Spring Break part 5
(30-Mar-07)
Out of the mountains and into the prairies.
A quick stop at Airdrie on our way to Drumheller.
You can see just how flat it is in this part of Alberta.
We took a quick detour to Torrington to check out the Gopher museum.
(Which we found in a book called "Weird Alberta Places" - figures, huh?)
It was shut - it only opens in the Summer, so we continued on to Drumheller.
Behold! The world's largest dinosaur.
(Yes, I know, a normal sized T-Rex was not the largest dinosaur - especially compared to some of the huge sauropods like Brachiosaurus, but this particular dinosaur was, as they say, "not to scale" :-)
Of course, we had to check it out.
Up the back passage we go...
And all the way up to the mouth.
"Hello down there!"
"Hello up there!"
This is the town of Drumheller, set in the middle of the badlands.
"Look out behind you..."
Toe jam?
Next stop, the spa where Delle, Bron and Freya were staying.
While we were waiting for 6:00 to come around, we checked out the Little Church.
The name was correct on both counts.
It was a church, and it was little.
"Let us pray..."
So why were we waiting until 6:00?
That's when the Royal Tyrrell Museum opened for overnight business.
Looks like some of the dinos got loose.
Checking out where we'd be sleeping.
Look at the Allosaurus kissing the other dinosaur goodnight.
A quick meal. (See through the windows there - badlands.)
After dinner, they took us on edu-tours of various bits of the museum.
Here's some pre-prehistoric sea life.
Digging for fossils with Kirsten.
Found one!
Next activity, making pterodactyls
"I'm being swallowed by a Boa Constrictor..."
"And I don't like it very much."
A Stegosaurus tells Addie a bed time story.
And Cayde waits for his goodnight kiss from the Allosaur.
And the T-Rex keeps a parental eye on everyone.
See you in the morning...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Monsters everywhere! Remember La Brea Tarpits Mark in Wilshire Bvde Los Angeles? This looks like the same sort of thing. mum norma
Tyrrell - wine and dinasaurs.
Post a Comment