Anonymous wrote:The Baltimore aquarium is crazy expensive now. We took some visiting relatives there and it was $500 for our party of 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This takes me back! I took my kids 18-19 yrs ago and it was quintessential DC at the time. It was totally grim but it was ours.
I think that sense - the sense it was totally grim but still ours - is what made me create this thread.
Anyone remember the 2-headed snake?
I’m so glad it resonated. DC had such a different feel back then. The bizarro children's museum was still in town. We didn’t have to compete like crazy to get kids into camps although getting into the one Spanish speaking school east of the park was a nutty lottery. The food scene had yet to explode. 14th Street, the Wharf: none of that development even existed. Such a different time.
Sorry, don’t remember the two headed snake
Anonymous wrote:Did they actually charge admission? I was a Commerce employee anyway, but don't think I would have wanted to pay a whole lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This takes me back! I took my kids 18-19 yrs ago and it was quintessential DC at the time. It was totally grim but it was ours.
I think that sense - the sense it was totally grim but still ours - is what made me create this thread.
Anyone remember the 2-headed snake?
I’m so glad it resonated. DC had such a different feel back then. The bizarro children's museum was still in town. We didn’t have to compete like crazy to get kids into camps although getting into the one Spanish speaking school east of the park was a nutty lottery. The food scene had yet to explode. 14th Street, the Wharf: none of that development even existed. Such a different time.
Sorry, don’t remember the two headed snake
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This takes me back! I took my kids 18-19 yrs ago and it was quintessential DC at the time. It was totally grim but it was ours.
I think that sense - the sense it was totally grim but still ours - is what made me create this thread.
Anyone remember the 2-headed snake?
I’m so glad it resonated. DC had such a different feel back then. The bizarro children's museum was still in town. We didn’t have to compete like crazy to get kids into camps although getting into the one Spanish speaking school east of the park was a nutty lottery. The food scene had yet to explode. 14th Street, the Wharf: none of that development even existed. Such a different time.
Sorry, don’t remember the two headed snake
I loved that children's museum as a kid! I just remember making tortillas lol
I never liked the DC aquarium. It was always so disappointing. The Baltimore aquarium ending up buying them which is why Baltimore is now the National Aquarium
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This takes me back! I took my kids 18-19 yrs ago and it was quintessential DC at the time. It was totally grim but it was ours.
I think that sense - the sense it was totally grim but still ours - is what made me create this thread.
Anyone remember the 2-headed snake?
I’m so glad it resonated. DC had such a different feel back then. The bizarro children's museum was still in town. We didn’t have to compete like crazy to get kids into camps although getting into the one Spanish speaking school east of the park was a nutty lottery. The food scene had yet to explode. 14th Street, the Wharf: none of that development even existed. Such a different time.
Sorry, don’t remember the two headed snake
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This takes me back! I took my kids 18-19 yrs ago and it was quintessential DC at the time. It was totally grim but it was ours.
I think that sense - the sense it was totally grim but still ours - is what made me create this thread.
Anyone remember the 2-headed snake?