You are currently browsing the Tales of life with a girl on the go weblog archives for the day April 10, 2008.
- Amanda (16)
- Art (4)
- Barbara's family (215)
- Ben (14)
- Books (168)
- Career (7)
- Carnival of breastfeeding (9)
- Cats (18)
- Clio (5)
- clothes (32)
- Daddy (179)
- Daycare (67)
- Dylan (18)
- Flashback Friday (1)
- Flaunt it Friday (1)
- Food (104)
- Gardening (2)
- Glasses (2)
- Group Writing Project (7)
- Growing up (2)
- Holidays (61)
- Ken's family (32)
- Kindermusik (18)
- Language skills (112)
- Leo (4)
- Mama (333)
- Mars (3)
- Math skills (8)
- Melissa and Peter (38)
- Museums (38)
- Pastimes (213)
- Potty tales (5)
- Sarah (8)
- School (30)
- Songs (9)
- Sports (5)
- Stephen (4)
- Thursday Thirteen (9)
- Uncategorized (554)
- Vacation (61)
- Wordless Wednesday (42)
- Works for ME (14)
- Zachary (7)
- January 17, 2010: Faking it
- January 16, 2010: Happy Birthday, Sulienne
- January 16, 2010: Happy (belated) Birthday, John
- January 15, 2010: Spelling lesson
- January 14, 2010: Starting to add up
- January 13, 2010: Canadian winters don't get any better - Wordless Wednesday
- January 12, 2010: Staycation weekend 1
- January 9, 2010: Calendar building with Reid
- January 7, 2010: New Year's Resolutions
- November 28, 2009: Riding the rails play-by-play
- January 2010
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
Archive for April 10, 2008
Savour the Season
April 10, 2008 by Barbara.
When I wrote about the signs of spring that I was seeing last weeek, we didn’t have any flowers yet and Reid hadn’t been riding her bike but a couple of days ago I spotted some crocus.
MamaBlogga hosted a carnival with the theme “Savouring the Season” and these are the interesting thoughts that people shared:
- Life is short! by Amber(Homeschool Diva)
- in gratefulness by Lora LeBreck
- April Group Writing Project: Savoring The Season by Ivy
- In-between seasons by Michelle (The Beartwinsmom)
- Savoring the Season by phyllis
- A Letter To My Childless Friends by Mama Zen
- Savoring Spring by Daisy
- Savouring the season(s) by Jen
- April 2 by tiffany (threeringcircus)
- Savoring the Season: MamaBlogga March/April Group Writing Project by Julie Arduini
- ‘Tis The Season to Enjoy Some Mommy Time by Jenny
- to everything there is a season by boogiemum
- Makes-Me-Smile Monday: The best of times, the worst of times” by Jane of What About Mom?
- Purpose by Christy
- What a Difference a Week Makes by warillever
- Savoring Spring by Deb - Mom of 3 Girls
- The Sweet and the Savored by Ursula
- Savoring the season… by melissa
- Spring Has Sprung by Jill
- Better Safe, Than Sorry by Jackie
- Savor the seasons of motherhood by Jordan (MamaBlogga)
Posted in Group Writing Project, Uncategorized | Print | 3 Comments »
Living in Outer Space at the Canadian Children Museum
April 10, 2008 by Barbara.
Reid and I went to the Canadian Children’s Museum on Sunday morning. We haven’t been since January, or maybe even December, and we almost missed an interesting exhibit about living in outer space. The exhibit was developed by the Children’s Museum of Memphis for the Youth Museum Exhibit Collective is at the Children’s Museum only until the April 27 before it moves on. There is a sign at the beginning of the exhibit that says that the exhibit is geared to 8-12 year olds and younger children will require adult assistance to understand what was presented. Reid was able to understand what she saw with only a little bit of extra information for me. There were no dangerous small parts or entire modules that were beyond her comprehension.
There was a table with plastic building pieces set up around a model of the International Space Station. Reid was drawn to this table and went back several times as we looked around. She built herself a gun, using 2 tubes and a rectangular piece, and then showed me how to build one for myself. We took turns sitting on the space toilet, lining our “business parts” up using the television screen as our guide. With Reid’s love of “bathroom words” and all things, this was a definite highlight. Reid didn’t find the freeze-dried foods as odd as I did. I don’t know what that says about my cooking. Reid was surprised at the size of the personal quarters assigned to each astronaut. The label mentioned that the astronauts’ personal space was about the size of a closet. In fact, the space as shown was about 50% smaller than Reid’s closet. We read about the astronauts wearing their clothes several days before changing them. The clothes are then put into a vehicle that distintegrates upon re-entry to the earth’s atmosphere. Reid attempted a simulated science experiment in which she wore heavy rubber gloves and little pins that needed to be set up. It was effective at simulating the experience, I think. Reid and I worked together to “dock” the space shuttle to learn that cooperation is required for such manoeuvres. Reid also manipulated the Canadarm using a few different buttons, perhaps like the actual astronauts do. Reid was losing interest before we tried the extra vehicular activity, which seemed to be using small pieces of plastic while wearing snowmobile gloves and the exercise machine wasn’t working. There was also a reading nook with a few reference books that we didn’t stop at because Reid had noticed a globe across the hall and had to go look at “our planet” immediately.
In the studio, those eternally-nice Children’s Museum staff helped us to make an “asteroid belt” - a yellow strip of vinylized paper with a buckle that Reid decorated with star stickers and other shiny bits as well as some space rocks (aquarium gravel if my guess is right). I am a fan of puns and so I liked even the idea of it. Reid also tried a freeze-dried strawberry and some chocolate Astronaut ice cream. She was NOT impressed. I wasn’t surprised since Reid was didn’t like the freeze-dried Gerber Mini Fruits I’ve offered her before. Being the sort of mama that will do anything for her kid, I ate the strawberry and ice cream that Reid rejected. I can report that the strawberry was sort of fuzzy on the tongue and the ice cream was a confusing mix of “tastes like ice cream” and “feels like cotton candy”.
When I talked about the toilet at work, one of the fellows mentioned that Chris Hadfield had spoken about going to the bathroom in space. (TeacherTube is a way cool site, for its own sake. If you have a space nut in your family, you may want to show them the Living and Working in Space document that the Canadian Space Agency developed. It was written a while ago (pre-2005) but I don’t imagine there have been significant changes to daily life aboard the space station.
If you can make it, you should head over to the Canadian Children’s Museum for the Living in Outer Space exhibit.
Posted in Pastimes, Museums | Print | 2 Comments »