Water Play - Wisconsin Dells Family Hotels - My Family Travels
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Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink. True, Coleridge has a point here, but who cares? At these amazing indoor waterparks, the last thing you'll be thinking about is drinking!Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink. True, Coleridge has a point here, but who cares? At these amazing indoor waterparks, the last thing you'll be thinking about is drinking!

There are thousands of hotel rooms and probably millions of gallons of chlorinated water in the Wisonconsin Dells region of Wisconsin, but we know you'd like to know which ones are our favorites. Here's our list in order of size, cause in this town, size does matter.

For more information about Wisconsin's many family attractions, ask the Wisconsin Tourist Office.

Wisconsin Dells Waterparks

The Wilderness Hotel & Golf Resort
511 Adams Street
Wisconsin Dells, WI 53965
608/253-9729, 800/867-9453
Here you can find the largest indoor water park in the Wisconsin Dells, measuring 250,000 square-feet. The park has four areas: Klondike Kavern, complete with a lazy river ride and over 60 hands-on play/spray features, is geared to older children and adults, the Wild West Waterpark with its own wavepool, raft ride, six-level play structure, multiple slides, and the Wild WaterDome, the greenhouse-like structure offers year round indoor tanning.  The newest option, designed with the little ones in mind, is Cubby’s Cove.  Lodging options include two and three-bedroom condos overlooking Lake Delton at Wilderness on the Lake, which offers a golf club, the Sundara Spa and a choice of kid-friendly restaurants.

Kalahari Resort Water Park
1305 Kalahari Drive
Wisconsin Dells, WI 53965
877/253-5466
This 57,000-square-feet African-themed park is filled with water activities, opened in summer 2000 and built a 58,000-sq.ft. addition, making it (they claim) the largest in the Wisconsin! Kalahari's Master Blaster an uphill waterslide rollercoaster is the only one of its kind available indoors. With the newest attraction, an intense wave machine, the Flow Rider creates 5-foot waves with the pressure of 50,000 gallons of water every minutes, allowing guests to surf or boogie board. The Leopard's Lair offers an interactive play area surrounded by a 3,000 square feet complete with net crawls, water guns, and slides ranging from 6-20 foot in height. For the whole family, the Victorian Falls, a 504-foot long raft ride, wide enough to the family sized rafts and appropriate for all ages.

Mt. Olympus Water & Themepark
1881 Wisconsin Dells Parkway
Wisconsin Dells, WI 53965
608/254-2490
Of their four theme parks, half are indoor including the water park the Bay — a 55,000 square-feet. area complete with 9 towering slides and the Mayan raging river, a not so lazy river with sporadic surprise water sprays. Nearby, the Hispaniola Bay children's activity pool has its very own interactive pirate ship and gentle waterfalls. For a change of temperature, the Bay offers the Jaguar Hot Tub and Sacred Well Whirlpool. Marge and Gary Tillery brought their 7 and 3-year-old sons, Grant and Jeffrey, to Mt. Olympus a few years ago. "I couldn't believe that we actually spent two whole days in the water," said Marge. "I loved it, especially how fast I went on the slides," added Grant. Marge liked the fact that the pirate-themed area for toddlers was close to the water slides that her older son was enamored with. Some of Grant's other favorites were playing water basketball, and trying to walk on floating lily pads in the warriors water walk, which is a type of water obstacle course.

 


Great Wolf Lodges
1400 Great Wolf Drive
Wisconsin Dells, WI 53965
800/559-9653
This rustic resort has expanded to now 3 indoor parks, giving a total of 19 water slides, six pools and a four-story treehouse waterfort. Spirit Island, features Lookout Mountain, a four-story, 200-foot tube slide that ends in the lazy river. Bear Track Landing features Mountain Edge Raceway, the nation's first enclosed mat racer, 8 thrilling water slides, a rock climbing wall, and Raccoon Lagoon, a play area specifically for toddlers. The Fort Mackenzie, a 12-level treehouse can be found in Treehouse Island. A huge bucket containing 1,000 gallons of water is dumped on everyone in the fort every few minutes. This company has been so successful that they have expanded their indoor waterworld concept to several resorts in other states (read more below.)

The Chula Vista Resort
4031 River Rd.
Wisconsin Dells, WI 53965
800/388-4782
The entire Lost Rios waterpark can be seen from a bird's eye view on its Flyan Mayan Coaster Zip slide the world's longest and fastest indoor water coaster (they claim). The Mount Montezuma's Myan Temple activity center has plenty of interactive water toys and slides for kids to play with as they get soaked from the giant bucket that holds 500 gallons of bucket dumps over the center. The Madador Mat Racer allows siblings or friends to compete to see who is quicker on the mat track. Among the park's several slides, the hot tub and lazy river offer some relaxation and a break from the park's other fast paced attractions.

The Polynesian Resort Hotel & Suites
857 N. Frontage Rd.
Wisconsin Dells, WI 53965
800/272-5642
This resort has a newly expanded Water Factory suitable for preschoolers, with a shallow water play area for those under 80 lbs., a baby swing and the Aloha Pavilion with a traditional pool with a few petite waterslides. For the more adventurous, the Polynesian's Temple of the Black Pearl is the first hotel water park ride that takes place in the dark.

Blizzard Bay at the Wintergreen
Wintergreen Resort & Conference Center
60 Gasser Rd
Wisconsin Dells WI, 53965
800/648-4765
Even business travelers must enjoy these indoor water parks, as the region's new conference centers have joined in the fun. The RainTree Resort & Conference Center's (888/253-4386) Amazon Falls boasts a rain forest theme with more than 50 interactive water games set among ruinous temples, waterfalls, and waterslides. Even better, you can check that briefcase at Blizzard Bay, the snow and igloo-themed park with more than 30 water activities, including a castle and floating foam ice, at Wintergreen. Next time, bring the kids!


Money-Saving Tip: Budget watchers may want to check out a smaller hotel in the area.  The Copa Cabana Resort Hotel & Suites (608/253-1511), Grand Marquis (800/447-2636), the Meadowbrook Resort (877/993-3557) and the Alakai Hotel & Suites (800/593-9392) also have their share of slides, bubbling geysers and water-sprouting palm trees.

Dear Reader: This page may contain affiliate links which may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. Our independent journalism is not influenced by any advertiser or commercial initiative unless it is clearly marked as sponsored content. As travel products change, please be sure to reconfirm all details and stay up to date with current events to ensure a safe and successful trip.

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  • Emily

    Thank you so much for your beautiful article!
    I’m so happy that you enjoyed your experience at the Onsen!
    I’ve never been to an Onsen, but I would love to get to visit one some day.

    Back in the 1980s and 1990s my mom was the head supervisor at a YWCA in Ohio. I practically lived in the YWCA (not literally, of course) for the 19 years that my mom worked there. I had a part time job at the YWCA for a few years in the 1990s.

    One of the great things about spending so much time at the YWCA was that I grew up using the locker room all of the way from a young child to a young woman and being 100% comfortable with both my own nudity and the nudity of all other females.

    I feel that it was so much better back then when the Y had one big room full of shower heads on the walls than it is with stalls these days. The group shower setting was great from a bonding experience. I feel that it’s much healthier psychologically speaking that females are exposed to other women’s and girl’s bodies, as opposed to feeling that we need to hide from each other and change clothes in toilet stalls or under towels.

    One of the benefits of having a mom who was a supervisor of the Y was that after hours my mom and my sisters and myself could just skinny dip in the pool, and my sisters and I were allowed to have our female friends with us for a skinny dipping session on Friday and Saturday nights.
    Also, my aunt and a few of my female cousins would skinny dip with my mom, my sisters and I every once in a while.

    My mom said that she had heard that the YWCA used to have one night a week that was for nude swimming back in the 1960s and most of the 1970s. Obviously it was a female only facility at the time.

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