Showing posts with label aquarium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aquarium. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Virginia Aquarium, Virginia Beach

The Virginia Aquarium is on the outskirts of Virginia Beach. It has two buildings separated by a nature trail that includes some viewing platforms along Owl Creek and an Adventure Park. We started our visit by trying to find parking in a very full parking lot. Once that was done, we got in line to buy tickets and enter the north building.

Virginia Aquarium (north building)

Welcoming sign

Bypassing the photo room (they take your picture and try to sell you the photo at the end of your visit), we enjoyed the upland river exhibit, with some catfish and other fresh-water fellows.

Catfish

The coastal river exhibit includes some more traditionally land animals, like snakes and turtles.

Too hot to come out

A massive turtle

A ferocious little crab with one big pincer!

Around the corner is the Komodo Dragon exhibit. We saw two of them. The exhibit has a spot to crawl underneath and peek up through a dome. Our youngest did that but did not stay long enough for me to get a picture since the dragon was headed straight for the dome!

Enjoying a rest

Getting a drink before attacking young children

The next exhibit was a two-story tank where visitors walk through a tunnel in the middle. Seeing fish above, to the left, and to the right was amazing.

Under a ray

One section of the aquarium is dedicated just to sharks. In addition to the big tank, side exhibits show the skeletons of sharks (made of cartilage, not bone) and lots of other interesting facts.

Shark and shadow

More rays

A mixed community

Another section is dedicated to sea turtles, massive creatures that move slowly and majestically.

Sea turtle

A dry touching pool let my son feel the hard shells of hermit crabs.

A hands-on exhibit!

We walked south to the other building which had an empty river otter exhibit (bummer!), and a very full area of jellies. While they live in the ocean, jellies are not considered fish and are a separate part of the animal tree, much like mushrooms are not considered plants even though they grow in the ground.

Creepy lighting for creepy creatures

Another touching pool let my son feel the top of the jellies. The curator had visitors (not me, I did not want to touch!) wash their hands before carefully feeling when the jellies flopped right-side up. They spent a lot of time sideways and upside down, though I suppose they don't think about it since they don't have brains, only nervous systems.

Touching a jelly

Another exhibit showed off amazing superpowers of some fish, like eels that live in the sand and rocks, only poking out to get food. We spent so much time talking there, I didn't take pictures.

The walk back to the car, back down the nature trail, took us past the Adventure Park, a high ropes adventure system that we did not try out. It looked very popular and had too many other children for my kids to be interested. Maybe sometime when it isn't spring break week?

Adventure Park (at least some of it)

Monday, August 29, 2016

Loxahatchee River Center, Jupiter, Florida

http://lrdrivercenter.orgThe Loxahatchee River Center is a small nature center on Route 1 in Jupiter, Florida. The focus of the center is on water ecology and it has a good variety of exhibits that are kid friendly.

Loxahatchee River Center

Their seal

Their neck of the woods

Naturally, they have a lot of aquariums with various aquatic life inside.

Fish in water

My son sees a big one

My daughter checks out an eel

A big, beautiful tank

Turtle going right

Turtle going left

A creative display demonstrates how tricky it is to balance the use of water. Little bean bags are labeled as water resources (like rain) and water consumption (like drinking). My children enjoyed it, though they were more about tossing than learning.

Can you balance your water use?

The star of the center is the touch tank, an open aquarium where visitors, while supervised, can touch some aquatic life. The tank has mostly sea urchins and crabs. My kids were nervous but excited.

The touch tank

Touching an urchin

Giving it back

Happy to hold

Checking the hermit inside the shell

A whole wall is dedicated to shark trivia and information. Many fake sharks are mounted throughout the center.

Shark info in a fun and interactive presentation

Nurse shark, Ginglymostoma cirratum

Bull shark, Carcharhinus leucas

Scalloped hammerhead shark, Sphyrna lewini

The center is not very large, letting us visit in about an hour. The kids had a lot of fun.

Wacky skeleton

A blue fish

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Glen Echo Playground, Maryland

We went to Glen Echo Park hoping to see the new aquarium there. It was the early afternoon on New Year's Eve and it turned out they were closed for for New Year's Eve and Day. We consoled ourselves by trying out the playground and exploring the park a bit.

Entrance to the closed aquarium (yes, the tree house is a boat!)

The playground was a lot of fun and had equipment for all pre-teen ages.

Some equipment

A large climber 

More challenging climber

The most popular by far with my children were the swings. Everyone (except the parents) took turns.

A happy boy

Big sister lends a hand 

Big brother swings and snaps fingers?

Flying high

This is a close up from a different picture, really!

High on the other end

We also explored the park. The carousel was also closed (though we knew that beforehand).  It was built in 1921. The canopy and carved figures were hand-crafted by the Dentzel Carousel Company in Germantown, Pennsylvania. It has undergone extensive restoration and is open for rides from May to September.

Carousel

The Bumper Car Pavilion doesn't have any cars and is used mostly for dancing on weekends.

Bumper Car Pavilion 

The Spanish Ballroom is also used for dances and they were decorating for the big New Year's Eve shindig later that night. It was built in 1933 and follows a Mediterranean-influenced Art Deco style. My wife and I used to dance there many years ago.

Spanish Ballroom

Nearby is the entrance for the Crystal Pool, a popular attraction back in the day when the park was an amusement park. The pool was large and could accommodate hundreds of swimmers. The pool has been filled in but the entrance remains.

Crystal Pool entrance (it was too cold to go swimming anyway)