The Mag Lab
/This weekend the National High Magnetic Field Lab had their annual Open House, and it was awesome. It was our first time at the Open House, and we really didn't expect to see much, other than the 45 Tesla Electro Magnet. What we found was that the entire complex had been set up with different experiments and demonstrations, each designed to get kids interested in science.
Firebeard and Thing 2 visited the Cryogenics Lab and saw the Liquid Nitrogen rocket car, and flash frozen flowers, while Thing 1 and I visited the big magnets in the DC Field Building.
Thing 1 wasn't very impressed in the world's largest magnet, because "it looked like a bunch of tubes" (her words), but the other demonstrations in the magnet cells were pretty awesome. She especially like the electric pickle, the cloud made in a bottle, and the thunder tube.
In the end, Thing 1's favorite part was the exhibit set up by the Sci Girls, a groups of girls just a few years older than her. They were showing the conservation of angular momentum with bike wheels, and making cloud bubbles with dry ice. Thing one didn't want to leave. It makes me wonder if she will be demonstrating in a few years.
Next year we are planning to go earlier and see some of the demonstrations were didn't get to see this year, like the MagLev Train in the Applied Superconductivity Center and the hydrogen powered toy car in the center for alternative power systems (Hint, hint, Mag Lag open house organizers). I also hope that next year they will have the robots that Thing 2 was wishing for.































After yesterday's pic of the babies in their brooder box, I thought I would share a pic of the big girls (and boy) in their coop. As you can probably tell, the girl's coop, does not look like a standard coop. For one thing, it is 4 feet off of the ground, and for another, it is almost completely open. There is a rhyme in our reason however. We live in Florida, where it is very hot and very humid most of the year. Chickens tend to dislike very hot and moist environments, and suffer in those conditions. As a result, we decided to make a coop that would allow for maximum air flow reducing both heat and humidity. The reason the coop is 4 feet off the ground is that we have several large predators in the area, such a coyotes. We needed to keep the chickens far off the ground in their open coop. You may have also noticed that there does not appear to be a way for the chickens to get in to or out of the coop. Rest assured there is a way for them to come and go. The rope going from floor to ceiling in the coop is attached to a retractable ramp that extends down during the day, and is pulled up at night, and becomes part of the floor of the coop.

On Easter Sunday, the Easter bunny left more than just eggs in our yard, he also left two adorable baby chicks. The kids found them in a basket with a note from the Easter bunny, asking the kids to give his chicks a good home.

As I stated in a previous post, I have actually had more time to craft since I started working full time than I had prior to working full time, due to a period during my working hours my coworkers foolishly refer to as lunch time. I have more accurately dubbed this hour during my day craft time, and have used it to great advantage. One of the projects I have been able to complete during this time is the 






Have you ever found a double yolked egg in a commercial box of eggs? I would be a bit surprised if you had, as they are not very common. However, there are a few things that would increase your odds of finding a double yolker, one is the age of the chicken laying the eggs. Young chickens are more likely to lay a double yolk egg than older chickens. Very large eggs laid by young chickens are also more likely to be double yolkers than standard size eggs. So, when one of my young chickens laid a very large egg, knew what I had on my hands - a double yolker.

