![]() ![]() ![]() I immediately called customer services and was told a housekeeping supervisor would speak to me. Cracker smashed into ground on side of chair. Only in the room 5 minutes and found multiple wrappers and food items around bunk bed, twin bed, and queen. Would have been nice to be oriented to the resort upon check in as we have never been here before.2) Disgusting room. I had to return to lobby several times for these items. Did not include Wolf passes or breakfast vouches. Terrible customer services and cleanliness of the rooms! 1) Check in only received wrist bands. Just a note, you can always find online coupon codes for booking to make a fairly expensive weekend getaway a little easier on the wallet. Overall, our children had a fabulous time and the waterpark itself made our stay well worth it. There are showers and changing areas in the water park you can stay after checking out of your room (you don’t need a late check out to continue playing in the waterpark). Saturday afternoon/evening was the busiest the park cleared out fairly early on Sunday. On a weekend, the park was well staffed and we didn’t find the crowds overwhelming (separate, age appropriate areas, a lot to do for toddlers through school-age children). Housekeeping was spotty (when they finally came to service our room we asked them to return but they did not). An adjacent town center is in the early stages of construction and should bring more food options in the next year or two. I highly recommend bringing snacks and drinks and utilizing the fridge in your room. Dinner at Campfire Kitchen was a debacle we waited over an hour for our food after ordering - I would not recommend for families with young children. As others have stated, the food is mediocre and overpriced but the restaurants were easy to navigate. Check-in and out was efficient and luggage carts were readily available. ![]() The separate bunk bed area, while awkward to use the sink, is ideal if adults are staying up a little later and worth the additional expense. There are no day passes, so to enjoy the park, you have to be a guest at the hotel, where rooms start at $200 (plus taxes) a night.We stayed for two nights in a Wolf Den Suite. But once your kids are scampering up the six or so flights to go down the water slides-including one that hurtles you down a 20-foot free fall from a collapsing floor-all annoyance is forgotten. The waterpark-the 16th in the Great Wolf chain-opened in May, and when we visited in June, the staff was still getting its footing. And while the five water slides, the wave pool, the lazy river, and the gargantuan splash pad are obvious attractions, the operators know kids can’t have enough to do, and so there’s a ropes course, an arcade, a bowling alley, and even a digital scavenger hunt that will take them hours to complete. ![]() You could conceivably go days here without breathing fresh air, subsisting only on the overpriced food. For one thing, everything-except for the outdoor pool, a compact play area, and a hot tub-is inside. The Great Wolf Lodge in LaGrange is Las Vegas for kids, which is to say they will love it even if you don’t. Photograph by Mark Ashman/courtesy of Great Wolf Lodge ![]()
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