tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2739195484976194987.post5044593429479656098..comments2022-03-27T18:55:49.820-04:00Comments on Mistress of Well-Intentioned Indecision: Summer 2013 Part One: Museum, Water Park, Limo, Garden, and PondElshaHawkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03202271118296135920noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2739195484976194987.post-62795601695819528932013-06-15T19:57:53.447-04:002013-06-15T19:57:53.447-04:00Hmm, maybe oceanographer is wrong. It was sort of ...Hmm, maybe oceanographer is wrong. It was sort of an archeological find, but under the sea, that they were highlighting. There was a REAL cannon from the sunken Spanish pirate ship in the museum that they were cleaning slowly with a salt water solution. It was very delicate.ElshaHawkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03202271118296135920noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2739195484976194987.post-50413728998569833832013-06-15T19:51:48.523-04:002013-06-15T19:51:48.523-04:00I've never seen crafted stepping stones like t...I've never seen crafted stepping stones like that -- they look like decorated mud pies! When you mentioned them on Skype, I assumed you meant just flatish rocks you'd collected somewhere and put in place, since that's what stepping stones usually are.<br /><br />Of course, if your kids were <i>really</i> being oceanographers, they probably wouldn't be wearing diving equipment but would instead be sitting in front of a computer looking at graphs and solving very complicated mathematical equations involving the calculus of fluid flow. But don't tell them that! (I did a week of oceanography work experience many years ago, when I was about 16.)Adrian Morganhttp://outerhoard.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.com