The most interesting exhibit was a series of four rooms, the aptly named "Rooms of Wonder," organized as a collector in the 1600's would have displayed them in his own home. Picture lots of wooden cabinets, filled with items celebrating nature, foreign lands, the arts, and science. It was a little snapshot into how people thought back then. For example, the Asian cabinet included items from China, Japan, and India - it was all just "the Indies" back then. And in the nature cabinet, the items represented the extremes - huge alligators and tiny beetles, because science looked to the extremes to make sense of the world, unlike today's scientific focus on the typical and average exemplars of a species.
For lunch, we turned to the best for recommendations. My cousins' cousins (I'm not quite sure how we're officially related) run a blog that reviews restaurants in the Baltimore area, Black Coffee and a Donut, and one of their recent recommendations sounded especially vegetarian-friendly. Baba's Kitchen is a tiny almost take-out restaurant that serves terrific mediterranean food. Andrew had a lamb kebab and I had a sampler platter which included the best spanikopita I think I've ever eaten.
We had intended to visit Baltimore's Washington Monument, which is a bit smaller than DC's version, but which allows visitors to climb to the top and admire the view for a mere dollar. In the end we had to postpone because the opening times seem to be rather random - it depends if the custodian wants to hang around the whole day or not, I guess. It leaves something to look forward to next time, I suppose.
3 comments:
You seem to do a great job with the "tourist" agenda. I am looking forward to what next weekend has to offer.
Does the "1840 House" still exist in Baltimore?
sounds like a great museum! I really have come to appreciate the smaller but more manageable museums and I do love me a good audio tour.
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