With a small fee we proceeded to observe once living wildlife and some nice bear photos. But before I could observe anything, I had to desperately visit the laboratory.
There were a lot of cool things wildlife displays to observe. We spend about an hour or so there. If you have young children there are even a couple of interactive opportunities for them by the displays. One involved putting on some bear fur and crawling down into a winter den. If there were not so many people around I would have tried climbing down into the den for a silly photo.
They also have a cool nature center like room. Kids and adults can touch many different things. There was a staff member there to help interpret your wonderings and to help young people explore natural items. I liked the entire place. It was fun and the bathrooms were very clean.
The only thing wrong with the place is that when you enter or leave the building, you are attacked by metal statues of wildlife that spring to life. I don't know how I made it out alive?
5 comments:
Funny. Is the 'laboratory' as clean as the bathrooms?
"Kids and adults can touch many different things". I bet they can.
oooppps!
That's WHY the bathrooms are so clean. Everyone keeps shitting all over in the laboratory.
Continuing good times.
T-Clog, ever the Man of Peace, throws himself in the midst of a conflict between hostile, bronze golems of wolf and moose.
BTW - I know that, for all intents and purposes, there's essentially NO DIFFERENCE between the two groups, but it is worth noting that the kids at the other end of the building are, in fact, Hmoung, and not Mongolian.
And there's only two total schools - Lucy's and the Hmoung Acedemy. It's not an ideal situation - as it was built as an open school, originally. Sound gets pretty crazy over the cubicle-styled partitians. Hopefully, this is only a one-year stopover to a more permanent location that is for one school only, and better all around.
I was going to ask about the Mongolians - I decided to let it go as some wild misspelling/misunderstanding. It's the only way it made any sense.
Either that or the next step after Montessori is east Asian 'barbarian'. Do they have 'pillaging work'? 'Ransacking work'?
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