A ROARING GOOD TIME
What better way to learn about science than though immersive, interactive play?
The Rochester Museum and Science Center (RMSC) is currently exhibiting Expedition: Dinosaur, showcasing eleven moving robotic dinosaur replicas. Visitors will have the ability to control some of the dinosaurs—making them roar, “breathe,” and shake their tail. One of the animatronic dinosaurs is a climbable T. Rex, perfect for a photo op with the kids! Visitors will learn how paleontologists uncover dinosaur bones and fossils, and participate in a number of interactive games, quizzes, and other activities to hone their knowledge of the Mesozoic era. Getting the giant dinosaurs into the museum and set up in the third-floor gallery was a major undertaking, according to RMSC communications coordinator, Felicia Swartzenberg. Most of the dinosaurs required a crane to hoist them through the third-floor windows.
And it was worth the effort.
“Dinosaurs and paleontology have a unique power to fascinate people of all ages and all interests,” says Swartzenberg. “When we saw this exhibit, we knew that we wanted to bring it to life for the Rochester community.” Visit RMSC.org for more information.
AERIAL EXPLORATION
Play involving adventure offers an important outlet for children to test themselves, push through their fears, and stretch their abilities, according to Shane Rhinewald, senior director of public relations at the Strong National Museum of Play.
The museum recently opened a new high ropes course called Skyline Climb, which features two courses for visitors of all sizes and skill levels in the museum’s glass-enclosed carousel atrium. The High-Rise course is two levels, at sixteen and twenty-eight feet from the ground, for visitors over forty-eight inches tall. The Low-Rise course is about three feet off the ground, for visitors under forty-eight inches in height. There’s no age restriction for Low-Rise, but participants must be able to walk.
Guests wear a safety harness and navigate from pillar to pillar, in any direction with no time limits, while facing a variety of challenges including wobbly bridges, ropes, planks, rolling logs, and a zipline.
“Physical play is an important aspect of play, and it’s something that we haven’t been able to fully explore in the museum setting in the past,” says Rhinewald. Thanks to a recent museum expansion, it seemed there was no better time to add the Skyline Climb.
Tickets for this attraction are $5 for Low-Rise and $7 for High-Rise, with $1 off admission for members. Learn more at museumofplay.org.
HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS
The Harlem Globetrotters have been bringing their exhibition basketball to fans all over the world for more than ninety-five years. Their current tour, Spread Game, has the team visiting 200 cities, including Rochester on February 5 to play the Blue Cross Arena.
Audience members can expect a blend of jaw-dropping athleticism mixed with theatrics and comedy. The Globetrotters popularized the jump shot and slam dunk, and invented the half-court hook shot, according to the website, and they have set more than twenty Guinness World Records.
Fans will have unprecedented access to the players on this tour, with packages like the Celebrity Court Pass and Player Meet & Greet available for purchase. The former gets fans on the floor for the pregame practice, and the latter promises facetime, autographs, and photographs.
Tickets start at $22, and all ticketholders will be required to show proof of vaccination. Tickets are available at keybankcenter. com.
VISIT FROSTY AND FAMILY
Take a drive to the Southern Tier this winter for an opportunity to visit snowmen that keep their shape month after month.
The Corning Museum of Glass (CMOG) will exhibit Glass Snow Family through March 6 this year. The tallest member of the snow family stands at six feet tall, while the smallest snowkid measures in at three feet. There is even a family snow dog on display, named Pi-Rex.
The glass artwork was created by CMOG glassmaker George Kennard and a team of eight professionals. Visitors can make their own snowperson in the museum’s Make Your Own Glass studio until February 28. While you’re at the museum, check out a display of work made on the hit Netflix series Blown Away, a glassblowing competition show. There are ten objects from the second season on display, one by each contestant. Further information is available at cmog.org.
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