Today is SteelyKid’s seventh birthday, which she’s been counting down to for a good while. It’s a little hard to believe it’s seven years since she was substantially smaller than her stuffed Appa toy.
She’s become quite a handful in that time, with boundless energy apparently derived from photosynthesis (since she hardly eats anything), and intense interests in Minecraft and Pokemon, math and taekwondo. She’s a red belt now, which is only a few short of black, and this summer has started doing the “Elite Team” sparring classes. I’m pretty sure that if she really wanted to, she could kick my ass. Happily, she’s generally good-natured. This is also a Good Thing because she has an amazing ability to talk her friends into doing what she wants…
We’re having the annual blowout birthday bash at the house tomorrow– a bunch of her friends from school and day care, a rented bouncy-bounce, and junk food. Presents from family have been trickling in over the last few days– last night she got a geocaching starter kit from her awesome California aunts, and it took a bit of work to stop her from heading out immediately to look for hidden treasures. This morning, I got her up a little earlier than usual to check out her new science toy: a telescope. She wanted to spend her allowance money on a small refractor on a wobbly mount from the local science museum, but that slightly offended my real-scientist sensibilities, so I promised her a better one as a birthday gift. Many thanks to astro-blogger extraordinaire Ethan Siegel for suggesting the Celestron Firstscope, which is pretty much exactly what I wanted– simple enough that she can figure it out, stable enough to give a good view (though I may look at screwing a plate on the bottom that would let me put it on a camera tripod rather than a patio table…).
The Moon is currently pretty high up right at the time when we normally wake her up, so I got it set up and brought her straight outside, where she was duly impressed. I got the accessory kit as well, so it has four lenses, and we tried out two; the image quality is really good, but way beyond my ability to photograph– I got one hold-the-phone-by-the-eyepiece shot with the wide field lens, but the higher magnification eyepiece is too small for my unsteady hands. Nice view of mountains along the terminator, though. I’ll be looking for good early-evening targets to point it at in the next few days; suggestions welcome in comments.
(The Pip also demanded a look, so we showed him both. “Yep, that’s the Moon,” he said of the wide field, and “That’s part of the Moon” for the higher magnification. He’s a very practical Little Dude.)
Anyway, it’s been a fun ride for the last seven years (“SEVEN! YEARS!” in the mode of Jeremy Piven from Grosse Point Blank), and she’s pretty awesome. We’ll keep her for a while longer.
We did have a hint of things to come last night, though. On the way home after Elite Team taekwondo, she asked “Dad, when can I get my own phone?” And so it begins…
from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1NeXtcd
Today is SteelyKid’s seventh birthday, which she’s been counting down to for a good while. It’s a little hard to believe it’s seven years since she was substantially smaller than her stuffed Appa toy.
She’s become quite a handful in that time, with boundless energy apparently derived from photosynthesis (since she hardly eats anything), and intense interests in Minecraft and Pokemon, math and taekwondo. She’s a red belt now, which is only a few short of black, and this summer has started doing the “Elite Team” sparring classes. I’m pretty sure that if she really wanted to, she could kick my ass. Happily, she’s generally good-natured. This is also a Good Thing because she has an amazing ability to talk her friends into doing what she wants…
We’re having the annual blowout birthday bash at the house tomorrow– a bunch of her friends from school and day care, a rented bouncy-bounce, and junk food. Presents from family have been trickling in over the last few days– last night she got a geocaching starter kit from her awesome California aunts, and it took a bit of work to stop her from heading out immediately to look for hidden treasures. This morning, I got her up a little earlier than usual to check out her new science toy: a telescope. She wanted to spend her allowance money on a small refractor on a wobbly mount from the local science museum, but that slightly offended my real-scientist sensibilities, so I promised her a better one as a birthday gift. Many thanks to astro-blogger extraordinaire Ethan Siegel for suggesting the Celestron Firstscope, which is pretty much exactly what I wanted– simple enough that she can figure it out, stable enough to give a good view (though I may look at screwing a plate on the bottom that would let me put it on a camera tripod rather than a patio table…).
The Moon is currently pretty high up right at the time when we normally wake her up, so I got it set up and brought her straight outside, where she was duly impressed. I got the accessory kit as well, so it has four lenses, and we tried out two; the image quality is really good, but way beyond my ability to photograph– I got one hold-the-phone-by-the-eyepiece shot with the wide field lens, but the higher magnification eyepiece is too small for my unsteady hands. Nice view of mountains along the terminator, though. I’ll be looking for good early-evening targets to point it at in the next few days; suggestions welcome in comments.
(The Pip also demanded a look, so we showed him both. “Yep, that’s the Moon,” he said of the wide field, and “That’s part of the Moon” for the higher magnification. He’s a very practical Little Dude.)
Anyway, it’s been a fun ride for the last seven years (“SEVEN! YEARS!” in the mode of Jeremy Piven from Grosse Point Blank), and she’s pretty awesome. We’ll keep her for a while longer.
We did have a hint of things to come last night, though. On the way home after Elite Team taekwondo, she asked “Dad, when can I get my own phone?” And so it begins…
from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1NeXtcd
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire