Archive for the 'Santa's Paradise Express' Category

Santa Returns to Ride the Rails in Strasburg

Friday, December 7th, 2007

By Larry Alexander
Intelligencer Journal
December 7, 2007

STRASBURG, Pa. - Santa’s Paradise Express is about to pull out of the station.

The popular holiday train ride features Christmas carolers, brass horns and a personal visit with Santa during its 45-minute journey through the Amish countryside.

Festivities will begin as soon as the visitor reaches the train platform, said Kathy Gochenaur, Strasburg Rail Road’s Christmas coordinator. Carolers will be strolling past the shops, all of which have been decorated with lights, ornaments and metal Christmas stars fabricated at the railroad’s own workshop. Two metal Star Trees, also made on site, will be on display.

A heated rail coach on a siding will be the home for holiday story-telling, and visitors may go inside the J tower, an old switching tower, for a bird’s-eye view of the approaching train long before it enters the station.

Inside the ticket office will be a display of old photos and decorations from Christmases past, on loan from the National Christmas Center.

On the train, which consists of six coaches, a dining car and a first-class parlor coach, more carolers will stroll car-to-car, as will a pair of brass horn players.

Starting from the opposite end of the train, Santa will make his way along, saying “hi” to all the children and handing a gift to those between ages 3 and 11. The singers, musicians and Santa, will all pass each other as they traverse the train.

“That way everybody, at some point during their trip on the railroad, will see Santa Claus, the carolers and hear the horn players,” Gochenaur said.

Carols will be sung by two groups, all high school students — the Madrigal Singers from Lampeter-Strasburg High School and a group of home-schooled students. Each ensemble will feature 10 to 12 voices.

“They’re a delight to hear,” Gochenaur said.

Each car will be heated by a pot-belly stove and decorated for Christmas, with the parlor coach being the most festive, with a live tree and lights.

“That coach is decorated extra-special because it is first class,” Gochenaur said.

This is the 49th year that Santa’s Paradise Express will rumble along the rails between Strasburg and Paradise, and Gochenaur said its popularity has only increased. In recent years, she said as many as 10,000 people have ridden the rails at Christmas.

Santa’s Paradise Express will roll out of the station Saturday and Sunday, as well as Dec. 13-16. Trains run throughout the day on the weekends with special 7 p.m. trains on Thursday and Friday.

Coach fare tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for children 3 to 11 and $4 for children three and under. For first class, tickets are $18 for adults, $13 for children ages 3 to 11 and $7 for youngsters under age 3.

Santa’s Paradise Express, Sat. and Sun. (also Dec. 13-16), 45-minute train ride with Santa, carolers and musicians, plus storybook readings, holiday decorations and more, Strasburg Rail Road, Route 741, Strasburg, $4-$15, 687-7522.

Strasburg Rail Road a Holiday Destination

Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

“I knew exactly what Santa’s elves looked like because I saw them at work in those windows,” Morrison says.

The kid-size monorail and giant tree at Wanamakers, the miniature train set-ups in hardware stores, the department-store Santas who gave out clear toy lollipops - Morrison remembers it all as if it were yesterday. A collector of all things Christmas, he opened the National Christmas Center in Lancaster to showcase a staggering collection of Santas, crèches, ornaments, toys, cards, books and artwork - both his own and items on loan from other Christmas aficionados.

The life-size dioramas and animatronic figures in the Tudor Towne exhibit tell an enchanting children’s story of how a town of animals celebrates Christmas. Another exhibition uses lifelike statues to show Santa Claus figures from around the world. This year, Morrison is adding a “Memories of Philadelphia” display with historical photos - ephemera like a Sealtest paper wreath, and children’s books given out by Gimbels, Lit Brothers and other bygone Philadelphia businesses.

A large, walk-in room re-creates an early Woolworth’s store at Christmastime - the first successful Woolworth’s opened in Lancaster in 1879. The display is a sentimental favorite of Morrison’s; he bought his first Christmas collectibles - three houses for a miniature Christmas village - at Woolworth’s as a 7-year-old. And, yes, those three houses are now part of the exhibition.

“It’s all about preserving the essence of Christmas,” says the man who calls himself Santa Jr. and whose hefty stature and natural gray-white beard make him a Santa look-alike. The same could be said of Lancaster County during the holiday season. Lancaster done right, that is - avoiding the strip malls, outlets and tourist traps on the congested part of Route 30 nearest the city of Lancaster.

The Germans who settled this area contributed some of our more beloved Christmas traditions - decorated evergreens, miniature villages served by toy trains, even candy canes. So it’s not surprising that the county evokes Christmas fantasies - a journey that begins when you pull off the highway and onto the two-lane back roads of this primarily rural area.

Rolling farmlands alternate with small towns where the sidewalks are lined with hundred-year-old homes that have front porches designed for neighborliness. Here, it’s the automobiles that seem out of place, not the horse-drawn carriages of the Amish and Mennonites.

Visitors to the Landis Valley Museum walk through the streets and buildings of a living history village that represents the Pennsylvania German culture of 18th-, 19th- and early-20th century Lancaster County. For years museum volunteers had adorned the village with evergreen branches and other small holiday touches, but only in the last five years has the museum highlighted extensively old local holiday traditions, a mini-lesson in Christmas history.

The museum’s early-1800s tavern, for example, features an evergreen tree hung upside down from the ceiling to prevent mice from nibbling its adornment of edible cookies and dried fruit. The Landis Brothers House incorporates a Victorian-style feather tree and traditional German miniature “putz” nativity scene.

At the museum’s Country Christmas Village (Friday through Sunday and Dec. 14-16 and 26-28) visitors will encounter Belsnickel, a gruff peddler in tattered clothes who carries a switch to punish bad children and candies to reward good ones. The German Belsnickel was a precursor of our Santa.

The pleasant scenery on Route 741 west of Gap evokes Sunday drives of old, when the journey itself was the enjoyment, but a reward lies ahead in Strasburg, where the railroad is still king. Those who grew up with a miniature train layout under the Christmas tree will delight in the oversized display at Choo Choo Barn, the outgrowth of a setup that began about 50 years ago in the basement of the Groff family, which still owns and operates Choo Choo Barn.

The 1,700-square-foot walk-around display features 20 operating O-gauge trains crisscrossing the farms and villages of a miniature Lancaster County, over bridges, through tunnels and past a ski slope. Electricity brings to life more than 150 animated figures, including an Amish barn-raising, dairy farm, three-ring circus, amusement park and baseball game.

The operating layouts at the National Toy Train Museum in Strasburg are neither as large nor as elaborate as Choo Choo Barn’s. This museum instead focuses on the history of toy trains, displaying hundreds of locomotives and cars from the late 1800s to today. Train collectors will be fascinated. A recent visit found numerous families with little boys enjoying the museum, too, but if you go to only one place to see toy train layouts, make it the Choo Choo Barn.

Train lovers can experience the real thing by taking a ride on the Strasburg Rail Road, one of America’s oldest short-line steam railways. Operating hours are abbreviated in December, but special events include the popular Day Out with Thomas and Santa’s Paradise Express.

Across the street, the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania exhibits more than 100 cars and locomotives, including the interiors of sleepers and dining cars.

Lancaster County offers visitors a chance to shop the way we all once did - strolling the streets of a real downtown, patronizing small, locally owned stores and, best of all, escaping much of the crowds. The little town of Intercourse has more than 30 craft, food, gift and furniture stores within walking distance along Old Philadelphia Pike (Route 340) and East Newport Road (Route 772) and within the Kitchen Kettle Village complex. Among the out-of-the-ordinary gifts available are locally made quilts, traditional folk arts and crafts, and local food specialties.

Downtown Lancaster makes an enjoyable shopping excursion, mostly near Penn Square on Market, Prince, King and Orange. At the heart of the district is Central Market, the oldest continuously operating farmers market in the country. The current building is a modest 114 years old, but the market itself has been operating on this site since the 1730s.

Market stalls offer Pennsylvania Dutch meats, baked goods and preserves alongside Greek specialties and organic foods. Pick up some traditional springerle molded cookies and hand-painted ornaments from the Springerle House market stall.

Numerous art galleries sprinkled throughout the downtown area sell high-quality local crafts as well as fine arts from regional and international artists. Two museum stores worth a look are those at the Heritage Center Museum on King Street and at the Lancaster Quilt and Textile Museum on Market Street.

Visit the Quilt Museum itself to see the “Lancaster Christmas” exhibition introduced last year. The sentimental re-creation of Christmases past was curated by the National Christmas Center’s Morrison. Eight life-size room settings depict Pennsylvania holiday celebrations through the years, from the simpler decor of the 1850s to the 1960s, when aluminum trees lit by color wheels were all the rage. Woolworth’s 5-&-10-cent store makes an appearance here, too.

Downtown Lancaster’s Old Fashioned Holiday Weekends, the first three weekends of December, feature horse-drawn carriage rides, trolley tours, and Santa himself.

Strasburg’s tiny downtown, at the crossroads of Routes 741 and 896, has a few shops worth visiting. Eldreth Pottery specializes in traditional salt-glazed stoneware and Pennsylvania redware pottery. Springerle House has its main store here, and 70 antiques and collectible dealers showcase their wares at the Strasburg Antique Market in a restored tobacco warehouse.

Lancaster County seems to have more than its share of theaters, and their holiday shows tend to cost less than those in larger cities. Sight & Sound Millennium Theatre’s Miracle of Christmas presents a musical rendition of the birth of Jesus with a large cast, live animals on stage, and impressive special effects.

Amish Family Christmas at Freedom Chapel Dinner Theatre depicts the holiday celebration of the fictional King family, and Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre presents Irving Berlin’s White Christmas, a musical based on the 1954 Bing Crosby movie.

American Musical Theatre boasts that its Christmas Show “is constantly compared to Radio City Music Hall.” At $32 for adults and $16 for children, ticket prices for the Lancaster variety show go for considerably less than those to Radio City’s Christmas Spectacular.

Holiday time brings nostalgia for the “good old days,” when to many people, Christmas seemed simpler and more meaningful. Lancaster County in December can’t bring back those days, but it offers a chance to recapture the feeling.



Lancaster County Christmas

Lancaster County, west of Philadelphia, is about a 60- or 75-minute drive. The leisurely trip is along Route 30, also called the Old Lincoln Highway, where traffic can be heavy. The Pennsylvania Turnpike is the fast way to reach the county by car or truck. Amtrak trains and Greyhound buses run between Philadelphia and Lancaster.

Santa Claus Is Coming to Town — By Rail

Friday, December 15th, 2006

Santa Claus is Coming To Town — By Rail
By Larry Alexander
Intelligencer Journal
December 15, 2006

LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - It’s not quite the Polar Express, that magical train that carries children across the frozen wilderness to Santa’s North Pole headquarters, but it’s a terrific second, combining two of the Polar Express’s key features — a train ride and a visit with Santa.The Strasburg Rail Road’s Santa’s Paradise Express is running the rails between Strasburg and Paradise through Sunday.

The depot is decked out for Christmas with lights, wreaths and garlands. Carolers stroll the grounds, adding music to the festive atmosphere.

Taking time out from his busy schedule — “time is of the essence in everything I do,” he said — Santa Claus strolls the platform, saying hello to the children.

Asked if he worries that such pre-Christmas appearances won’t throw him hopelessly behind schedule, Santa said, “I have a real good staff of elves who take care of all my logistics.”

Boarding the train, riders have their choice of the first-class coach, the deluxe lounge car, the dining car or the coach-class cars for the 45-minute excursion. Each car is heated by a pot-belly coal stove that casts its warm glow over the passengers.

The cars are all decorated, usually with hanging greens, with the most elaborate being the first-class coach, which includes a Christmas tree and strings of lights.

As the train chugs through the inky darkness of the night, the cars rock with the motion of the wheels on the iron rails. Outside, white smoke from the engine curls past the windows as inside, Santa makes his way from car to swaying car.

“Hello,” he says to kids along the way. “How are you doing? Have you been good?”

Often he stops, poses with a child for a picture snapped by a grinning mom or dad, then hands the child a pack of crayons and a coloring book, and moves on.

Santa said he enjoys the looks on the kids’ faces, and while most are thrilled by his attention, some are apprehensive, and “those are the ones I try to reassure that it’s OK.”

Coming from the other direction, two brass horn players move through the train, performing a wide assortment of Christmas tunes. As they meet Santa coming from the opposite direction, the duo breaks into “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town.”

Santa’s Paradise Express runs tonight at 7 p.m. only.

On Saturday and Sunday, trains will run between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m., with an evening train at 7 p.m.

All trains depart the station on the hour.

This weekend also features the Christmas Garden, a holiday train layout erected by the National Christmas Center in Kinzers and set up in the switching tower, plus other activities at the depot.

Mrs. Claus also attends the railway event, greeting visitors in the President’s Car.

Reservations are strongly recommended, and can be made by phoning the Strasburg Rail Road at 687-7522.

All Aboard! The Paradise Express

Thursday, December 7th, 2006

Day By Day
Weekend Entertainment Highlights
Lancaster New Era
December 07, 2006

…Who says Santa always takes a sleigh. Rail travel has been a favorite of the jolly old elf for years. Why do you think trains and Christmas go together like love and marriage? He’ll be taking some rides on the Strasburg Rail Road — aka the Paradise Express — today during hourly departures from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Saturday, too.) And he’ll be back next Thursday through Sunday. The elves have things well in hand back at the North Pole. If you have any last-minute requests, he’ll stop by to say hello. For tickets and info., call 687-7522 or visit www.strasburgrailroad.com

To read the entire article, please visit Lancaster Online.

Santa’s Paradise Express: Give The Gift

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006

All Aboard To Thomas
By Janene Mascarella
NY Metro Parents
October 27, 2006

If you have a child who loves Thomas the Tank Engine, finding a cool holiday gift isn’t too difficult. Toy store shelves are stacked with Thomas, his many friends, countless accessories, and enough wooden tracks to chug to the moon and back. But if you really want a gift that will knock their socks off, get on track to Strasburg, PA., where kids can climb aboard a life-size Thomas, complete with blinking eyes! Grab your ticket, hop on, and take a 22-minute ride through scenic Pennsylvania Dutch Country. The event, called “A Day Out With Thomas”, is held three times a year at the Strasburg Rail Road. Next stop…December 1-3, 2006.


Choo-Choo!
A Day Out With Thomas draws thousands of families each year. Some of the activities kids of all ages can enjoy: Getting pictures taken on Percy — a life-sized blow up version of Thomas’s friend; riding the cranky cars, pump cars, a caboose, a pint-sized steam locomotive — the Cagney; getting faux tattoos of Thomas and Friends; meeting Sir Topham Hatt; and shopping an infinite amount of Thomas merchandise. To learn more and to purchase advance tickets, visit www.strasburgrailroad.com.

Check in!
If you plan on staying in Strasburg, The Netherlands Inn & Spa is a great choice for families. Located on 18 acres and surrounded by Amish farms and cornfields, its country-cool, relaxed atmosphere is a breath of fresh air. The Inn & Spa has 104 guest rooms, offers full country breakfast for two (included with the room), and yes, there’s a full-service spa on site. The Netherlands has great things in store for the season: an inviting fireplace as guests check in, mulled apple cider in the lobby, and a wonderful winter menu featuring weekly “comfort food” specials. And the inn offers shuttle buses to and from the Strasburg Rail Road throughout the Thomas event, and will reserve seats for strollers. For more information, call 1-800-872-0201, or visit www.netherlandsinn.com.

Check out!
If you miss the December 1-3 Thomas event, you can still catch the Strasburg Rail Road’s “Santa’s Paradise Express”, a 45-minute train ride, on December 9-10, 14-15, and 16-17 — when the railroad transforms into a winter wonderland with carolers and musicians strolling through the train and, of course, an on-board Santa Claus…

To read the entire article, please visit NY Metro Parent.

To Lancaster County We Go

Sunday, July 2nd, 2006

Pennsylvania Dutch Country
By Janene Mascarella
The Long Island Exchange

I was looking for a fun place to take the kids for a couple of days—that didn’t involve plane tickets. Something cool and different and reachable by car. So I did what most parents do these days, I hit the net. I surfed around a while for ideas and inspiration, but came up empty.

My son was playing with his ‘Thomas’ trains on the floor making such a racket, I couldn’t even think clearly. He’s obsessed with those trains—it’s a sickness, really. Anyone with young children might know the symptoms: Rattling off the names and numbers of ‘Thomas’ and his many ‘Friends’, humming that silly rail road song, a sudden invasion of wooden tracks. I tripped over one of those trains running for the phone. This gave me a brilliant idea. Some moms mentioned that kids can actually ride on a life size ‘Thomas’. The event is called A DAY OUT WITH THOMAS and it travels around the country. Maybe this little blue train that I almost broke my foot on, is a really useful engine after all. I hobbled back to the computer.
A click here and a click there—and bingo—‘Thomas’ will be at the Strasburg Rail Road. Perfect. Strasburg is located in Lancaster County, also known as Pennsylvania Dutch Country, famous for its landscape and rolling farmlands. I learned there was plenty to do: there’s the Amish, shopping, amusement parks, museums, theaters. Sure sounded fun. Not too far, definitely something different. Its official… to Lancaster County we go[…]

[…]I had no idea what a big event this was. And how crowded. Here’s another tip: make sure you buy tickets well in advance. The lines are crazy. At the Strasburg Rail Road, this event is huge. When we heard that parking would be a nightmare, we were so relieved to learn that the Netherlands Inn & Spa provided shuttle buses going back and forth to the rail road all day. Whew! We thought it would be best not to bring the stroller. Bad move. The shuttle bus left room for strollers in the front seats and when our young kids tired from walking around all day, we had to carry them, along with ten bags full of goodies and treats.

When ‘Thomas’ is in town, the event attracts nearly 50,000 people—but for kids who love that little tank engine, I assure you, they won’t be disappointed. This year, the life size ‘Thomas’ (a real train) blinks his eyes and what’s really great is you hop aboard for a 25 minute train ride through the Amish countryside. My kids were thrilled beyond words. The lines were long, the day was hot, but would I do it again? Yep. We plan to return in December when the event returns. Here are the other cool things that happen at the Strasburg Rail Road during ‘A Day Out With Thomas’. The kids can:

* Get pictures taken on Percy- a life size blow up version of Thomas’s friend.

* Learn about farm animals - with a chick hatching display – a real tractor - and other farm-related fun.

* Ride the Cranky Cars - which are just the right size for young children.

* Go on the pump cars (for the whole family)

* Take a ride on a caboose.

* Ride on a pint sized steam locomotive – the Cagney.

* Find their way through a child sized hay maze.

* Get faux tattoos of Thomas and Friends.

* Shop through an infinite number of Thomas Merchandise.

Take This Trip Tip: Do It Again In December!

We all had such a great time in Strasburg, PA—we are now making plan to return in December. Strasburg is the home of The National Christmas Center, and there are plenty of events and festivals to celebrate the Christmas season. We plan to ride Santa’s Paradise Express. December 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, and 17th, the Strasburg Rail Road transforms into a winter wonderland and the family can take a train ride with Santa! There are also carolers, musicians, storytellers and much more[…]

To read the entire article, please visit Long Island Exhange.