Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Cute Kid Pix June 2024

More pictures that didn't get their own post...

We went to Savage Fest this year (see our visit on a previous year) and only stayed a little while. The kids are too big for the bouncy castle and too young for all the arts and crafts booths. We did a little of the feeding animals area and saw some jump rope routines.

Feeding a calf

A bunch of goats

Black sheep

Kangaroo Jumpers

More of the same

Big bubble guy

That night, we went to Pepper Jacks for dessert and I got the butter pecan milkshake. There was a little too much crust for my taste, otherwise delightful!

Butter Pecan Milkshake

My youngest completed his Webelos requirements and has bridged over to work on his Arrow of Light, the highest award in Cub Scouting.

Literally on the bridge

Being silly

We went to the neighboring county library for a program on chemistry, electricity, and batteries. It was a lot of fun, though the kids complained about learning outside of school, especially during the summertime. We parents liked it a lot.

Modeling atoms is not glamorous?

Building one atom of copper

Proper scientists have eye protection

Vinegar-based multi-cell battery

Oxidizing epsom salt water

My daughter has starting making fabulous chocolates as a summertime activity. We encourage her in this endeavor.

The mold and the gold

While running errands, I spotted a suspicious pair of stickers on a car. I hope they are not directly related!

Hmmm

With nice weather, we went on a walk around Lake Kittamaqundi in Columbia. 

Not quite sunset

Enjoying a swing

My youngest made a new milestone--going around the roller rink without holding on to anything! He has become a much better skater, though the effort took a lot.

A well-deserved rest

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Cute Kid Pix May 2024

More pictures that didn't make their own post...

May is the concert season for our school children. First, the eldest had a pops concert at the beginning of the month. His concert band played music from the recent Star Trek reboot. The Wind Ensemble played Led Zeppelin in Concert. Both were delightful.

Concert!

The eldest also had his driver's license test, which he passed. I watched a short bit of it from the sideline. Maryland has a long portion on actual roads, so I couldn't see everything.

Parking in the MVA parking lot

During one day of long errands, I stopped off at the Guinness Open Gate Brewery and had a quick lunch. I paired the caesar salad with Give It a Chai, a stout with chai spice flavor that was very delightful. I sampled the Pineapple Coconut Stout which only reaffirmed my theory that beer and fruit don't mix well (unless you are talking about a lime wedge in a Corona).

A quick lunch

The library had a program for kids to pet dogs, so my youngest went. He's a bit skittish around animals, so the experience was definitely a good one.

Not dual-wielding, but something like it

More concerts came the next week. My elementary scholar played his bass in the same auditorium where his older sister played her cello a day later.

Elementary Orchestra

High School Orchestra

We did not see any of the aurora borealis during those solar storms but we did see a sweet rainbow in our neighborhood.

A full arc?

My wife is the treasure at the end of the rainbow

The kids hiked by some rock formation while I was somewhere else. My wife got these pictures.

King of the mountain

Getting dethroned

Happy hiker

During a walk back from school, we spotted two new families in the neighborhood.

Traffic on the waterways

We went on a scout hike and discovered a big worm and the joys of a creek beach.

Centi- or Milli-?

Cricket Creek beach

Epic throw time!

Crossing the creek

Uh-oh!

Made it!

On the way out to celebrate our niece's graduation, we stopped off at South Mountain Creamery and had a treat along with a quick peek at the cows.

Shy about having a picture taken

Not shy about having a picture taken

Back at home, my youngest's school had their field day where everyone plays outdoor games. I volunteered to run the Buddy Walkers, which is a sort of synchronized ski walking. My son walked by once but did not play my game. Later, as he was packing to go home, I got a picture of him sitting in the principal's chair. He got it as a prize from a silent auction fundraiser--he got to use it for a week at his classroom desk.

As close as he got to me during field day

More festivities

Principal's chair in 4th grade!

I usually take a short cut walking back from school. One morning I caught some deer hanging out in our little woods.

A zoomed in shot

We visited Centennial Park in Columbia, Maryland, to do some geocaching and play at one of the playgrounds.

Working together

Do you think I want my picture taken?

A little relaxation

I visited my sister in Virginia and the only picture I took was of my steak at Outback Steakhouse. Whoops!

Sirloin with lobster mac!


Thursday, May 30, 2024

Historic Saint Marys City, Maryland, 2024

My youngest had a school field trip to St. Marys City, the original capital of the colony of Maryland (the capital moved to Annapolis before the American Revolution). This trip took us to some new places that we hadn't seen back in 2022 when visited as a family (see our last visit here and here). Our first stop was the Godiah Spray Tobacco Plantation. The first building we saw was the barn, which naturally had livestock nearby.

Colonial barn

Bulls

Pigs

The guide said that the pigs were the same breed used in colonial times, so they are period-accurate without being a couple of hundred years old.

Around back of the barn, we had a presentation on tobacco. Back then it was a cash crop, meaning not only that it was a highly valuable commodity, but also it was actually used as cash. For example, a pair of shoes might cost ten pounds of tobacco (shoes were imported from England, so pretty expensive). I was amazed when he talked about the insecticide they used back then....Kids were sent into the fields to pick bugs off the plants. Not just the servants' kids either--all the kids had a hand in keeping the cash crop in top condition.

Tobacco presentation

Our next stop was the main house. Godiah Spray was a tenant farmer, meaning he did not own the land but worked it. Some people came to the colony of Maryland as indentured servants. They would work for seven or ten years and then receive payment in the form of three barrels of corn, a barrel of tobacco, and rights to fifty acres of land. Typically, the granted land was not yet cleared of forest, which meant some more work before it could be turned into a viable farm.

Tenant farm house

The main living area

Drying herbs in the kitchen

Typical kitchen implements

A lot of axe heads

Dishes and bottles

The docent in the house explained that farms tended to be much more self-sufficient than we are nowadays. Walking to town was a whole day affair, so no one just popped off to the drug store for a cold remedy. Colonists would make their own pharmaceuticals from the garden herbs. Feverfew was a popular plant that would be crushed in a mortar and pestle, mixed with water, and heated with a hot iron from the fireplace, just like the picture below. The brew would be drunk immediately. 

Home-made aspirin?

The house garden

We then walked over to the Woodland Indian Hamlet. This area was occupied by the Yaocomaco people. They built large buildings as homes, with many of the accoutrements that the Europeans had. To build the structure, they used a wooden frame and covered it with grass and tree bark. 

Native home reconstruction

The main living area

Pelts

Frame without coverings

The homes were more primitive but also mobile. They could be taken apart and reassembled in another area if they had to move for the seasons or for other reasons.

Further in the village, a docent demonstrated how animal pelts were treated to provide leather or furs for various purposes.

Fur processing

The natives used stone tools, like the small axe below. Ropes were made from deer tendons or woven from strong grasses. When the colonists came, metal tools were a popular trade item.

Native axe

Trade items

Canoes were made by burning out the insides of a log. By carefully packing wet clay in certain spots, they could have controlled burns that hollowed out the tree. Shells were used to scrape out the ash and smooth out rough spots.

Making a canoe

Our next stop was the waterfront. We saw a recreation of the Dove, one of the two ships that brought Leonard Calvert and the original colonists.

The Dove

My son and I

The dock and ship had several educational stations. The most impressive to me was the captain's station, where the costumed interpreter explained dead reckoning, i.e. how the colonial sailors would track their voyages by measuring their direction, speed, and time. The information was charted on a map so they knew where they were in the ocean. Getting lost at sea was basically a death sentence, so crews were very careful about charting their position.

Captain

We saw the archeological dig at Leonard Calvert's home. Since the original was built of wood, it has not survived. Many other items, like pottery and metal bits, are found in the ground and give clues to how the colonists lived.

Leonard Calvert House archeology

One of our last stops was at the Print House, where the printer demonstrated his press. Back in the day, they did not print books or newspapers at the colony. Legal documents and notices were more practical and necessary with a one-sheet printer. People would send over hand-written texts to be printed.

Printing press

It was a delightful visit. I was glad to go.