Monday, July 25, 2022

Penn's Cave & Wildlife Park (7/25/2022)

Monday, July 25, 2022
On our way home from Buffalo, we stopped at Penn's Cave & Wildlife Park near Centre Hall, PA.
Penn Cave House (1885 as a hotel, now corporate offices)
Patriotic Arch
The Visitor Center/Gift Shop had a train
running at ceiling level
Bags of "mining rough" were available for sale,
each augmented with gemstones
Prospector Pete's Gemstone Panning sluice
Here you would sift through your bag of mining rough
to pan out your gemstones
Another feature of Penn's Cave was the Miners Maze,
with four stations to find the letters spelling 'gold,'
and if completed in a certain time, one wins a prize
We began with the 90-minute Farm-Nature-Wildlife Tour
By strictly calling these animals Bison bison/Bison,
our guide mightily confused some tour participants
who then thought they were related to "buffalo"
A good portion of the Penn's Cave property is
Penn's Cave Farm, for growing crops for the animals
Some of the tree trunk animal carvings: groundhogs
There were Cervus canadensis/Elk with calves,
as well as Odocoileus virginianus/White-tailed Deer with fawns
One of a herd of Bos taurus taurus/Longhorn Cattle (KSS)
A variation of the Vulpes vulpes/Red Fox is
known to be a red fox because the tip of
the tail is white (on a Urocyon cinereoargenteus/
Gray Fox, the tip of the tail is black) (KSS)
Tom, the Lynx rufus/Bobcat
Guide Lily with Oscar, the Ursus americanus/Black Bear
Penn's Cave also has its own [unmanned] airport
Gift shop display of vintage souvenirs
This is quite a souvenir!
Now to take the 48 steps down to the
Penn's Cave Boat Tour
Flat-bottomed boats with electric motors seat about 20 people
Penn's Cave history correctly credits the indigenous Seneca tribe with discovering the cave. A Reverend James Martin was the first white man to enter the cave in 1795.
The Cathedral was one of the few
areas to be lighted, otherwise a spotlight
was used to point out formations
Can you see the Starship Enterprise from Star Trek?
The Garden of the Gods is seen in silhouette
A huge boulder of limestone that dropped from the ceiling
is called the Rock of Gibraltar and created a Strait of Gibraltar
The Owl formation
The white formations are Jabba the Hut and the Nittany Lion;
the original cave entrance is beyond the Nittany Lion
The legend of Penn's Cave is told, where a French explorer, Malachi Boyer, befriended the Seneca Chief O-Ko-Cho. Malachi fell in love with the chief's beautiful daughter, Nita-nee. They were forbidden to marry, so they ran away together. However, they were caught, and Malachi was thrown into the cave filled with water. The only exit was guarded by the Senecas and so Malachi died. Later when Nita-nee died, the spirits arose and covered her grave, creating Mount Nittany. It is from this mountain that the Nittany Lion was named, and became the mascot of nearby Pennsylvania State University.
The Chimes that between 1885 and 1967
were tapped with a wooden mallet to
produce a melody of hollow sounds
The practice of "playing" the Chimes was stopped because of damage to the formation.
Room of Colored Lights in red
The Room of Colored Lights in rainbow colors
In 1927, a tunnel was cut at the closed end
of the cavern; we floated from the 52 degrees
inside the cave to the 84 degrees outside
The boat tours were scheduled every 15 minutes,
so we passed three boats during our 60-minute tour
After a brief sail on Lake Nitanee, we
returned to go back through Penn's Cave
Penn's Cave had a combination of clear rock faces
and stalactites and stalagmites, and flow formations (KSS)
The boat guide offered the phrase “stalactites hold tight to the ceiling and stalagmites might touch the ceiling,” to help remember the difference between the two formations. However, I always remembered that stalactites has a 'c' for ceiling, and stalagmites has a 'g' for ground.
Dove's Wings formation
Umm, the Statue of Liberty
Elephant with Runny Nose; all the stalactites
dripped water, but our guide told us if we
thought the elephant's nose dripped water -
it's not (say the last phrase fast), LOL 

Friday, July 22, 2022

Locks in Lockport, NY (7/22/2022)

Friday, July 22, 2022
We were able to meet with a family friend, DeeDee, for lunch at Lock 34 Bar & Grill in Lockport, NY.
Old City Hall (1860 as a mill, converted 1884 into one
of the first water pumping stations, 1893-1974 was city hall)
Below us is Lock 34, viewed from the
Pine Street Bridge, and above it is Lock 35 of
the New York State Barge Canal (1909-1918) (KSS)
Lock Tenders Tribute (2021 by Susan Geissler) replicates
an 1897 photo, and will eventually have a dozen lock tenders
The Lock Tenders are located between the paths of the
eastbound (grassy area) and westbound Flight of Five Locks
(completed in 1862) which enlarged the original
Erie Canal Locks of 1822-1825 (KSS)
The water in Lock 35 was drained to allow the
Lockport Locks & Erie Canal Cruise boat to enter (KSS)
Lock 35 is then filled with water to raise the boat
a total of 49 feet combined for Locks 34 & 35 (KSS)
The double upper gates of Lock 35 begin to open (KSS)
The gates are almost fully open on the
western-most locks of the Erie Canal (KSS)
Now the cruise boat can continue for a distance
on the old Erie Canal before returning (KSS)
Bon voyage!
Tamiko with DeeDee at her darling house! (KSS)

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Everson Museum of Art (7/20/2022)

Wednesday, July 20, 2022
On our way to Buffalo, we stopped at the Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse, NY. Another Tyler Arboretum reciprocal admission museum.
Everson Museum of Art is significant for being the first
museum to hire I M Pei to design its building (1968)
Tree of 40 Fruit (2016, by Sam Van Aken);
one of eight trees created by grafting 40
different types of stone fruit trees (KSS)
Some of the stone fruit trees are native and antique,
and not commercially available
The proliferation of fruit is remarkable
Two-piece Reclining Figure No 8 (1961, by Henry Moore)
Strand (1972, by Ron Gorchov) (KSS)
Everson Museum of Art is also the first museum to create a permanent collection of ceramics.
Paul Phillips & Sharon Sullivan Ceramics Center: Curious Vessels: The Rosenfield Collection (only the name of the artist was posted):
Face Tray by Andy Nasisse (KSS)
Reverse side of Nasisse work (KSS)
Service Ware by Michael Simon (not the chef!)
Hot Plate by Neil Forrest (KSS)
Plate by Irma Starr
Louise, the "coming soon" farm-and-kiln-to-table café in
the museum, will feature handmade cups and mugs (KSS)
Vase by Neil Patterson and Pitcher by Sam Chung
Galleries A & B: Sharif Bey: Facets (exploring the heritage of Africa and Oceania in ceramics and glass):
Guardian Series: Serpent Charmer (2022) (KSS)
Yawn Series: 1, 2 and 3 (2022) (KSS)
The spiral staircase in the museum atrium
Kent with Raptor Return (2022)
Raptor Return detail
Photo of artist Sharif Bey (KSS)
Another view of the atrium
Galleries C & D: Forever is Composed of Nows ("snapshots" of the present moment across different time periods, from the Everson permanent collection):
The Peaceable Kingdom (c 1840-1844, by Edward Hicks)
Pennsylvania Dutch & Adidas (1975-80, by Elliot Erwitt)
Prosperity V (2007, by Caroline Cheng) (KSS)
Prosperity V detail (KSS)
Miniature Golf Course (1970, by David Furman)
Little Falls (1940, by Beatrice Wose-Smith) (KSS)
Members' Coucil Gallery: Achala Wali: Surface Densities (the natural world through the physical act of drawing):
Archaea by Achala Wali
Sculpture Plaza
Shawanaga (1968, by Robert Murray) (KSS)