Transit of Venus--taken by Eric through the sun safe glasses |
Astronomy has seemed to be the theme of our summer this week. We started by attending a program at the Norton Library called Astronomy for Everyone: Size and Scale of the Universe. It was a very informative program and Eric would have loved it. It was chock full of information. Even I learned that there are 88 named constellations--I only learned that because there are 88 keys on a piano and he made that comparison. :) Who out there already knew that? With my TBI, I have difficulty following along closely with any informative lecture. I think that must be related to the fact that I can't read nonfiction without getting a headache. With lectures, I've found my coping mechanism is just to zone out. I did enjoy watching the videos and the slides. (Is that what you call them when they come from a computer??) The kiddos even sat through the lecture and learned something. They were looking forward to getting to see sunspots through the telescope. They were quite disappointed when that did not happen and their current review of the program is not positive. He did send us home with a daily observation log that I hope we get to use sometime soon.
Yesterday, we got to have an astronomical experience that gets a much more positive review from them. We got to see the Transit of Venus. :) This will not happen again until 2117, so this was our once in a lifetime experience. Thank you to the Sternberg Museum for making this possible. http://sternberg.fhsu.edu/ The kiddos first got to go into an inflatable planetarium set up in the lobby and see what they would be looking at later. I don't know if a wheelchair would have made it safely into the planetarium, but I was afraid to try. I could just see myself knocking the whole thing down. :) Later in the day, we all got the opportunity to view the actual transit of Venus through a telescope and through sun safe glasses. We couldn't actually see the Transit of Venus without some sort of magnification--so we were glad they had telescopes set up for us. And, I was thankful that they were able to adjust the telescope so I could use it from my wheelchair. Thank you Sternberg Museum. The cool thing was getting to keep our sun safe glasses so we can use them for the next Solar Eclipse. We even got to see some sun spots this time.
All this astronomy has gotten me thinking about He who created it. Thank you God for such a creative world and allowing us to experience Your wonders. It made me think of a talk I had heard from Louie Giglio. Check out the following video and look him up on YouTube to find even more videos. Thank you God for this amazing universe.
What astronomical experiences have you had? Did you get to see the Transit of Venus? How do you feel when you look at the Heavens? How do you feel when you learn more about the Universe?
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