Chicago: 10 Things to Do
3. Judy Istock Butterfly Haven
The outside of the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum is a museum itself: The extensive prairie, rooftop gardens and solar panels, and water conservation systems make it one of the city's shining examples of green technology. The inside of the building sprouts kid-friendly interactive displays and workshops for adults such as "Geology of the Chicago Region," but the real reason to pay the $9 admission is the year-round Judy Istock Butterfly Haven unless you hate butterflies (you'll be in an enclosed space with about 1,000 of them).
After watching a short video, you enter a huge room with a wall of windows, a trellis strung with vines, a rocky waterfall, and a curving path lined with benches. At first you may be afraid to move for fear of either stepping on or running into a butterfly. But that's when you realize how many there really are, and how they're able to camouflage themselves maybe even after landing on your shoulder. The museum regularly rotates species of these winged beauties, featuring about 80 different types at a time.
Just before the exit, there's a mirror so you can check and make sure there isn't a butterfly trying to hitch a ride out on you. In the next hallway there's a glass display where you can watch various species miraculously emerge from chrysalides. Then it's time for you to emerge out of the museum and flap thee to the lakeshore nearby.
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1. Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
2430 North Cannon Drive, Chicago, IL 60614; 773-755-5100 41.926369-87.633961 chias.org