Your Guide to the Perfect Winter Getaway in Boston
Courtesy Meet Boston
Forget staying in, Boston makes winter worth going out. Picture yourself browsing a packed indie bookshop in Harvard Square, skating under twinkling lights at Boston Common, or training seals at the New England Aquarium. Add in candlelit dinners, cobblestone streets dusted in snow, and cocktails by the fire, and you’ve got a city that turns cold weather into pure magic.
Cosmopolitan and cultured
You could spend a lifetime collecting cultural experiences in Boston. Perennial favorites, like an evening with the Boston Symphony Orchestra or a stroll through the curated corridors of the Museum of Fine Arts, are always solid choices. But there’s also a tucked-away side to Boston’s cultural scene — if you know where to look.
At the Harvard Museum of Natural History, display cases of animal and marine life fill the three-story space, including the skeleton of a 42-foot Kronosaurus (a short-necked, long-tailed, prehistoric reptile). Bones aside, be sure to explore the showstopping Glass Flowers. This glass collection contains thousands of unbelievably intricate plant models — 780 species in all — an effort that took Czech father-and-son duo Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka 50 years to create.
Head to Harvard Square for a dose of campus energy and quirky shops selling everything from vinyl to comic books. Pop into Trident Booksellers & Cafe, part indie bookstore, part café, where the vegan cashew chili has been a cult favorite since the ’80s.
Kid-friendly fun (that adults will love, too)
Boston’s historic Back Bay hides another glass marvel: the Mapparium at the Mary Baker Eddy Library. This three-story, 30-foot globe of stained glass, built in 1935, lets you step inside for a rare look at the world between two wars.
With kids in tow, add the New England Aquarium to your list. Favorite exhibits include a giant ocean tank teeming with coral reef, sea turtles, and a rainbow of reef fish, while the Amazon rainforest houses piranhas and anacondas. Time it up in late afternoon for a heart-warming Animal Encounter. The add-on experience gives children over age 7 the chance to play with trained Atlantic harbor seals.
Next year, the country celebrates 250 years. Bundle up for a refresher of the country’s origins and walk Boston’s 2.5-mile Freedom Trail. In winter, it’s quieter and more magical, with snowy streets leading to historic houses, churches, and monuments. Pop into the Paul Revere House for a quick tour; kids can even dress up in colonial garb.
Don’t miss one Boston experience you can only have in winter: skate under string lights at the Boston Common Frog Pond, then warm up with hot cocoa at the café (open November–March, rentals available). In the holidays, head to the Seaport’s Snowport Market, where local vendors, food, and music bring festive cheer.
Read fully story at The Philadelphia Inquirer.