If you are not bothered by heights, there is an attraction in Branson, Missouri, that can give you plenty of thrills and challenges. It is called Fritz's Adventure and advertises itself as "80,000 square feet of explorable space, that brings outdoor adventure into The Great Indoors."
I went there recently with these friends to check it out, and we got a "before" photo, as we approached the entrance, located just off Hiway 76 West in Branson.Diana took a selfie of all four of us:
When you first enter the building, you will use the touchscreen computers to complete the liability waiver that is required of all participants.
Then you will head to the cashier to pay the entrance fee. You can go to their website (www.fritzsadventure.com), to see the fees for your specific needs, since the fees vary, depending on your age, and several other categories of discounts one might qualify for. There was a small group ahead of us in the cashier line, so we took advantage of the "waiting opportunity" to get our picture taken in the "Campsite Photo Opportunity" they have set up in their gift shop, adjacent to the cashier line.
Of course, the gift shop sells tee shirts, and they have very clever designs:
One of the tee shirt displays, shows a Branson banner, with tee shirts suspended on large industrial hooks.
Our group started out on the Sky Trail Ropes Course. This is a four story ropes course with 40 differnet paths of varying obstacles, such as a tight rope, rolling log, suspension bridges, and more. This course requires harnesses, but no helmet or gloves. Helen waited down below in her wheel chair, and snapped this photo of us waving good by, as we were about to start our elevated experience: (Note: There is no charge for spectators, which is what Helen was, in her wheel chair. Spectators are not allowed on the upper floors.)
After that, Diana asked another spectator, who was more mobile, to take some photos of us with her phone, once we got up on the Sky Trail course. (Phones/cameras are not allowed on the challenge floors or ziplines, so I am indebted to a kind gentleman spectator, who walked around with Diana's phone below us, taking these photos)
Photo below shows Peggy on the platform, ready to start a ropes challenge. Our harnesses were tethered to a pole, with metal slots on it, and one could only go where the slots were connected to a challenge obstacle. It gave me a new meaning to the phrase "playing the slots"! Photo below shows how our hiking group can get in shape for water crossings on wobbly stones, by practicing on the wobbly boards Diana is traversing:
Photo below shows that Peggy is making progress scaling across the rope wall, while Diana is almost finished with the "wobbly stepping stones" obstacle:
I followed Peggy attempting the rope wall, as she started the balancing act, required for the "wobbly stepping stone" maneuver:
This photo below, of Diana and I on the platform, shows you how the harnesses are fitted on sturdy tethers, attached to metal sliders, that move along the slots in the metal beams:
In the photo below, all three of us are on the platform, with the understanding that we could not stay there indefinitely! We were going to HAVE to trust those harnesses to be our "life line", as we slowly inched a our way, across the shaking suspension bridges,
Our (anonymous) photographer took this "long shot", that shows the maze of obstacles that one can tackle on the four-story Sky Trail. Since the photo does not show my feet, I have no memory of which obstacle I was on. Participating in these challenges took every bit of concentration I had, so I was oblivious to anything going on around me!
There is one spot on the Sky Trail, where there is an automatic camera that will take your photo! Then you type in your cell phone number, and the device will text you the photo! I took a "trial shot" to practice, not realizing that my uplifted arms were covering up Diana in the background!
For the next attempt, we scrunched up together, so we could all three be in the photo:
After we finished the mid-level course, we paused to re-hydrate, visit the ladies room, and look around to see what was available to do next. We discovered they have a great meeting room/dining room for large groups, that looks out over the entire recreational facility, as well as windows to the outside.
There is also a clever mural that provides many photo opportunities, with the invitation that says, "Let's Go On An Adventure!. (Note a wooden plank suspension bridge mural is painted on the floor)
There is a walkway where you are on eye level with an airplane. (Peggy took this photo of me on the walkway). One of the activities guests can do, is crawl through a maze of small metal cages, that will eventually get you into the airplane's cockpit (a 1959 Twin Beech) where you can listen to air traffic controls.
The entrance floor is also where group photos can be taken, and instructions given. Fritz's Adventure routinely promotes days that are designated "Home Schooler Days", and we happened to be at the Home School Day promotion for August.
A pretend swinging bridge painted on the floor provides additional photo opportunities:There is even a ladder that the photographer can climb, so they will be above the people on the floor mural:After this, we ordered lunch from their snack bar, and took it outside to eat on their patio, (which fortunately had sun umbrellas), and is right below the doors that zipliners use to start their outdoor aerial adventures, called "The Treetops Escape":
Here is a gal about to land:We also stood by listening to a group getting their safety instructions for starting the treetops course . This is called "Ground School", because you get fitted with your harness/helmet/gloves, and you are taught how to use the zipline/treetops equipment. Each person must then take their feet off the floor, and slide down a zipline that is just inches above the floor, with the purpose of getting the participant to trust that their harness will hold them. We learned that it might take two hours to complete, so we realized it was more time than Peggy, Diana, and her mom had available before they started their drive north to Illinois to participate in their next adventure, called Floatzilla.
I did not have a time constraint, so I continued on with the treetops course, and realized that one of the activities I had seen when I was on the easier course, but could not access, was because it was a part of the more difficult treetops course:
It was when I saw this photo of a participant with gloves and a helmet, I realized why I had not been able to access that portion. I had not yet been through the safety course, where the gloves and helmets were issued.
One activity to "save your energy" for, is a climb to the "Crow's Nest", outside near Highway 76. After your first outside zip line, you will have the option of climbing the pole that leads to this, as pictured below:
One climbing activity I have been wanting to try for a long time, is a Via Ferrata. The first time I saw a Via Ferrata was on a massive granite bluff in Quebec. I asked my rock-climbing son about it, and he said they were very common in Europe, and consisted of metal pegs hammered into rock walls, that allowed the climber to traverse a vertical wall, without having to rely on cracks in the rock to get footholds and hand holds. There was a simplified version of this on the treetops course, and it is pictured below: (I was able to make the traverse successfully, although there are no photos of my very awkward movements to "prove" it!)
This climbing obstacles, which had a certain WAY, they had to be completed, serves as the visual aid for one of my First Place 4 Health (www.FirstPlace4Health.com) memory verses that says: "Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you saying, 'This is the way, walk in it.' ."(Isaiah 30:21) There was only ONE WAY to access the ziplines that led you outdoors, and if you did not go that way, you could not access the outdoor zip lines. Thankfully, I had a voice behind me telling me how to access that outdoor zip line! I was baffled because I was at the upper story door that led to the outside, but it was closed! The voice behind me said, "This is the way, press this button." And voila! The door opened!
In addition to the photos of activities on this blog, there are additional activities that you can try out. There are underground tunnels, laser room, climbing wall, telephone poles to climb, giant treehouses, multi-story slides, and warped walls. Be sure to check out the Fritz's website for more information, including weight and height limitations. For example, for the Treetops Zipline course, the weight minimum is 44 pounds, and maximum is 285 pounds. The height requirement is 55 inches.
I am very thankful for the experience I had at Fritz Adventure. It gave me "MILES OF SMILES!" Tricia