Friday, March 18, 2011

Scouting in the Science Museum

A few weeks ago, Katherine's Girl Scout Troop had a real "Night At the Museum" experience. The museum doors were locked at 7:00 p.m. and weren't unlocked until 7:00 a.m. Doesn't sound so bad until you consider that it's a science museum. Every corner you turn, you're face- to-face with a bear, a mountain lion, a t-rex, snake, or, even worse, a loin-cloth draped native American.

Here, the girls have just arrived and are well-rested and all smiles.

And then, we were assigned our sleeping quarters. I was hoping we wouldn't be camped out under some hungry looking grizzly towering over us, but lucky us...we got the Native American Exhibit. Yeah, the one with the life-sized, loin-clothed sporting Indian brave taunting us with a spear pointed at our heads. (Since the lights shut off at midnight, and we had only flashlights to use after that, it was worse than it sounds.)

Of all the planned activities they did, the girls enjoyed the fingerprinting activity the most. First, they were fingerprinted and got to study their own prints. Then they learned how to dust for prints on different objects.

And then Katherine made her most exciting discovery of the night. In the pirate exhibit, she found a story about Thomas Tew, a real American pirate. She took the following pictures detailing his career:




While it was not at all a restful night, it was really a lot of fun. It's a night Katherine won't be likely to forget any time soon!

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Wow! How much sleep did you and the girls get? Looks like fun.

Moonshadow said...

Sounds like your daughter had some fun!

You know in that book "From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler," the main characters run away to a museum and solve a mystery. It's a great read if they haven't already read it ... just caution, the story mentions "marijuana" which I believe most kids have heard about in "health" class these days.