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My Teepee or Yours? North America's Most Uncommon Lodgings By Ann Waigand, GoNOMAD LODGINGS GUIDE Mother always told you not to eat right before you went to bed or you'd have strange dreams. Makes you wonder what these designers had on their dinner plates to inspire them to design these mighty unconventional places to lay your head. From railway cars to grain silos, sod houses to wigwams, spend the night in the wildest, weirdest, wackiest accommodations in North America-and see what dreams may come. Teepee Town Want to stay
in a property listed on the National Historic Register? Don't expect a
stately Victorian mansion when you book this historic property, fifteen
teepes arranged in a semi-circle, constructed in 1937 near Mammoth Cave
in Kentucky. Wigwam Village Sod House
on the Prairie Life on the
prairie wasn't as easy as Michael Landon made it look when he transformed
Laura Ingalls Wilder's books into the hit series, Little House on the
Prairie. Settlers usually lived in dugouts, built into a bank or dug right
into the prairie like the dirt-floored sod house exhibit on the same property
as this unusual B & B. Sod House
on the Prairie Keeper of the Week If your childhood
dream was to live in a lighthouse and help guide ships at sea, the Rose
Island Lighthouse offers you a chance to be a working lighthouse keeper.
As their "Keeper of the Week," you will be responsible for raising
the flag each morning, recording weather, electric, and water data, and
helping with overall maintenance and upkeep of the century-old structure.
Rose Island Lighthouse RV Having Fun Yet?
Shady Dell
Vintage Trailers Sow Your
Oats Remember making a doll cradle out of a Quaker Oats box? If you could do that, reasoned hoteliers in Ohio, then why not turn an old oats factory into a hotel? Thirty-six, century-old, concrete grain silos and their companion mill form the Inn at Quaker Square. The rooms are circular; the restaurants serve oatmeal. But can they guarantee the mattresses won't be lumpy? Prices start at $99/night. Crowne Plaza
Quaker Square All Aboard! Where do old cabooses and mail cars go to retire? This family motel grabbed a number of the Pennsylvania Railroad's outmoded, 25-ton train cars, lined them up along three rows of tracks, and opened them to families and couples (there's even a honeymoon caboose). A Victorian dining car serves up family-friendly meals and views of Amish horse-and-buggies, and summer brings a petting zoo, buggy rides, and country-western shindigs in the motel's barn. Couples cabooses range from $39 to $85, depending on day and season; family cabooses range from $53 to $104, depending on day and season. The Red Caboose
Motel and Restaurant
Nestle down between slices of bologna and tomato after a refreshing Jacuzzi in your giant coffee cup, just one of several wacky options at West Bend, Indiana's Fantasuite hotel. If the Happy Days Café Suite is not your cup of tea..er, coffee...try the Continental Suite, where the bed is a 1964 Lincoln Continental pulled up at a drive-in theater (your own wide-screen television), or your own private grass hut, medieval dungeon, Gemini space capsule, or Viking ship waterbed. Prices start at $99/night. Fantasuite
Hotel
The bar is a riot of hot pink kitsch. Your room has rock walls and its own waterfall shower. This seeming mish-mash of styles and decor is also an artful use of found and recycled materials. Put together over a span of several years, Madonna Inn is made of building supplies left over from constructing the Pacific Coast Highway. Prices start at $137/night. Madonna Inn
Sweden's famed ice hotel idea first arrived in North America in 2001 in the form of this ice palace with walls carved out of 4500 tons of snow and 250 tons of ice. Ice beds receive a blanket of deer pellets and guests use arctic-rated sleeping bags to keep warm in an accommodation that maintains an average temperature of -2 to -6 degrees Celsius. Thankfully, a heated bathroom is accessible from inside the ice structure. The hotel plans similar opening dates each year. Of course, you won't want to miss the ice sculptures or the Absolut ice bar. Prices start at CAN $150 per person/per night. Hôtel
de Glace Québec-Canada Inc. And To Break The Ice
Alexander
Henry Bed and Breakfast
For more unique lodgings in the U.S. and Canada, search the GoNOMAD LODGINGS LISTINGS
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For more information on way out and wacky lodgings, visit our GoNOMAD LODGINGS guide here.
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