Saturday, March 17, 2018

The Great Western Pilgrimage - Part One

Finally. Well, I have to preface it with, not sure when the next installment will occur but bear with me dear readers...and check back frequently.

Finally is what I felt (along with a crazy bit of anxiety) when we woke up on Monday morning around 5 to rouse our little ones and head to the airport (with all the other business people). The alarmists were wrong. If you fly, all you need is little people and there is really no trouble at all. Once this tiny one is beyond the 6-year-old threshold, I figure I'll be in a wheelchair so, again, priority boarding ;0)

Our first stop would be Dallas airport for a short layover on our final journey to Albuquerque. The first leg was uneventful and other than some turbulence from the high winds during our descent to New Mexico, all was well. It was good to finally be where we would begin.
A friend reminded us that it was flu season so we were those goofy people wearing masks on the plane. No one got sick the entire trip and it kept my nose humidified during the trip. Score.

hmmmm...crop circles ;0)


We certainly have a beautiful and topographically diverse country (that's sand under those trees)!
 
After settling into the hotel and unpacking a bit we headed out to our first stop, The National Museum of Nuclear Science and History. It was full of all things Nuclear - the science and the history - with a few planes and rockets thrown in. It was also free through the reciprocity of our Science Museum membership...a great perk when you're traveling with a large group!

I wish I had several million dollars and a huge house. I would totally have a science room with this as the floor!



Did you know Red Fiestaware would set off the Geiger counter? 

Kids toys from the past!

PT at the museum...pedal fast enough to make the fan spin
 Even Einstein was there to explain some concepts!
This section of the museum was actually fascinating. Everything you wanted to know about the atomic bomb and the role of New Mexico in its development.

#1 found the name curious - so did I

All I do is teach history...these kids' moms were building bombs!

Then in the middle of the building they had this entire room of simple machines. Great diversion from pondering about the total elimination of man! Or, perhaps, to remind us that one day we may be starting again from scratch.

Hologram that looked like a black Tardis

look from the side....nothing there!

Ahh, back to total annihilation. Can you imagine any of this happening in the age of technology?

They had an actual fallout shelter







He was amused by the "buried sub" in the middle of New Mexico


We were in a strange place, no doubt. The sand, the mountains rising up from nowhere, the people who looked and spoke differently than us. It is the exact reason I dislike flying somewhere - there is no time to transition through known-to-unknown. Still, in the days to come, we would see and realize the similarities that exist all across this country. Even the things that were different would be appreciated as we made our way along this pilgrimage. What a great God we have to make all of these different types of people then give us the opportunity to grow by trying to understand one another. The pilgrimage is never boring...stay tuned.

We are blessed.

1 comment:

  1. What a fascinating museum! We were just learning about the Manhattan Project. Looking forward to reading about the rest of your travels when it is not past my screen curfew :^)

    Miss that family! Xo.

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