10 Almost Free Things to Do in LA

If the name of the game is “budget travel” right now, you’re not alone. We racked our brains to dish out the best free things to do in LA, then we thought we’d splurge…and put together 10 budget-conscious ways to see Los Angeles. But you know how it is. Once you indulge, it’s hard to stop. So here’s another top 10 list of “almost free things to do.” After all, this city is all about variety.

1. See the stars (literally)

Explore the Griffith Park Observatory for free and don’t forget to buy a ticket to the Samuel Oschin Planetarium. Tickets $7 for adults and less for kids, students and seniors. The planetarium offers three amazing shows guided live by people who really know their stuff when it comes to the skies. In an interactive show, you’ll have the opportunity to ask questions and see particular constellations or a particular moment in time in the sky.

2. Set Sail!

Echo Park Lake offers peddle boat rentals all summer long as well as on weekends the rest of the year. You can glide around the lake under your own power from a half hour to and hour for less than $10 and enjoy some scenic beauty in the middle of the city.

3. Eat well and prosper

Cheap eats can be found all over the city in ethnic enclaves and beyond. Some famous local favorites include Pink’s Famous Chili Dogs in Hollywood; Yuca’s, a Mexican food stand in Los Feliz; India Sweets and Spices in Los Feliz and Culver City; Zankou Chicken in Hollywood, West Los Angeles and other locations; and East Japanese Restuarant in Little Tokyo where on Monday and Thursday they offer sushi specials at $1 a piece. Also, taco trucks, tamales and bacon-wrapped hot dogs straight from the cart are great ways to get a quick cheap meal. If you see a line, you know it’s good.

4. Save room for dessert

Even if you’re not eating out, a trip to one of LA’s sweet treat specialists can be an inexpensive activity everyone can enjoy. Try Pazzo Gelato in Sunset Junction; Hollywood Gelato in Los Feliz; Scoops Hollywood; Al Gelato on Robertson; Mashti Malone’s in Hollywood; and N’Ice Cream Nielsen’s Homemade Gelato & Sorbet in Venice. With more custom flavors between them than you can shake a spoon at you just might have to try them all.

5. Engage with the world around you

The California Science Center is a great place to visit for people of all ages. General admission is free. They have motion-based simulators to explore air, space and other science topics and an Ecology Cliff Climb that allows the brave to scale a sheer rock wall.

6. Explore the past

You can visit the exterior grounds of theLa Brea Tar Pits free of charge, and then for $7 or less for children, students and seniors you can step inside and learn more about the Los Angeles Basin where saber-toothed cats and mammoths roamed the land 10,000 to 40,000 years ago. You can even watch through windows as real fossils artifacts are cleaned and catalogued.

7. Take me out to a ball game

For a mere $9 you can purchase advance single tickets to Dodger’s Games atDodger Stadium. Watch under Dodger blue skies as the boys strive for win after win. For $10 you can pick up a ticket to a WNBA Sparks game at STAPLES Centerand take in the prowess of the team’s stellar athletes in their world-class home stadium.

8. Picnic with pals

Check out a film screening in the outdoors at the famous Hollywood Forever Cemetary, final resting place for such greats as Cecil B. DeMille, Jayne Mansfield, Rudolph Valentino. Playing a wide range of films throughout the summer from cult classics to horror to comedy, it’s a great place to go with a group or on a date. Be sure and pack a picnic and some blankets. To save on parking, ditch your car in the neighborhood and walk in. Just be sure to arrive early to get a prime spot on the grass. Donation tickets $10 at the gate.

9. Listen carefully

You might be hearing the chords of the next music sensation. Check out some of the local music venues where great bands got their start. Many shows are $10 or less. Check weekly or monthly listings for Sunset Strip legends The Viper Room and The Knitting Factory, Hollywood’s The Hotel Café or The Mint and the Eastside’s The Echo and Spaceland, along with many more.

10. Get creative

A few area museums offer tickets under $10 and that’s a steal when you consider that you can spend as many hours as you like enjoying the work of master’s of their crafts. The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA)Norton Simon Museum of ArtCraft and Folk Art Museum (CAFAM) and Museum of Neon Art (MONA) can all brag about astonishing collections that illuminate some of the most important creative movements in human history.

Blog Source: DiscoverLa

Halloween Best Haunted Attractions Southern California

This Halloween the competition is fierce for the title of best haunted attraction in Southern California, and Los Angeles in particular. The key players this year for older children and adults are Knott”s, Universal Studios and Magic Mountain. Disneyland, Legoland and Seaworld San Diego are hosting haunted events that are suitable for all age groups.

Halloween at Universal Studios Hollywood

Universal Studios Hollywood

Halloween Horror Nights® opened its 17-night run today at Universal Studios HollywoodSM with the annual presentation of the Eyegore Awards, honoring the horror genre’s top stars and creative artists. The 2010 “Halloween Horror Nights” event at Universal Studios Hollywood offers spine-chilling new mazes based upon the horror genre’s most compelling characters. Rob Zombie and other top artists collaborated with Universal Studios Hollywood in the creation of new mazes, “scare zones” and backlot experiences. Halloween Horror Nights’ mazes will include “A Nightmare On Elm Street™: Never Sleep Again,” “Friday the 13th™: Kill, Jason, Kill!,” Rob Zombie’s “House of 1000 Corpses: In 3D Zombievison” plus “Saw: Game On” and “Vampyre: Castle of the Undead.” Among the six “Scare Zones” is a new “La Llorona” experience, based upon the timeless Mexican legend.

Overnight hotel packages are also available to make planning a complete weekend experience easy.

Knotts Berry Farm Halloween Haunt

Knott’s Berry’s Farm
Knott’s Berry Farm Haunt is the world’s largest Halloween celebration. Starting September 24 and running for 27 horrifying nights the typically family friendly theme park will transform itself for its willing victims into 160-acres of sheer terror. Knott’s Halloween Haunt continues to be the leader in theme park Halloween events offering a whopping 13 mazes, seven hair-raising shows, three horrific scare zones and 1,000 roaming monsters roaming throughout the entire park. Knott’s Halloween Haunt dates are September 24-26, September 30-Oct. 3, 6-10, 13-17, 20-24, 27-31, 2010. Event hours are 7pm – 1am; Fridays and Saturdays from 7pm-2am.

Magic Mountain
Six Flags Magic Mountain is transformed from a “theme park” to a haunted “scream park” for Fright Fest Presented by SNICKERS® beginning October 8 and running for four frightfully fun weekends through October 31. Fright Fest offers 12 days of terrifying haunted mazes, roaming zombies, the scariest clowns on the planet and new shows … leaving no tombstone unturned to bring the ultimate sensory overload for every range of fear. For the little monsters, a Trick or Treat Trail Presented by Walgreens, Scaryoke and Crafts in Bugs Bunny World round out the activities. October 8-10, 15-17, 22-24 and 29-31.

Halloween Spooktacular (C) at SeaWorld San Diego

SeaWorld San Diego
Seaworld Halloween Spooktacular where can kids meet some spooky and not-so-spooky animals, pose for pictures with mesmerizing mermaids and trick-or-treat among a sea-inspired atmosphere, which includes friendly sea princesses, octopuses and schools of fish? It’s all part of SeaWorld’s Halloween Spooktacular, where Halloween meets the sea this October. Kids are invited to come in costume and enjoy animal meet and greets, special Halloween shows and colorful costumed characters, from 1 to 6 p.m. the following weekends: Oct. 2–3, Oct. 9–10, Oct. 16–17, Oct. 23–24 and Oct. 30–31, 2010.

Queen Mary Dark Harbor
The ship’s crew have ensured this Long Beach Halloween tradition’s unforgettable and macabre makeover at the hands of fright masters long responsible for some of Southern California’s biggest scare-fests. More than 45,000 scares per hour await, along with 160 monsters and 20-foot tall flames. Three shipboard and two onshore mazes confuse and ensnare visitors, and although visitors will have every opportunity to turn back, the food, drink and entertainment inside will ensure leaving is unthinkable. 18 Nights Oct. 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30 and 31
7:00 p.m. through the darkest hour of midnight

Thank you to  California Destination Guide for the valuable information.