Tag vacation

Mooning

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Our summer vacation this year was a 10-day trip to Washington DC and Colonial Williamsburg. I can’t imagine that anyone who visits Washington for vacation doesn’t manage to stop at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum, since it is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world. Even as we first began to think about our trip, there was no question that it would be one of the must-do attractions, even if it meant missing something else as a consequence.

All of which makes it hard for me to say that it was probably the thing I liked the least of all the things we were able to do in the course of our visit. Perhaps my expectations were too high from nearly a lifetime of imagining what it would be like to visit in person. This was my very first trip to Washington DC, after all, and I’ve had a lot of years to imagine what all of these places were going to be like when I finally got to see them in person. But beyond that, it seemed to me that, unlike the other Smithsonian museums we visited, Air & Space was more like a children’s museum than a serious attempt to curate and present a collection of truly unique and predominantly American historical artifacts. I certainly appreciate the thinking behind making museums as fun learning experiences for children, and I also totally get why the Smithsonian went that way with Air & Space, but my own selfish interest made me actually resent it.

Having said that, though, there is one aspect of the museum which is utterly and undeniably heart-stopping: stepping into the main lobby of the building and seeing all those historical aircraft and spacecraft all in one place. The Spirit of St. Louis, Chuck Yeager’s “Glamorous Glennis” X-1, John Glenn’s “Friendship 7″ Mercury capsule, and the Mack Daddy of them all, the “Columbia” capsule of the Apollo 11 mission.

That’s it in the picture at the top of the post. It’s positioned somewhat inside the lobby so that it is one of the last things you come to on your way into the museum, and it’s frankly rather non-descript compared to the bright orange bullet of the X-1 or the rickety-looking Spirit of St. Louis. It’s completely encased in clear Lucite to keep the millions of little fingers that would otherwise despoil it away, but the exterior of the capsule is dirty brown with scorching from the heat of re-entry, making it look like a large, overused tagine casserole more than the first spacecraft to put humans on the moon. Every replica of an Apollo capsule I’ve ever seen has had the spiffy white, black and red paint job, not the look of one too many macaroni-and-cheese dinners spilled over.

Nevertheless, as soon as I genuinely realized what I was looking at, my whole body buzzed. This was not some model of a space capsule on display, a replica with pretend toggle switches for overstimulated kindergarteners to yank on ten thousand times a day and a worn-out video loop of Neil Armstrong’s “One Small Step” playing over and over. This…ohmygawd…THIS is the Real Thing. And for a second, I was six years old again myself.

Later that day, as we explored the Museum of American History, I started to get used to that feeling. Almost every single object you see in that museum is the Real Thing, and it seems like there is not an imaginable treasure of American history that they do not possess. When we saw the Star Spangled Banner, I actually had to sit down for a minute. But the first and best thrill was seeing that burned-up little capsule.

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The museum is roughly divided into one half about space and the other half about aircraft. The space half has to content itself with mock-ups and replicas out of necessity. The original rockets, satellites, and such either remained in space or burned up on the way back down. All of the actual lunar modules that landed on the Moon are still there, of course (in fact, you’ve probably seen these new photos from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter just in the last couple of days). The LEM I am standing in front of in the photo above was actually built for use in the space program, but was surplussed after the Apollo program was cancelled. Even that degree of provenance, though, makes it a very weak sister to the three mission capsules in the lobby (Apollo, Mercury and Gemini), and it’s location down with the other mock-ups is an acknowledgment from SI that it really doesn’t count.

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Tucked away in a weird place, though, is ANOTHER real Apollo capsule, fastened to a wall just high enough to keep it out of reach of visitors so that it does not have to be sealed in plastic. If I remember the signage correctly, it is the Apollo 8 capsule that orbited the Moon during the Christmas before the Apollo 11 mission and told all of us enthralled little children on Earth that they had seen Santa Claus.

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The lack of protective Lucite and the angle at which the capsule is mounted to the wall give you a much better look inside the capsule than is possible with the Apollo 11 craft. The “couches” for the three astronauts look decidedly uncomfortable and reminded me more of Dick Cheney’s torture chambers than a ship that sailed to the moon and back.

Even though we’d like to go back to see Washington in a couple of years, I doubt I’ll bother with the Air & Space Museum again. Still, as we’ve all been reliving those exciting and tense moments of 40 years ago these last few days and watching the joyful giddiness of Walter Cronkite announcing the moon landing every time the news programs eulogize him, I’m genuinely gratified that I had the chance to see the Real Thing in person once in my life.

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Mr. Kane Goes To Washington

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I’m not sure if I’ve mentioned here that we’re going to Washington D.C. as part of our summer vacation, but now you know. We’re going to Colonial Williamsburg first and spending three days there, then driving back up to Washington for the remainder of the week. It’s something that Bridget and I have talked about for years, and now that Charlotte is old enough for bigger adventures, it seemed like this year would be a good time to do it.

We decided to go just as soon as school let out for the summer, so we set our departure date for Saturday, the 13th, since school was scheduled to get out the day before. Of course, as soon as Bridget made hotel reservations, we got a big snowstorm at the beginning of March that necessitated a school closing. That knocked the last day of school around to the following Monday, but we decided not to change our travel plans; Charlotte can manage to miss the last day of school, which is only a half-day anyway and not exactly critical to her education. It’s at least an eight-hour drive from here to Wiliamsburg, which will be the longest roadtrip the three of us have ever done together, so we are even considering the possibility of leaving Friday evening to get about as far as Southern Connecticut to break things up a little.

Charlotte is still a big colonial history fan, and she is pumped to go to Williamsburg. Bridget made her this dress for Christmas, and she can’t wait to bring it with her and wear it on site. Charlotte had another growth spurt this spring, so I don’t know if the dress still fits, but knowing her she’ll find a way to make it fit somehow. My prediction is that she’ll really enjoy Williamsburg but may not like Washington as much. It’ll depend a lot on the weather (I’m hoping our early trip will cut us a break on the notorious heat and humidity of summertime Washington) and on what things we can come up with outside of visiting every stop on the Mall. We were able to score a Capitol tour pretty easily, but we won’t know whether we got on the list for a White House tour until the last minute. She will have just seen the “Night At The Museum” sequel, which takes place at the Smithsonian, so I hope that movie will have her excited to see it in person. Depending on how things go, the boat ride to Mount Vernon might be in the offing as a break from the monument-and-museum march.

Over the last several weeks, as I have been acting in my official capacity as Charlotte’s Chauffeur, I’ve been listening to other parents at dance rehearsals, softball practices, and the like all talking about trips to Disney World. When Charlotte was a baby, Bridget and I talked about the eventual pilgrimage to the House of Mouse and agreed that we would consider it when she was about eight. Well guess what. That day has arrived. Charlotte will be eight years old two weeks from Thursday.

It was Bridget who said she wanted to take a trip as a summer vacation, and it was Bridget who came up with the idea of going to Washington. Which is fine with me. I am completely on board for a trip to DC. I gave a little internal sigh of relief, though, that she didn’t suggest that we follow through on our agreement to go to Disney World. Frankly, even though Charlotte is indeed old enough for a big trip, I don’t think we’d all survive a week in Orlando. Neither Bridget nor I particularly like amusement parks, and we can just about manage to spend an afternoon at the modest digs of nearby Canobie Lake Park. A whole week, trapped in a place that is ALL amusement parks ALL the time, would be torturous.

Lucky for me…us, Charlotte isn’t seriously fixated on going to Disney World. She might mention it once in a while, but it isn’t a constant drone from her, so I know it’s not something that occupies her thinking. Taking her to places like New York and Montreal and spending our weekend activity times in Boston regularly have acclimated her to the idea that it’s fun to go to the city and see and do interesting things, so that’s her idea of a fun trip (my evil scheme is working perfectly!). It helps that she is still terrified of people in giant character costumes and knows that Disney World is crawling with guys dressed up in Mickey suits. Also, Bridget and I had not anticipated that eight-year-olds are at an awkward spot for amusement parks — too big for the little kiddie rides, too small for the thrill rides — so she might find the whole thing frustrating.

I suppose we’re not quite out of the woods yet on having to go to Disney, but I’m feeling positive that it won’t have to be a must-do for us. Meanwhile, I am starting to get excited about the forthcoming trip to DC. As usual, I’ll be dragging along a fair kit of electronics to document the entire experience, so you’ll get all the gritty details. Stay tuned.

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