Not far off 295, I-95, and I-495, in the land of parking lots and office parks, lies a gateway to the final frontier - the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Though most of Goddard is off limits to the public, they have a lovely Visitor Center that's perfect for an afternoon or morning excursion - and despite its small size is high on our list of favorite places for the toddler set - and despite it's lack of a playroom, the play area and the rocket garden, I would classify the Visitor Center as one of the top play areas for the (well-supervised) preschooler in the D.C. area.
But the draws of the Visitor Center are more the mere models of spacecraft. On our three trips ChaseKBH has learned about the Big Bang, the colors and noise of space, and how very, very small the Earth really is in the great cosmos. We've also learned a lot about tsunamis and global warming from the science on a sphere presentations in the theater - I can't wait until he's old enough to attend lectures from people who can answer his questions a whole lot better than I can.
Of course the favorite exhibit is the model of a Gemini capsule which visitors can climb into and marvel at the tight space. The Big Bang seems totally plausible compared to the idea that any person could spend two weeks in this tiny space without any comforts whatsoever. We had to explain why there was no video screens, nothing that ChaseKBH would consider a computer, no touch pads, no keys, and none of the basic technology the kid takes for granted every day.
As children both Jamie and I had a fascination with space and astronauts - but I think we were the exception. Somehow the excitement of the space program skipped our generation. I think ChaseKBH's generation will pick up our slack. Almost every morning that I drop him off at preschool some child excitedly tells me what s/he saw from Curiosity that morning, what to do when going to Mars, or how things fall around the Earth without falling into it. If the moon is mentioned, a good handful follows up and asks to which planet's moon the ignorant grownup refers. They also have a wonder about how the world works that I can't remember having - they know that its their natural right to understand the entire universe as immediately as possible.
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