December 29, 2006

Southeast Florida North

Orchid at the American Orchid Society greenhouse, Delray Beach.

Miami, FL

December 20, 2006



We left Key Largo in the damp of the morning and left the Keys for the Fort Lauderdale area. It wasn't raining; the damp night air soaked everything. There is a lot of construction on the road connecting the Keys to the mainland. It appears that the road is being widened from two to four lanes and the low drawbridge over Jewfish Creek is being replaced with an overpass. This should facilitate the evacuations of the Keys which seems to happen about every two weeks during August and September.



On the way north we visited the Miami Metrozoo and Vizcaya, an Italianate mansion built for the president of International Harvester.


The Miami Metrozoo boasts being the only subtropical zoo in the U.S. The major areas represented on the 3+ mile path through the zoo are Asia and Africa. Tropical America is under construction although some South American animals are on display as well as a few from Australia. The emus are in the Africa area, but few would notice that they are out of place since they look so much like ostriches.



Almost all of the animals are displayed in open enclosures. Unfortunately, almost all of the enclosures show animals in an area of cropped (Florida) sawgrass and subtropical trees rather than an enclosure that would be more representative of their native habitat. An exception is the Bengal tiger exhibit which has an Asian-style 'temple ruins.' The flamingos, the first exhibit near the entrance, have deeper colors than I remember seeing flamingos wearing at other zoos.



The zoo lacks North American mammals: No bears, bison, wolves, or deer. It must be a sub-tropical thing.



We got to the zoo shortly after opening; the same time as several school buses. The various school groups broke into smaller groups and wandered around with each group having to shout to be heard over the other groups. The simangs out-shouted them all. Click on the 'play' icon below and judge for yourself.



We avoided the crowds of students by heading to the far end of the zoo while the youngsters were still gawking at the animals closer to the entrance. By the time that we worked our way back to the front, the crowds had dissipated.


Allen feeds the otters.


We were alone at the exhibit of Asian smalled clawed otters. One of the otters stood up and began talking (squeaking, really) to Sarah as she looked down into the exhibit. A few minutes latter a keeper came in and explained that it was feeding time and that Sarah had been standing where the keeper does when she tosses in the fish; the otter was just being impatient. The keeper gave Sarah the dish and we each fed small fish to the otters. I didn't eat any myself.


Sarah at 'Vizcaya.'


As you might imagine, Vizcaya was large, had a lot of fancy rooms; and elaborate, tended gardens. It's good to be rich.




We also tried to see the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden. They are currently having a Chihuly exhibit and would not accept our reciprocal membership at this time. We were unwilling to pay the steep admission to see an exhibit that we had already seen in the New York Botanic Garden only two months ago.



Fort Lauderdale, FL

December 22, 2006


Allen tests 'lift' at the Museum of Discovery and Science.

Yesterday the weather was good. We visited the Museum of Discovery and Science and saw their first floor nature exhibit portraying Florida's sea and shore life with tanks and dioramas. The Asian Walking Catfish, an introduced species, is a lot larger than I thought. It's no wonder that it sometimes attacks cats and dogs when it is walking on land from pond to pond.



Most of the second floor is devoted to physics activities and demonstrations, most related to flight. We poked, pulled, and pushed a few things.



In the corner of a hallway (literally) is the very small dinosaur head display and not far away is the Egyptology exhibit which consists of a mummy and a computer with information about ancient Egypt. The mummy wasn't real and neither were all of the dinosaurs heads.


I overheard a docent recommending to a teen interested in the dinosaur exhibit that he should visit the AMNH in NYC. Good advice!





The Museum of Art/Fort Lauderdale was next on our agenda. We were looking forward to their special exhibit, The Cradle of Christianity. After a brief disagreement with personnel at the admissions desk, we went outside and called the museum's office on our cell and someone came down to straighten things out for us so that we got V.I.P. admissions. [It had that printed on our admission tickets.]



The exhibit, artifacts from Israel, showed items from the Middle East that were in common use 2,000 years ago, but explained that no archeological artifacts have been found that are directly related directly to Jesus or his apostles. The identifiably Christian artifacts in the exhibit mainly consisted of items from the Byzantine era of the 4th to 6th centuries that were made for pilgrims or used in churches.



A few pieces from one of the Dead Sea Scrolls were on display and there was some mention of the Jewish roots of Christianity stemming from the Essene community living in the Judean desert for more than a century before Jesus, but not much. More was mentioned in the Dead Sea Scrolls traveling exhibit that we saw at the Explorium in Mobile a few years back. That information would have been very appropriate here.



A visit to some historic Fort Lauderdale homes rounded out our visit here.

Sarah at 'Bonnet House' in Fort Lauderdale


Palm Beach, FL

December 27, 2006





We ran out of museums of interest in Fort Lauderdale, so we moved north to Palm Beach. Here we have a science museum, a zoo, an art museum and 'Whitehouse, the mansion of Henry Flagler, etc. Flagler, a founding partner of Standard Oil, created Florida as a tourist destination, particularly Miami and St. Augustine. He also built Florida's railroad all the way to Key West. He was wealthy when he started the Florida development and became even wealthier. The most time he spent in his Florida mansion in a year was seven weeks. After he and his wife died, a large, opulent hotel was built adjacent to the mansion and the mansions rooms became public areas of the hotel. The hotel is gone and the mansion is set up as it appeared when Flagler was there (or in one of his three other homes). It's good to be rich.


Whitehouse, the Flagler mansion



The nearby Morikami Museum and Japanese Garden in nearby Delray Beach displays Japanese art and has displays about the history of Florida's Japanese agricultural community which began near Delray Beach in 1903. Various forms of Japanese gardens are found on spurs off of a one mile trail which encircles their lake. We had a lot of cool sunshine today and enjoyed the stroll.

Deer Chaser uses water and bamboo to keep deer out of a Japanese garden.



Bubbling Waters



Waterfall



The Morikami has the most fish food for fifty cents that I have ever seen. The lake is home to the largest koi that we have ever seen. Do you think that there is a connection? They have an extensive bonsai collection, too.

Sarah feeds the koi



The Norton Museum of Art has NO paintings on or about manhole covers or sewer grates; you're thinking of Ed Norton, the sewer worker from the Jackie Gleason Show which was broadcast from Miami Beach for several years. This is Andrew Norton of Acme Steel, a guy with bucks. He and his wife started collecting paintings to decorate their Chicago home. After they moved to Florida, they started a museum. Probably a tax write-off.



The Norton Museum of Art has a Chihuly ceiling (no extra charge) but did want extra for the special Wegman exhibit, “Funney-Strange” (sic). As we had already seen the “Funney-Strange” exhibit twice this year, we passed. If you have the opportunity, check it out; it's not all dogs (although Man Ray & Fay Ray are there).



The Norton has a good exhibit of Chinese artifacts. I was impressed with the high quality of items produced in China during the Bronze Age. A more modern (special) exhibit had works from well known artists and several lesser-known painters. I don't understand why 'well known' Milton Avery's crap is shown in the same room with the works of giants such as Homer and Wyeth. (It's a small room and there is no shortage of modern painters' works.) It must be because he had a rich father-in-law who paid high prices for his 'art.'



See, you don't have to go to art school to be an art critic. You just have to criticize.



Allen at Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge

Allen at Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge

Although small, the South Florida Science Museum has much of the necessary items, they're just not too big and there aren't very many of them. They have a piece of a meteorite thought to be from Mars; it's the size of a pea. (The meteorite was much larger when it fell to Earth forty years ago; small pieces are in many museums.) They have an Egyptian mummy; it's a small child. They have many colorful (small) fish in their aquariums. Why not; it's Florida.



They expect to be larger in 2008; so do I. (And 2007, too. I seem to be expanding daily. I've got to get back on my bicycle.)



Their special exhibit this time is Robotics. There were lots of things to do with robot stuff.



Lake Worth, Florida

December 28, 2006


We finished our time in Palm Beach by visiting two sites south of here. It was too close to closing time to visit the American Orchid Society yesterday when we went to the Morikami Museum; they are both in Morikami Park. The American Orchid Society has a small tropical garden and a greenhouse which displays orchids. Although well done, both were small. We didn't even spend an hour here, but I took many photos. The orchid displays that we recently saw at the Atlanta Botanic Garden were much better.




Mizner Park, an up-scale shopping center, is the site of the Boca Raton Museum of Art's new building (2000). The last time that we visited, the museum was somewhere else. Other than the extensive Meso-America exhibit, all works are later than the late 1800s. The ground floor is used to display special exhibits, the second floor houses the permanent collection.



The current special exhibits are more works of Marilyn Monroe than I have ever seen assembled, the other is a display of large photographs made using a gigapixel camera. Although the resolution was phenomenal, it was not all digital. The digital camera was used to take a photograph of a chemical image on a 9” x 18” plate.



The images are so clear that, using a magnifying glass (provided), one can see the faces of the people in the stands of a baseball stadium in a photograph taken from the outfield.



From here, we move into central Florida and hole-up until 2007.


On the way back to Palm Beach, someone about my age, driving more car than he could handle, turned into my rear bumper as I was waiting to exit a parking lot.


The chrome rim on my spare tire cover was slightly askew and there was some black paint on my chrome bumper. I reset the spare tire cover and replaced the lock, which had rusted and had to be beaten off with a hatchet. I didn't look for damage to his over-sized SUV's bumper or grille, but my steel is tougher than his plastic. If he has an ego problem, maybe he should drive a Porsche.


Best regards for a happy and prosperous new year,



Allen & Sarah