Day 671: Minnesota Science Museum

Today we again drove to the Minnesota Science Museum.  This time we called ahead, so we were sure the museum was open.

The museum contains within it the visitor center for the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their badges:

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Inside the museum, M and my brother did a faux news cast:

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The tornado machine:

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Really big chair:

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The new exhibit, called “Space”, was very interesting:

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After a great day at the museum, we stopped at the Byerlys supermarket where we used to shop when we lived here.  The kids got to experience the “pick up your groceries at the side of the building”, which is quite popular in winter:

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Tonight we had an enjoyable big family pasta dinner.

Day 670: Pays to Call Ahead

Today we drove over to St Paul to the Minnesota Science Museum.  Unfortunately, they’re closed on Monday.  We tried the adjacent Natural History Museum, but it too was closed on Mondays.  We then drove a few blocks over to the Capitol, but it is closed to the public due to renovation:

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Defeated, we drove to St Louis Park for lunch, refilling an empty propane container along the way.

Tonight we had a hot dog roast in my brother’s back yard:

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We will try the museum again tomorrow, after calling to confirm they’re open.

Day 669: Hanging out in Minneapolis

We had a great Shabbos reconnecting with our friends from Saint Louis Park, MN, where we lived when we were first married over a decade ago.  Today we moved our RV a bit west to the suburb where my brother lives to park in his driveway.

M bought a new scooter for himself last week, and today modified it to give it a PPG-themed name:

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The kids turned Bondi, which we received as a gag gift, into a PPG pilot:

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I went for a nice 34 mile ride out west of town, and found an ultralight flying field I may have to try out.  Its amazing how quickly the city gives way to rural country:

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Day 667: Pipestone National Monument

We had a restful overnight at the casino.  The humidity broke, and the casino parking lot was much more quiet than Walmart:

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Today we visited Pipestone National Monument, where Native Americans have harvested Catlinite to fashion ceremonial pipes: 

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There was a piece of catlinite to practice with:

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The catlinite exists in a thin seam, pitched at an 8% angle, under a layer of hard quartzite.  The Indians would quarry away the quartzite to get at the catlinite, which can be seen here as the narrow dark layer the the base of the quarry’s back wall:

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The loop hike to a few quarry sites was enjoyable:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger workbooks and received their badges:

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We continued east to reach Minneapolis, where we will be spending Shabbos with the community in St Louis Park, where we lived while I attended graduate school. 

Good Shabbos from St Louis Park, Minnesota!  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 666: De Soto NWR and the National Music Museum

This morning we awoke to a rainy day that was unpleasantly warm and muggy:

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We drove a few miles to DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge:

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The main attraction here is the housing of the artifacts from the steamboat Bertrand, which sunk here in 1865 and was found in 1968, her cargo still intact:

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This vast roam displays a fraction of the 10,000 cubic feet of cargo recovered, supplies for the gold fields in Montana:

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The Bertrand’s paddlewheel flange:

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This keg of nails rusted together, then the barrel rotted away, leaving the mass of metal behind:

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Miners need lots of shovels:

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General goofyness at the visitor center:

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This poster shows various birds’ wingspans to scale:

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This facility manages both DeSoto and Boyer Chute National Wildlife Refuges, so the kids completed the joint workbook and received both badges:

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Continuing north, we arrived in South Dakota:

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We stopped in Vermillion, South Dakota to check out the National Music Museum:

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The museum has room to display only 7% of it’s collection, which includes this massive drum:

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The string collection was especially impressive:

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This Amati was made in 1595 for King Henry IV of France and was later owned by Jean-Baptiste Cartier:

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A Lira da Braccio:

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Many of the instruments had impressive internal scrollwork:

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A carved neck:

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The cello on the left has seam lines near the top of the belly, showing the original profile of the instrument, a viola de gamba made by the Stradivari family in the 1730s:

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A Stradivarius violin:

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This Stradivarius guitar has its maker’s name carved in the neck:

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18th century clavichord:

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An armonica, invented by Benjamin Franklin:

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Bohemian bag pipe:

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A Balalaika:

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A Serpent:

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The Hurdy-Gurdy was my favorite instrument at the museum:

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An elaborately carved shofar:

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Portable violins for dance instructors:

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The bent instrument is an A clarinet:

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Harmonicas:

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There was a gallery dedicated to Asian and African instruments:

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This phonograph played two-minute was cylinders, which were made obsolete by records:

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Elaborately engraved bell:

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A theremin:

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We stayed at the museum until closing, then drove north to overnight at Royal River Casino outside of Flandreau, South Dakota.  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.