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Wednesday, June 13, 2018

This Summer's First Trip - D.C.

We spent a week in DC. The kids and I had never been there and Neal was like 10 years old, maybe, when he went last.

The first day there we had time to check into our hotel and meet up with my friend from 5th grade onward, Angela, and her youngest daughter for delicious burgers and horrible service. Great company though!
The weather was great for the greater part of the week and we were able the dodge heavy rain for the one day it did.

Day 1: Hirshhorn Contemporary Art Museum and Air and Space Museum

Contemporary art is weird and that's why I like it.



Rhys really wanted to see the Wright brothers' plane since he learned about them in 2nd grade.
Problem: the cafe in the Air and Space Museum was closed and it was raining hard and you can't bring food in. Solution: we spent way too much on dark chocolate, candy peach rings, space shaped crackers (I know we don't really know the shape of space or that it does not have shape but think along the lines of space shuttles, astronauts, sun, moon...), and for protein astronaut cheese chunk food product. We found a place to sit down on the floor next to a wall in a common area and ate our "lunch" secretively. By the way, astronaut cheese is actually pretty good. Gasp!

Day 2: Monuments and Arlington Cemetery and LOTS of walking

Washington
Closed for repairs, but still tall
World War II



Reflection Pool and Lincoln

Taken from Lincoln Memorial


Vietnam

Tender moment here when a Vietnam vet who served in 68-69 was talking with one of the volunteers there and suddenly broke into nearly silent tears. His adult daughter just held his arm until he was composed again. Just witnessing that put a lump in my throat.


This and all gray squirrels in DC are named George. Just ask Rhys.

Memorial spanning behind
Korea



After being reverent for several memorials, we got our sillies out
Arlington Cemetery




Jefferson

F.D. Roosevelt


Creepy photo bomber



FDR looking a little green in the face

Martin Luther King, Jr.
Day 3: Capitol, Library of Congress, Japanese American (WWII) Memorial

Although we applied months in advance for tickets to tour the capitol building, it wasn't enough months in advance so we thought we'd explore the visitor's center and as luck would have it, Neal noticed the walk-ins line for the tour was very short. In 15 minutes we were on tour.











We went to the National Postal Museum because of my long lived love of snail mail and it wasn't great but I wasn't really surprised. Sophie said this one was her favorite but I think that's because the had a great kid's scavenger hunt, not for the content. They earned free postcards and postage to send off to some of their friends from the museum.

Great opportunity to teach our kids about the Japanese Internment Camps and how sometimes the American government/people get it wrong.


Korean noodle bowl
Day 4: National Museum of American History and National Museum of Art

We took a tour at the history museum and saw the highlights while getting some good background. I love tour guides!


Rejected Washington Monument, thank goodness


This sun stone caught our eye as we were on the tour so we came back to it.  On the original Kirkland temple.

The art museums gave us another opportunity to talk to our kids, this time about nudity. Artists like it.
This one was a winner based on the sheer amount of pit hair.

Sophie's favorite Still Life with Peacock Pie. She did an art competition a couple years ago and had to memorize many masterpieces of which we saw many.



My favorite. It just makes me happy.


Day 5: Air and Space Udvar-Hazy Center

Have I mentioned how amazing my husband is? Here's another reason I love him. The night before I am glued to HGTV because I don't get that at home, and Neal says I just looked up Uber and it's going to cost us over $100 to travel to and from tommorrow's air and space center (about 35 miles out of town). A few minutes later...There I just got us a rental car for $45. We walked to the nearby car rental and because we walked they took off another $5.  I can do $40 quite happily.

Neal and I joke about how many of these air and space centers and military related stops he likes to make and I, on the other hand, am good with MUCH less.  We got a tour guide for this one too and I'm so glad we did! It wasn't just plane upon plane but story upon story. I could relate to that. We stayed most the day and even watched airplanes tracked and taking off and landing from the tower.



Day 6: White House, Portrait Gallery, National Archives, Nationals baseball game

We actually did this day in reverse. We arrived at the Archives early only to find the line wrapped around the side and to the back so we decided to do the Portrait Gallery first and come back. However, the portrait gallery was closed upon our arrival and did not open for over an hour so we headed the White House Visitor Center and reversed it.

The White House was the #1 item on Rhys' D.C. bucket list



No photos of the Archive because you cannot take pictures but the Declaration of Independence is so faded it's pretty hard to make anything out. The Magna Carta from the 1200s is more legible.


Love our photo bomber
They lost he game but it was fun. It started to rain as we caught our Uber ride back to the hotel.
We were all tired after such a great week. The next morning we had a bit of time before going to the airport so we walked to the National Museum of the American Indian and learned how the American government's treaties went down the drain and we pushed out the native Americans. We arrived went straight to the info desk, told them we had one hour and asked what they suggest we do with it there. No pictures just lots of reading and another opportunity to teach our kids.

A totally great trip and wishing we had more time to learn more at almost each museum.

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