Toledo-area spring activity guide

Looking for things to do out in the sunshine this season? We’ve got a sampling of a few of our favorites. If you’d like to add one of your hot spots, leave a note in the comments. We’ll update these guides throughout the year!
The Biggest Week in American Birding
Hosted by the Black Swamp Bird Observatory, The Biggest Week in American Birding brings people from all over the world to parks and preserves across Northwest Ohio to observe the migration of over 100 bird species.
Birding experts and novices alike can enjoy a variety of activities during The Biggest Week, including participating in workshops and listening to keynote speakers. For birding locations, activity and event information, visit The Biggest Week in American Birding’s website.
May 9-18, 2025 (dates vary from year to year)

Fort Meigs Historic Site
Fort Meigs is Ohio’s War of 1812 battleground and includes a reconstructed walled fort that transports visitors back to 1813. The mission is to educate visitors about this slice of local Ohio history. Check their website for admission fees, hours and special events.
Located at 29100 W. River Rd., Perrysburg • 419-874-4121 • Open April-October. The museum and visitor center is open year-round.
Mud Hens Baseball
Every spring, the Toledo Mud Hens return to Fifth Third Field in the heart of downtown Toledo, offering more than just baseball. As one of the most beloved minor league teams in the country, the Mud Hens are a seasonal staple for families, friends and fans of all ages.
From fireworks nights and theme games to ballpark snacks and skyline views, catching a Mud Hens game is a summer tradition that brings the community together. Whether you’re a die-hard baseball fan or just looking for a fun evening out, there’s something special about cheering on the Hens under the lights in downtown Toledo.
For a complete guide to your Toledo Mud Hens, go to their website.

Sauder Village
Sitting on 235 acres, Sauder Village includes its living history farm and craft village — which preserves over 75 historic structures and houses close to 50,000 artifacts — Sauder Heritage Inn, Sauder Village Campground, Barn Restaurant and Doughbox Bakery. Adults and children alike get to step back in time in this immersive village to experience Ohio from 1803 to the 1920s. Call or visit their website for admission information, hours and events.
Located at 22611 State Route 2, Archbold • 1-800-590-9755 • The Historic Village is open May-October.
Toledo Zoo & Aquarium
The Toledo Zoo & Aquarium has a full calendar of activities and events, in addition to all of their regular exhibits. Check their website for membership and ticket information.
Located at 2 Hippo Way, Toledo • 419-385-5721

Toledo Farmers’ Market
Stroll through the Toledo Farmers’ Market to find fresh produce, breads and sweet treats, homemade gifts and more from local vendors.
525 Market St., Toledo • 419-255-6765 • Hours: Saturdays (November-April) from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. from May-October.
Metroparks Toledo
Metroparks Toledo’s locations across Northwest Ohio offer venues for a plethora of activities, including biking, fishing, nature walks, playgrounds and more. Below are a few that we love to visit. For a complete list, go to their website.
Maumee Bay State Park | 1400 State Park Rd, Oregon • 419-836-7758
Maumee State Forest | 3390 County Rd. D, Swanton
Ottawa & Jermain Parks | Ottawa Parkway, Toledo
Harroun Community Park | 5500 Main St., Sylvania (at the rear of St. Joseph Church parking lot)
Navarre Park | 1001 White St., Toledo

5th year program celebrates inaugural class, welcomes new seniors

TOLEDO – May 1 marked a major milestone for high school seniors across the country. Known as College Decision Day, it’s the deadline for students to accept admission offers from most colleges and universities, a moment often celebrated as the start of what is next.
But what about the seniors who don’t know what is coming next?
This question has driven Jim Pollock, president of Junior Achievement of Northwest Ohio, for decades. Five years ago, he and his team began developing 5th Year, a post-graduation transition program designed to support students who feel unsure about their future.

“I am the kid who, a long time ago, graduated from high school not knowing what I was doing, not having a clear direction and following the herd like everybody else … wandering off to college and mostly failing my way through school, and then ending up with a degree I don’t use,” Pollock admitted.
Pollock’s experience shaped his passion for creating an alternative that gives students time, guidance and real-world exposure before making life-changing decisions.
“There needed to be a better way for students to transition from high school to their next phase of life. Whatever it is, whether it’s the military or college or the workforce, there’s better opportunities,” he said.
The 5th Year program is a structured, nine-month experience that connects recent high school graduates with professional development, career exploration and mentorship from local companies and organizations. The goal is to prepare students to lead independent lives and confidently pursue their personal and professional aspirations.

“If you give a kid a chance and you put them in the right place and meet the right people, great things happen,” Pollock said.
Those “great things” were on display May 7, when the Glass City Center hosted the celebration of 5th Year’s inaugural class. Students from across Northwest Ohio crossed the stage, not only as graduates of the program, but as part of a growing network of future-ready young adults.
Pollock called it the “proudest moment of his life,” watching both the outgoing and incoming classes step into their next chapters, and backed by corporate, nonprofit and education partners.

Ocean Hayes, a Perrysburg High School senior, is one of 30 students in this year’s incoming 5th Year class. She said she applied because she was not sure what she wanted to do after graduation. The support the program offers felt like exactly what she needed.
“I just didn’t really know what I wanted to do or what my future had in store for me,” Hayes said. “But what the program had to offer really inspired me to join.”
For her, the most exciting part is the chance to gain hands-on experience with internships, something she has never done before. Still, the transition is not without its nerves.
“Making connections and meeting new people, I feel like [that] is definitely nerve-wracking. Not knowing a whole lot of people definitely can make you nervous, but I feel like for the most part, it’ll be all right.”
That same uncertainty, and hope, was exactly what Aubrey Edens, also a Perrysburg High School alumna, felt when she joined 5th Year as part of the program’s inaugural class.
Now, just one year later, her life looks entirely different.
She originally hoped to attend cosmetology school but cost was a barrier. She considered taking a gap year, until she found out about 5th Year.
“I’m like, wow, I can visit so many different companies throughout the year. I can move out of my parent’s house for a year. I can start my journey. I can possibly get a full-time job from this, and then I can go to cosmetology school after,” Edens said.

That is not quite how things turned out, but in the best possible way. After interning at Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick with the 5th Year program, Edens was offered a full-time position as a legal administrative assistant. Cosmetology is still on the table, but now as a long-term side goal.
“I absolutely love where I am now,” Edens said, “and I absolutely had no idea this was where I was going to be. That’s awesome.”
Beyond the job offer, Edens said the program helped her grow as a person.
“I was so quiet before I joined 5th Year,” Edens said. “The best thing I learned, and the most I’ve changed, is you need to go up to everybody and talk to everybody because you never know who you’re in a room with, and you never know who you might meet and how you can help them and how they can help you.”
Her advice to Hayes and the rest of the new class? Dive in.
“You definitely get out of it what you put into it,” Edens said. “If you do the extra things, if you go up and talk to people, if you go and speak on stage and do all of those different things, you are going to get so much more out of that.”
She added one last note for those watching from the outside: “If you don’t join 5th Year, invest in it, because it’s the best thing happening right now.”
Pollock agrees. In today’s economy, where many students graduate without a clear path and employers struggle to fill roles, 5th Year aims to bridge the gap.


Toledo fire chief soars with Thunderbirds

Story and photos by Scott W. Grau
TOLEDO – Surreal. That’s the only word that Toledo Fire and Rescue Department chief Allison Armstrong can think of to describe her unique opportunity to fly in a U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds F-16 Fighting Falcon jet.
“It didn’t feel real until we were in that jet and taking off,” she said.
Once Armstrong and advance pilot/show narrator Maj. Brandon Maxson were airborne, she exclaimed that “it was amazing!”


Armstrong had the honor of flying with the Thunderbirds during their dress rehearsal performance on Friday, May 9, a day before the Toledo Air Show officially was held during the Mother’s Day weekend.
The Thunderbirds, officially the USAF Air Demonstration Squadron, were formed in 1953 and are assigned to the 57th Wing at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada. Their primary mission is to support U.S. Air Force recruiting and retention efforts, along with demonstrating the professional skills of Air Force personnel. They perform their air shows with six F-16 Fighting Falcon jets, showcasing formation flying and solo maneuvers.
The squadron is very community-oriented and offer the Hometown Hero program wherever they are performing.

The Hometown Hero Program offers individuals who have made a significant positive impact on their communities an opportunity to fly in the backseat of a Thunderbird F-16. These “Hometown Heroes” are nominated for their service, sacrifice and dedication. The program aims to recognize and honor their contributions while showcasing the capabilities of the Air Force.
Armstrong was nominated by the Air Show committee. She was one of several people whose names were presented to the USAF Thunderbirds and ultimately deemed to be the ideal candidate as the Toledo Air Show Hometown Hero.
Prior to climbing into the cockpit, she met with the Thunderbirds flight surgeon to be briefed on how to properly use the G-suit that she would wear, and how to breath and brace so that she didn’t black out during the high G-force maneuvers she would be enduring.
The Thunderbirds ground support crew fitted her for a G-suit, harness, helmet and face mask. After that, she sat in on the pilot and team briefing sessions.
For Armstrong, the experience didn’t feel real until the canopy began to lower and the jet began to roll. At that point, she said that she was “excited, nervous and terrified all at the same time.”


Armstrong’s jet took off and climbed three miles into the sky, allowing her to watch the entire Thunderbirds show routine from high overhead. Her jet performed the same maneuvers that were done by the team, and it trailed behind during group formations.
“I didn’t realize that the flight was part of the dress rehearsal,” said Armstrong. “It was absolutely amazing to be behind the other group and to see the planes in formation.”
At some point during the flight, the pilot let her fly the jet.
On Sunday, Armstrong watched the Thunderbirds show as a spectator from the ground.
“The view from the air is much different than the view from the ground. Watching the show from the ground tied it all together,” she said.
Reflecting on her experience to fly with the Thunderbirds, Armstrong said she was “extremely grateful that they thought of me and I got an opportunity that most people will never get. Me climbing into an F-16…I never thought that I [would] be there in a million years.”
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Bricks & Minifigs Lego resell store a space for all abilities

TOLEDO – A bright display welcomes creative builders of all abilities and ages to Bricks & Minifigs, a Lego franchise reseller with its first 419 location at the intersection of Talmadge Rd. and Sylvania Ave.
New store-goers walk through a gauntlet of featured homages to pop icons, from Harry Potter and Stranger Things to Star Wars, all made of Lego blocks.

The store is the brainchild of Donny Stewart, 24, who opened up his first business in late November 2024.
“March has already been more profitable than last month,” he beamed, adding that retail stores generally don’t make a profit for the first seven years of their existence.
When asked why he wanted to open the store, he answered, “To support myself. Live on my own.”
What Stewart was hoping for was not so different from what most 20-somethings want: independence, to live life on his own terms and to have a job worth waking up for in the morning.
“I’m autistic,” he explained. “I never thought I would end up in a group home, but the possibility was there.”

Stewart opened the business with his mother, Shanyn Stewart, whom he introduced as a serial entrepreneur and his previous employer.
“He probably didn’t tell you he’s trained in doing taxes,” said Shanyn Stewart, a certified public accountant (CPA) who owns Advanced Accounting, a firm in Bedford, Mich.
The firm deals with business owners, and Shanyn Stewart said both of her children were not too keen on continuing the tax business.
“My son, Donny, came to me and said, ‘I want to do something that I love.’
“People don’t do that,” she retorted, and offered her son a way to prove himself. “If you can show me how to monetize your hobby, then I’ll get behind you.”
“He came to me with a full business plan and said, ‘My Lego collection has appreciated more than your commodities portfolio.’”
Surprised at the viability of the Lego business model, she admitted, “And it has!”
Appreciating hobbies
A researcher on the subject, Victoria Dobrynskaya, who received her Ph.D. from the London School of Economics and Political Science, spoke as one of the two authors in the 2021 a study titled “LEGO: The Toy of Smart Investors.”
“Tens of thousands of deals are made on the secondary LEGO market. Even taking into account the small prices of most sets, this is a huge market that is not well-known by traditional investors.”
The article looks into the many attributes of Lego that make them good investments, and ultimately estimated an annual 10-11 percent return on investment for Legos.
“You could spend $300-400 just for Jango [Fett]. It just depends,” said Al Koepplinger, of Port Clinton, who traveled 50 minutes to trade his SpongeBob, Bikini Bottom pineapple Lego set, along with a Star Wars set, for store credit at Toledo’s Bricks & Minifigs.
“Together they went for $130,” he said. “It’s better here [at the store] instead of just sitting in the drawer.”
Donny oversaw the trade, and when Koepplinger tried to get a better deal, Donny shrugged with a half-smile, and said in true pawnshop fashion that he couldn’t go lower for the bottom line of his store.
An amicable trade was reached, and then Koepplinger continued to peruse what the rest of what the store had to offer.
Glass cases with rows of specific Lego characters [aka’ed as minifigs] form the front counter of the store, while shelving behind the counter features assembled sets with prices under them.
There are refurbished Lego sets, Lego sets designed by fans, and maybe the most popular and interactive option for kids are the bulk bins, where customers can mix and match parts.
Koepplinger said the individual characters, based on rarity and demand, can go for hundreds. In-store, the highest fetched value for an individual Lego character is a rare 2010 white version of Boba Fett, a Star Wars bounty hunter, priced at $300.
Online, Redditers post pictures of the same minifig, and the comments excitedly explain how to check the piece for authenticity.
“It was a Toy Fair exclusive with a limited production run of 150 copies,” Donny explained.
Koepplinger revealed he was more interested in building Legos with his wife than collecting, “Since we do a lot of the bulk, we just do a store credit and fill up a bin.”
Tables with raised sides hold the Lego pieces in the “bulk bins” while customers search through the vast piles of plastic available parts.

“I find the parts for retired Legos and put them together,” said Ken Noonan, of West Toledo, as he rummaged through the piles looking for specific connectors. “They’re sets they don’t make anymore.
“I find the instructions for the builds online, [and] then I find the parts to make them myself.”
Most of Noonan’s fascination revolves around classic car Lego sets, and he says he’s made about 20 car sets, six of them from Legos from the bulk bins at Bricks & Minifigs, so far.
Once a week Noonan stops by to see what’s changed in the store, while Koepplinger said he makes the trip to Bricks & Minifigs once or twice a week.


“Yesterday we saw a billboard, and at places like this you never know what you’re gonna find,” said Jennifer Rongers, of Virginia Beach, Va., who came to the store with her husband Sean Rongers.
The couple were visiting family in Oregon, Ohio when they came across the store’s advertisement.
As the two perused the selection of minifigs, Sean Rongers revealed his true hidden passion.
“Like she said, I’m looking for the older secondhand sets that I don’t have,” he said, but it turns out finding sets Sean Rongers doesn’t have may be more difficult than it sounds. I do [collect]. I have 524 sets of just Star Wars [Legos].”
The specifically elusive “white whale” for Sean Rongers has been the Star Wars Super Star Destroyer set, originally released in 2011. The 3,152-piece set has gained fame for its rarity and subsequent appreciation value. Originally, the Super Star Destroyer retailed for $399.99, and has since ballooned to a used price of $750 and can reach as much as $1400 if unopened.
In total, there are 987 Star Wars Lego sets, so he still has a ways to go.
History of Bricks & Minifigs
The first Bricks & Minifigs opened in Battle Ground, Wash. in 2010, and now there are 130 Bricks & Minifigs located across the United States and Canada. Part of the benefit of opening up a Lego franchise reseller was tapping into an already engaged fanbase.
Donny is part of this Lego fanbase, and it helped him contribute to his own stock by putting up many of his own sets for sale.
He just wants to do what he loves, but also bring joy to people. There’s never a day that he doesn’t come home, and he’s like, ‘Mom this kid was in today,’ or ‘these parents were in today and I got to see them smile.’
Shanyn Stewart
Shanyn Stewart mentioned that, before setting out as an entrepreneur, Donny had difficulty in high school and a university, simply because the environments were not made with him in mind.
“People weren’t kind to him because he was different.”
A mentor for Donny Stewart, Brian Winter, co-founder of SOAR Study Skills, a modern resource to help neurodivergent students perform better, recalled the main challenges Donny had in college.
“It was not an intellectual thing,” he said. “It really stood out to me that Donny is highly intelligent and he’s also very much connected with what’s transpiring on a global level.”
The challenges Donny faced on the daily were social cues, sensory sensitivities and a raw authenticity that put him at odds with going through the motions.

“Donny was aware that his sensitivities and his unique challenges were going to always be working against him in environments where he’s coming in as an employee, and he’s just expected to conform.”
Instead, Donny blazed his own way forward with Winter advising him on the best way he could manage his sensitivities within the store, which in turn attracted like-minded individuals.
“If you noticed, several of the team members are actually on the spectrum,” Shanyn Stewart said.
These considerations allowed many differently-abled people to enjoy the store at their own pace.
Accessibility and order were foundational considerations for Donny as he worked to make the store a reality, including making sure a wheelchair could access the bulk bins and installing sound-absorbing ceiling tiles and carpet to dampen the plastic clinking pieces, something that could overwhelm people with sensory sensitivities.
Changes to the standard Bricks & Minifigs layout presented complications for Donny Stewart, but he pushed forward, “I know what it feels like to be left out, and that’s…it’s just not fun.”
Already, six months into running the business, Donny has faced complications with the city of Toledo’s occupancy permits and issues with contractors, but he mentioned a few things that keep him grounded.
“I go to the gym early in the morning, and I can have an hour or so of just quiet.”
Donny also said improving his gut health with a proper diet helps him to maintain his composure. And about a decade ago, he had a breakthrough with Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy.
“It made day-to-day life much easier,” he said of the experience. Before receiving the therapy, “a slight change in my routine, [and] I would melt down.”
But now, Donny says he’s gained the ability to learn to be flexible, and he’s always learning.
Some days are harder than others, but he is able to see the impact his choices are making for people who enter his shop.
About a month ago, Donny said a “child was in a motorized wheelchair, and his face just lit up when he saw he was able to pull up to the tables and play with all the Legos.”
“Getting the store ready and starting the process, there was a lot of waiting and stress involved. So things like that made it worth it.”
At the beginning of June, Bricks & Minifigs plans to start hosting summer and day camps in coordination with elementary school teachers, and Donny and his mother have many more plans to help make Bricks & Minifigs a community-minded space for everyone.