Where we're heading next:
Home Sweet Home
Quote of the Day
Peanut, "Wow, mom, now we can say we've been to all 50 states! What are we gonna do next?"
15 October 2008
Mystic Seaport
It took a while to get into the Mystic Seaport Museum and that surprised me because it's so lauded. Grandma enjoyed it more than me because she got to read all the posted information while I talked to the kids. Plus she's always
had a thing for Clipper ships.
We're here in the off season so that surely has something to do with it's lackluster vibe.
More importantly, the staff here are less magical with children than in other places we've been. Repeatedly, they were told "don't touch" or "get down" in areas I would have expected them to be encouraged, like on the Dunton Schooner.
Something that really irks me is when adults won't listen to what kids are actually saying and try to dismiss them. My kids ask serious questions and they deserve decent answers. I felt like no one was interested in teaching them anything; they kept trying to send us to the Playscape where they could climb on small wooden boats.
Little Man wanted to climb the real masts like a pirate which I fully understood. When they said he couldn't, he got it. But he still had questions about climbing them and he really wanted to understand some things about the ladders and sails. But the worker talked over him, didn't look him in the eye and continued to repeat all the reasons why it was dangerous to climb up there. Arrgh, matey.
Things changed for the better when we took a carriage ride around the village. Our driver was cheery and even though it was a low-key tour, he woke us up -- we got a genuine sense of life in the ship-building era.
Then we went to the Planetarium and met the most wonderful docent. He clearly loved his job and he practically directed the entire 35 minute show directly to my little ones. Granted, there were very few people there, but his efforts were extremely appreciated. He even let Little Man sing Why Does the Sun Shine and then did his best to teach he and Peanut how to use a sextant. This was Peanut's introduction to "angles and degrees". We could have spent hours discussing why a sailor might need to know where exactly he was in order to find out how to get where he wanted to go.
There were several other interesting exhibits so I asked what everyone's favorite spot was:
-Grandma loved the pharmacy with it's giant container for leeches, which makes me wonder...did kids used to wail, "I need a leeeeech", like they do for band-aids nowadays?
-I enjoyed the Figureheads exhibit because I'm a sap for the movie Titanic and that's all I could think of in there.
-Peanut liked the crew quarters aboard the Dunton, walking through the skeleton of the Australia, and the Planetarium.
-Little Man liked the guns in the gift shop -- is this really my kid?
-Doodle liked the man singing in the church and the Frozen In exhibit where she got to sit in an igloo and wrap up in a fur. Did you know when it's 50 degrees below zero outside it's a balmy 30 degrees above zero inside?
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Have you thought about "rating" the museums and historical places in your blog entries, maybe using an A-F grading system? You could score the "content" of the museum and also the "kid-friendly atmosphere". Considering how many places you've visited in your travels you certainly have a lots of comparisons to guide you.
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