Jan. 31st, 2004

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Admission to the Royal Ontario Museum is free between 4:30 and 9:30 p.m. on Fridays. It's one of my daughters' favourite destinations and I'm happy to take them. Today we picked Sylvie and Sarah up at the university after Sylvie's last class and drove to Toronto for an evening of entertainment and education. Here is Sarah posing with a hadrosaur.



The main entrance has a fabulous tiled ceiling. I wonder if this in any way inspired Guy Gavriel Kay's novel, Sailing to Sarantium. I will post separately, and behind a cut, a 1024 x 764 desktop version of this image.



We perused a wing I had never seen before, the extraordinary glassworks collection. Sylvie and Marian were particularly excited about these displays.



Friday evenings offer special features: tonight it was traditional Thai music and dance. I was unable to approach close enough to take any photos. However I did take several other interesting shots of various displays, which I will post in the near future. We explored the temporary exhibit on felt, the weapons and armour, the bat cave and parts of the natural hsitory section. I was pleased to see a new display describing Ontario's scarce Tallgrass Prairie ecosystem.

After three hours we were tired and hungry, so we headed down Bloor Street to Futures Cafe and Bakery for some decadent desserts. On the way we passed the famous Bata Shoe Museum. I'm anxious to visit it, and Marian expressed enthusiasm, too.

Marian and I had creme brulee cheesecake, Sarah had praline cheesecake, and Sylvie and Brenna had a delectable chocolate mint torte. I helped Brenna finish her piece.

By the time we left Toronto around 10:15, heavy snow had started falling. It just won't let up. Highway 401 was already snowcovered and I couldn't see dividing lines or shoulders all the way home. I was a bundle of nerves by the time we got back. I haven't driven in such bad conditions for years. Despite this stressful ending, our evening was definitely worth the trouble.
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An icthyosaur. This specimen is roughly three metres long.



More from the glass collection.



The temporary felt display contained samples from around the world and some history of the fabric. There was also a video depicting the construction of a yurg, the felt tent used by the nomadic Kazakh herders in Central Asia. The dispaly was hard to photograph, but I wanted to include at least one image. Here are some hat fashions. The bell-shaped flapper specimen was Sylvie's favourite in the collection. She sews costumes as a hobby and is fully capable of making a dress to match it, I'm sure.



Behind the cut are more images from various displays, plus two bonus silly pics of girls indulging themselves later on at Futures Bakery.

Eight more pics )
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I have published the January instalment of Living With Nature, my journal at Suite101.

Frost flowers

The entries end at January 14 because I was away from home for most of the latter half of the month. There are still many additional images not included in my posts here on LJ, plus some commentary.

Here are five more images that I took on January 13 and never posted here because of problems with freepicturehosting.com, and have not included in the nature journal. These were all taken along a seldom-used rail line that crosses the Eramosa River.



Four more )

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