With the press club posts, I took notes here (on Blogspot), but it didn't seem right to just post notes, yet there were so many panels that I didn't really have time to do the panelists or my readers right, so they are just dangling there as 'drafts.'
While most Anchorage bowl snow was gone when the grandkids arrived, we did find some puddles sealed in sheets of ice, which they had a great time breaking and then holding large pieces. They also liked bouncing sticks off of a still mostly frozen Goose Lake on bike ride to Goose Lake. Then on along
Northern Lights, the back of APU, and home. I knew my grandson would be fine - because he and I did a long bike ride in SF last year. But my granddaughter was also a champ. I'd warned them there might be some snow still on the trail, but by it was all gone, which disappointed my grandson. But he found dirt path that went off into the woods and still had some snow. And off he went. (He's 10 and she's 8.)
We also made it to the bead shop in the Golden Donut mall at Lake Otis and Tutor. There are all kinds of beads and other string able objects like porcupine quills.
At the west end of the mall is the Stars of Alaska Rock Shop. I'd put it on the list of places to take visitors to Anchorage.
It's a crazy crowded shop full of, rocks, of course, but also fossils, and amazing things.
How about a mosasaurus skull. Actually, I don't think that was for sale.
Owner Martin Warfield was unpacking a new shipment of Amonites - 'an extinct cephalopod mollusk' - that lived 280 million years ago.
Here's a closer look at a half of one.
Another big hit was Bosco's, Anchorage's really good comic, games, sports cards, etc. shop. As was Title Wave used book store.
Don't let magats see cephalapod, they likely will claim it is obscene. BTW asparagus was up April 21st this year. 2-3 weeks earler than normal.
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