Saturday, March 20, 2010

Zoos Aplenty!

This has been a busy week for the Weatherston Zoo Crew...in less than a week, we've gone to zoos 3 times!

The first came earlier this week, when we went to the Baltimore Zoo with our friends the Cornwall family.

As you might tell from the pictures, much craziness ensued, from butt-watching rhinos, flying down slides, turtle-riding, and cowgirling.















Snoozing like a polar bear sounded like a good idea by the end of the day.







Today, we had decided to go to the National Zoo in Washington DC. At least until Mom noticed an article in the newspaper than mentioned that at the celebration of the second birthday of Samson the elephant at the Baltimore Zoo there would be served cakes made by Charm City Cakes. As in the Charm City Cakes of Ace of Cakes fame. [Google if you've no idea what I'm talking about. It's only one of the most loved shows in our house. They make AWESOME cakes. Go look. Now. Shoo. Then come back.]

The problem then is...do we go? We had just been to the Baltimore Zoo, and still wanted to go to the National Zoo...but cake! By Duff! Cake!

So we did both.

Mom didn't tell Stevie what we were doing until we were almost there.

He then proceeded to drool. Vastly. We nigh well needed a mop to deal with it.

When we got there we quite a bit of time to kill until the gate opened. Then we rode the tram back to the part of the zoo wherein the celebration would occur. We walked (swiftly) past the animals, for of course the elephants are found in the very backmost portion of the zoo. We missed Duff himself by only a few moments - Stevie glimpsed a man on a motorcyle roar off, who we realized later must have been him. Several of the CCC girls were there, however. They were kind enough to pose in a picture with Stevie, as well as sign his zoomap.
There were a number of activities planned. The serving of the cake, of course (we were first in line). Signing a card for the guest of honor, as well as writing birthday greetings on the sidewalk with chalk (which then got drawn on by little kids coming later). We saw the cake that the zookeepers made for Samson...not something I'd want to eat, but it looked yummy for elephants.
We chose to have the chocolate cake filled with delicious peanut butter filling over the one with raspberry. Good choice, I think.



We may have gotten filmed in line...and my Dad may have gotten filmed licking his plate clean - watch for us in 3-4 months on an Ace of Cakes episode in season 9! *laughs*
We skipped the rest of the birthday bash, as we had another zoo to get to!

The National Zoo had crazy amounts of people. Almost no parking whatsoever, and a crowd of probably thousands of people.

The trees were blooming. They were extremely pretty. Looked like a huge group of white butterflies settled on a bare tree. Or popcorn. Depending on your point of view.



The prairie dogs were posing.



As were the meerkats.



The pandas were...eating. And eating. And...well, you get the idea.



And Missy was...getting pennies. Her penny collection must be worth lots by now! A couple of dollars, for sure. *grins*



All in all, a sucessful (but tiring) day.

Tomorrow we go to an art festival!

First Trip to the Science Center

Recently I blogged about the trip we made to the Science Center for Pi Day. That was not our first trip there.
The first trip we made was the week prior. It was to be a 'short' trip...we did not explore EVERY part of the building.

The very first thing I saw and was excited about as we walked up to the strange-shaped building that is the Sceince Center was the sign for the geocaching exhibit. [Aside: I LOVE geocaching...even though I do not yet have access to a GPS. ^^" I do my best by studying other people's pictures, reading their comments, and googlemaps. It doesn't work vastly well, but it's still fun. For those who do not know, geocaching is the hobby of finding hidden caches of items and such by using their GPS, then logging their visit to the cache on geocaching.com.]




I thought it was super cool that they had an exhibit, including caches hidden around the harbor that you can borrow museum GPS to find. (We haven't done that yet.) When we later went to the exhibit, I was the only kid to go through the entire maze they had, reading all the signs. (Dad came with me. ^^)




That was not, however, the first thing we did. First we watched the new Alice in Wonderland movie from Tim Burton on the IMAX. In 3d. It was pretty awesome. (My favorite character was probably the Cat. Or the Dormouse. Except for that icky eye-poking thing she does.)


After that we did some exploration of the museum.

Dad got tired and decided to rest for a bit.




On a bed of nails! Ouch!

Not really.


We went up to the roof of the Science Center, where they have a really cool telescope. They also have screens you can hold in front of your eyes so as to safely look at the sun. It filtered out light...and made the sun appear green.




We even got to look at the sun through the telescope. Needless to say, you got a lot better picture. Dad spent a long time looking through it.




I couldn't see through very well...sometimes having glasses means suffering the curse of being unable to through telescopes...microscopes...binoculars...

I like my glasses, however. I enjoy clarity in my life. *laughs*

I did manage to take a picture through the telescope.




I was feeling pretty good about my picture...until one of the guys running the telescope goes "No, no, no...that's not a good picture...this is a good picture!" He spends several minutes getting me a closeup picture of the sun...it even has some action going on toward the left side - a sun flare. Looks like a little curved thread.



As long as we were on the roof, I wanted to get a good shot of the view. Only way the view could be better is if they had built it so you could face the water.








Finally, just some other pictures I took of the interior of the building from varying heights.




I imagine that these probably will not be the last time you see blogposts about the Science Center around here...it's become a very popular place for our family!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Happy Birthday!

Today's my Grandma Elna's birthday!
I wanted to wish her a very happy birthday!
We love ya here at the zoo crew.
^_____________________^




Sunday, March 14, 2010

Happy Pi Day!

3.14159 26535 89793 23846 26433 83279 50288 41971 69399 37510...

Enough of that.

Today is March 14th! 3.14.2010!

I discovered 'Pi Day' a couple of years ago, but this is the first time I've actually celebrated it.
Now, I don't like math, but I do like the concept of a math symbol-related holiday. And a reason to eat pi. I mean pie. I also enjoy making pi jokes. (Mathematician: Pi r squared. Baker: NO! Pies are round!)

Well, when we went to the Baltimore Science Center last week (which I will get around to blogging about), we noticed that today would be Pi Day, and they would be doing special events to celebrate.
Both my brother and I decided that we...had...to...go.

So we did. ^^
And it was awesome.

Now, the weather was a bit icky...but we didn't care.
The birds might have, though. They looked kind of miserable.

My brother signed up for the drawing to get into the pie-eating contest. He didn't get in. Too bad, he would have whomped on those kids! Most of them barely touched their pie, because they didn't want to get their faces dirty.
The science center was doing a lot of cool activities: there were hula hoops (Pi is important in calculating the circumference of circles, of course), pi colouring pages, making pi necklaces (three beads of a colour, then one bead of a different colour, then four beads of a different colour, etc.), reciting as much of pi as you can (Let's see...chocolate, pumpkin, apple...oh, you mean the digits?), stringing pi along the stairwell of the building, one digit at a time, like a number garland:

There was eating pi...at least, Moon Pies.
My favorite, however, was piku and piems.
-
Celebrate
Pi
Day with haiku.
-
Traditional form:
Five seven five; or Pi form:
Three then one then four.
-
Call me the
Pi
Poem Master.
-
Feel free to make up
Your own 'piems' for Pi Day.
Does it look like fun?
-
The one I made up at the building actually went like this:
The symbol is cool!
As for the food, I think that
Cheesecake is better.
-
We did spend some exploring the rest of the science center too. We went to a couple of planetarium shows and played in most of the exhibits. (They wouldn't let us go play in the Kids' Room. My plan of hijacking someone's kid to get an in was nixed by the family. *sigh* Guess I'll have to plot something else.
One thing I found that was really cool was a small area devoted to the IMAX theater. It has lookthrough spots where you can watch the IMAX projector working, which was neat, but I found the display that compared different kinds of film fascinating. The two short, skinny films are VHS and such, while the bottom filmstrip is the IMAX film.
After we got done at the science center, we drove past a really funky looking art museum-thing. (I'll put pictures up in a slideshow soon as I figure out how).
When we got home we had dinner (mm...burgers). Since Stevie was bummed about missing the pie-eating contest...which he won, despite his 20-second handicap! But only by a few seconds...seconds I had lost because I had to stop to breath through my mouth because I'd gotten whipped cream up my nose! My sinuses are still burning. Kids, do not snort whipped cream. It ain't pretty.
Then we had pie. Chocolate cream. Mm.
But we ate it with chopsticks. *shrugs* That's life at our house for ya.
This morning, I actually sent out a message to my crochet group about Pi Day...with some links that I had found. I found an awesome hat to make my brother, as well as an amigurumi pi symbol. I'm thinking birthday presents, maybe?
So, overall Pi Day was much with the fun.
I hope everyone else had a great Pi Day...and if not, there's always next year!
-
It's farewell
to
Pi Day this year.
-
May next year
be
just as much fun!
-
[Slideshow of art museum to be added as soon as possible.]
[Am also working on drafting blog posts for everything from the trips we did in Texas to the move to this point in time.]
[Apologies for the screwed up formatting - I CANNOT get it to stay right.]