The final exhibit displays the safes, security doors, sturdy furniture and log books of Argentina’s National Bank.
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The entry fee also gives you admission to the former Government House, nearby at Av Maipu 465.
Essex Farm Cemetery
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Emirates Park Zoo
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Epernay
Where Dijon is a center for Burgundy's red wine production (and that of mustard), Epernay is the main entrepot for the wines of the Champagne region. Visitors from all over the world come to this small town to buy champagne and see how it is bottled. As it is the center for champagne production, its economy and tourism largely revolve around sparkling wines.
Like most other metropolitan areas in France, Epernay can trace its history to the last days of Rome. Indeed, the town is replete with the obligatory 16th-century church and Old Quarter; however, these quaint relics of long-gone eras have been somewhat overshadowed by a cheerily modern streak. This doesn't mean that the town's charm has disappeared under a bunch of apartments and malls; rather, Epernay's appeal spreads outside its limits to the surrounding countryside, where the wealthy wine merchants and champagne producers keep impressive maisons.
Also spread throughout the countryside are the region's many wineries, most of which offer tours and tastings. Driving around centuries-old vineyards is awe-inspiring in itself, and many producers offer tours of the champagne caves. Mined for chalk during Roman times, these caves were later found to be perfect for storing the effervescent wines that made the region famous.
L'Avenue de Champagne is probably one of the biggest tourist attractions in Epernay, as many of the most prominent champagne producers such as Moët et Chandon, Mercier and De Castellane keep their headquarters on this street. According to local hearsay, L'Avenue de Champagne is the most expensive street in the world, given all the bottles of champagne (numbering some 90 million) stored in the chalk cellars beneath the street.
Open daily