Once Bitten

Recently I became aware of two museums in nearby Elmhurst that we’ve never visited before. Better yet, admission is free on Fridays, so Joe took the day off this past Friday so we could check them out. The first museum we visited was The Lizzadro Museum of Lapidary Art which features an awesome collection of minerals and carvings. While small, it was very interesting, even more so than either of us anticipated.

Jade Carving

Castle Lizzadro

Connected to the same parking lot is a tiny conservatory that recently opened after renovation so we stopped inside to check out the flowers. The columbine in particular were very pretty, and I impressed myself by knowing what they were called. ;)

Columbine

We then made our way over to the Elmhurst Art Museum which was severely disappointing. It didn’t have many exhibits and we were only there for fifteen minutes at the most. I think we spent more time in the nearby library in awe of its size. I wish our local library was as inviting and had a cafe inside!

We stopped at Back Alley Burger for lunch but weren’t impressed with the burgers. The gravy fries, however, were pretty damn good. I need to find a recipe to make my own gravy because the packaged ones I’ve bought so far have been disappointing.

Since it was such a lovely day we went to the arboretum. It was Arbor Day after all! The daffodils are in full bloom so I grabbed a couple of photos of them. We also hiked on one of their shorter trails (baby steps).

Daffodils

Our evening included an impromptu trip to Target to take advantage of the one day sale on rotisserie chicken which we had for dinner. Side note: the Great Value (Walmart) frozen broccoli florets we had as a side are pretty damn tasty; we ended up buying three more bags later that evening.

After dinner we settled down for a night of TV but ended running back out to Walmart so I could get extra points from my shopkick app. I now have enough points for a $6 Target gift card, woot! On the way back we stopped at Walgreens to use the free Snickers coupons I won from their Facebook contest because Target doesn’t carry the size allowable in the coupons’ terms.

Saturday we headed over to an Earth Day festival and farmers market which was kinda lame. I did score a free chip clip from Nicor Gas and a magnet from the Forest Preserve of DuPage County, though. I enjoyed speaking to their staff and telling them about the Caspian Tern I spotted at a local park last weekend. I had never spotted one of them before but apparently they are becoming more prevalent in the area.

We stopped at the liquor store and I decided I had a taste for a Bloody Mary so we were looking at mixes when I turned to the internet for advice, and the internet had concluded that making one from scratch is the right way to go so we shelved the mixes and went in search of the necessary ingredients which included another stop at Walmart as well as the produce market. We picked up some lunch meat and cheese as well and had sandwiches for lunch. One of my new faves is roast beef with Gouda and horseradish sauce. It’ll make your nose run from the heat but it’s worth it.

As we were eating lunch we saw an explosion of feathers outside the window – a peregrine falcon had captured a mourning dove. He landed nearby with his kill and proceeded to pluck its feathers and devour him while we watched in awe. On one level it was gross but on another it was really amazing. Did you know that the peregrine falcon can reach speeds up to 200 mph while diving for his prey? I also didn’t know that they feed on medium birds almost exclusively. I felt bad for the mourning dove but it was cool to see such a large falcon up close, although not close enough to get a photo, unfortunately. We used our binoculars to watch the action, in fact. It made me wish we had a good pair, and also a telescope. I love nature so much and enjoy any opportunity to observe it.

Sunday we decided to skip our normal Target shopping routine and had a lazy morning before heading to Petsmart for a few supplies. We stopped at the Dollar Tree, which is quickly becoming a favorite store, on the way home. I worked on cleaning the rat cage while Joe worked out with his weights.

About two hours later after everything was how I wanted it, I had my hand against the cage bars where the two boys were hanging out and one bit my finger, hard! I was so shocked that it didn’t even hurt that much but it immediately started bleeding like crazy. I ran it under water and told Joe that to be safe I should get a tetanus shot since my last one, also when I got bit by a pet (hamster), was over 15 years ago. We ended up finding an urgent care center close to home that takes our insurance and they were great. They not only gave me the shot but they cleaned and wrapped my wound and called in a prescription for a 4-day dose of antibiotics to ward off any potential infection. Between the copay and medicine the visit cost less than $20 and they were more thorough than my primary care doctor! I wonder if I can just use them whenever I want instead of driving all the way to see my doctor who is great but has limited office hours. Hmmm…

I can’t believe after all this time of owning rats the ones who were supposed to be the friendliest bit me. I don’t know if it was out of confusion (although I never feed them through the cage bars) or aggression, but I wasn’t too thrilled about it and didn’t end up letting them out to play last night. I’m not even sure which one bit me since they both were standing so close together. Steve is more aggressive than Doug but Doug bit Bella’s tongue when he was in the cage the week she was staying with us so who knows. At the time when she was bleeding I thought maybe he had scratched her but after what happened to me now I’m going to say he bit her. I’m not really scared of them (they have never bitten outside the cage), but I definitely will be careful and not put my hands against the cage bars again. Lesson learned.

Joe was sweet and did some of my weekly cleaning last night so I can let my finger heal today. I’m still doing some laundry but I don’t have to worry about vacuuming or cleaning the toilets.

It’s raining out and will be doing so all day. I love lazy gloomy days so I’m ok with that. Although so far I haven’t been all that lazy with the laundry and cleaning I’ve been doing. I really need to stop, though, because I keep making my finger bleed.

Rockford

Building Front

Last Sunday we decided to visit Rockford. I’ve been wanting to visit the Nicholas Conservatory & Gardens ever since I learned of its existence, and I also wanted to see the special Megalodon exhibit at Burpee Museum of Natural History.


Daffodils

Orchids

LEGO Butterfly

We started our morning off at the conservatory. Let me just say for the record that I think the entire area surrounding the gardens is done quite nicely (although there wasn’t anything to see in the gardens due to the time of year) and the conservatory building is beautifully designed. That being said, the price of admission is rather steep ($8 per person) for what you get which is an extremely small conservatory with not a whole lot of flowers (mostly orchids and daffodils). I got excited that they had a limited-time butterfly area but that excitement quickly turned into disappointment in the size of the area and the variety of butterfly species available. I’m glad we visited to see what it was all about, but I can’t see ever going back when we have Garfield Park & Oak Park Conservatory here, both of which are free (although we always give a small donation) and have a lot more to offer.

After less than an hour at the conservatory we made our way to the museum. There’s actually a whole museum campus that also includes an art museum, a children’s museum, and a children’s recreational facility. The admission to the museum is also a bit steep for what you get and it was a bit irritating that you pay extra to see the special exhibit (Megalodon) when they don’t have anyone making sure you actually paid to enter that portion of the museum. I’m not suggesting you pay the regular $8 admission instead of $13 and “sneak in” but it sure wouldn’t be difficult.

Jane - Tyrannosaurus Rex

After the museum, which actually had some other interesting exhibits, most notably Jane, the juvenile T-Rex, we had lunch at Lonestar Steakhouse. I got my usual, the filet mignon. For the life of me I still don’t get how the Lonestar by my house went out of business but the disgusting Outback Steakhouse is doing great. No accounting for taste, I guess.

Zoos

Last Saturday, the 12th, was a beautiful day in Chicagoland. Joe’s son was playing in a band competition so we started off the morning trying a new restaurant called Stacked near his high school. After much deliberation, I decided to order the banana bread french toast which was amazing. Seriously, it was so rich and filling that I couldn’t finish it and took a whole slice (the dish comes with three) home. It came topped with fresh bananas and a side of some seriously mouthwatering honey cream cheese. It was the perfect fuel to get through sitting in the high school for two hours.

Lamb

Later that afternoon we stopped at Cosley Zoo to check out the new lamb(s) and renew our membership. We don’t necessarily visit the zoo enough in one year to recoup the membership cost but that’s where their reciprocal agreement comes in. This year we plan to visit Des Moines’ Blank Park Zoo where we’ll get free admission (a $22 savings) and Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo (a $15 savings) so after paying $59 we’ve already recouped $37. We only have to visit Cosley Zoo three times in a year (@ $3 per person) to fully recoup the cost of membership and that’s if we don’t end up visiting one of the zoos in Wisconsin at all since one trip to Milwaukee County Zoo would save us $28.50 and one trip to Racine Zoo would save us $8.00 (it’s a very small zoo). Honestly, if you live in the Chicago burbs and like visiting zoos you should really buy a membership from Cosley instead of the one from Brookfield Zoo (unless, of course, you prefer visting Brookfield but I’ve been going there since I was a toddler so it’s not that exciting anymore).


Hooded Merganser

Bobcats

Shedd Aquarium Visit

Jellyfish

Our most recent trip to the Shedd Aquarium on March 1st was nothing short of disappointing.

Despite having checked to make sure no events were taking place in the nearby area, Solidarity Drive was closed for parking, I’m guessing in preparation for that evening’s Blackhawks game. Not only that, but we weren’t allowed to park in the Adler Planetarium lot even though the Shedd’s site says you can. This required us to park in the Soldier Field parking garage which cost $22 and was a much lengthier walk in 20-degree temperatures.

Because we arrived early, we had to stand outside in the cold to wait for them to open their doors even though there’s plenty of space to wait inside. Since it was a Bank of America weekend, our general admission was free, but it still cost $42 for the three of us to visit the Oceanarium and Jellies exhibit. I kept questioning the guy who rang us up why three $8.95 tickets cost so much and he blamed taxes. I just wasn’t buying it, though, so before we left I spoke to a woman at the information desk who explained it to me. They don’t charge taxes at all. However, in addition to raising the ticket prices for the Oceanarium from $6.95 to $8.95 since our last visit, the tickets to see the Jellyfish went up from $3 to $5 despite not having added anything new. In fact, the exhibit is looking neglected and some tanks were even empty.

On top of that, I had read they expanded the Oceanarium since our last visit but I was hard pressed to notice any difference whatsoever. And our timing must have been poor because even though it was cool to see the beluga whales interacting with staff, the dolphins were nowhere to be found.

Needless to say, for a “free” weekend it sure was expensive! Plus it got so crowded that by noon we were more than ready to leave.

As much as I love checking out all the cool animals the Shedd has to offer, I felt like the visit was a rip-off and don’t plan on visiting again anytime soon. It sucks, too, because I had been looking forward to it for many months.

Shedd Aquarium photos @ Perfect Pixels

Laser Light Show @ Cernan Space Center

Last year sometime I was made aware of the Cernan Space Center at nearby Triton College in River Grove, IL when a former colleague posted on Facebook about taking her kids there. I’ve been keeping an eye on their show schedule and was pretty excited to learn that for the month of March they were doing a laser show called Ray of Light on Friday & Saturday evenings that included the following songs:

Ray of Light — Madonna
Perfect (perfecto mix) — Smashing Pumpkins
Wild Wild West — Will Smith
Praise You — Fat Boy Slim
Bodyrock — Moby
Confusion (Reconstruction mix) — New Order
Born Slippy — Under World

Last night we decided to check it out. First off, the space center itself is very tiny. Most of it is made up of the theater/planetarium which is set up like a smaller version of the Omniplex theater in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. There’s a gift shop on the premise that has space-themed items like astronaut ice cream and moon rocks. Our show was at 9 pm and started a bit late since the 7:30 pm show ran over.

When we first took our seats we were the only two people there. The guy running the laser show asked if we wanted to see the main show first or the mini laser show featuring some Beatles songs. I said I didn’t care, whatever he wanted, so he said he’d start the main show.

The show started off with the first song listed above and was accompanied by abstract patterns drawn by multicolored lasers which reminded me a little of the old visualizations Windows screensaver. Certain parts got really trippy which was fun, and kinda made me yearn for those days in college if you get my drift (and if you don’t, nevermind). All the songs had different patterns and some even had storylines told with animated drawings which I didn’t care for as much. My favorite visualizations were during Perfect by Smashing Pumpkins and my least favorite were during Wild Wild West by Will Smith (never was a fan of that song anyway).

A few people came in after the show started which was a bit distracting, not least of which because they chose to sit two rows in front of us when the entire theater was empty except for where we were sitting. Not only that but they smelled kind of bad (I wish I was kidding) but at least the smell dissipated after they had settled into their seats.

Once the main show was over the lights came up and the guy running it said that concluded the show. I walked over to his booth and asked about the Beatles mini laser show which was listed on the website and he, obliviously forgetting it was me he had spoken to before, said “when I first started the show there were only two people in here and they said they didn’t want to see it”, to which I replied, “No, I said I didn’t care what order you played it in” so he started that show a minute later, to which one of the other people there said, “Good, I was waiting for that”. Silly guy! I’m not mad, but shouldn’t he have played it anyway once more people came into the theater even if he thought I had said I didn’t want to see it? Tickets are $10 a person so everyone should get their money’s worth. It was only three more songs anyway (which, admittedly were rather boring) and overall the show was only an hour long.

In any case, it was a fun night out doing something different. Although based on the song choice and laser technology, we both speculated that they haven’t changed that show since it was originally created back in 1999!

I’d like to go back to the space center at some point to check out the monthly skywatch as well as see a holiday-themed laser show for Halloween and Christmas.