With the Curious George exhibit at Port Discovery closing this weekend, we decided to take Noah so he could play around with George and see the museum. Now, I had never been to Port Discovery, but I think Shannon had gone, or had gotten feedback from her mom, saying that she didn't think Noah would get too much out for it, definitley not the $13 admission price worth...But, since George was there, we were going to try it anyway. Even though little man is just 2, I think he gets a lot out of exhibits for 3 and 4 year olds too because...well, he talks like one :-P A lot of 2 year olds we meet are just putting 2 or 3 words together. Noah puts full sentences together! Anecdote to kick this off, they have a VW Bug on the 1st floor for kids to play with. I mean, a FULL SIZE VW Bug. So Noah climbs in to drive the wheel...What's the first thing he does? HE REACHES UP TO BUCKLE THE SEATBELT. I'm dumbfounded...Then, he moves to the radio and says "I'm going to turn on the radio" and starts turning up the volume knob and hitting buttons. Yeah, I think he's a bit of a smart cookie there...
So anyway, we parked, paid, and headed in. First floor has a couple of things, we skipped some stuff in the museum to try to prioritize what Noah would want to see...so from what we did/saw, the first floor has a big soccer court which Noah ran around on for awhile, didn't get much actual soccer in though but he was having fun. We moved onto the "store" exhibit, which was a Royal Farms setup with play food boxes, bottles, and cans, cash register, etc. Also had the VW Bug and gas pump. Thing we skipped in the first floor is "KidWorks". I'd probably say that is the "Crown Jewel" of Port Discovery, as it's a big jungle gym/learning stations which go through ALL 3 floors...like you go in at floor 1, go through the stations climbing upwards, and end up at Floor 3. The ages on that one is 4 and up, and 4-6 is meant to stick to the first floor, so...yeah, we skipped that.
Floor 2 greeted us with a train setup, with a crane type thing to pick up boxes. Noah's takeway from this...sitting on the train and trying to find a steering wheel. So, after finding the engine of the train and letting him get about 5 mins solid of steering a wheel, we headed to the "Sensation Station", which is designed for little ones. Things in this room are a little playset with a slide, climbing stuff, etc...appropriate for infant-4yo, water tubes with bubbles, ball pit, lots of toddler toys. Noah's takeaway from this..."Hey look...a LAWNMOWER". Yes, the toy he plays with all the time at home and daycare is the toy he spent about 10 minutes playing with in that place. You know, you can try to figure out toddlers all you want, but they know what they like...Eventually, I convinced him to try out the ballpit, which he proceeded to get buried in. He loved that a lot too.
Eventually, we pushed on and decided to just head to floor 3. This was supposed to be the big attraction...CURIOUS GEORGE. Now, I watch Curious George the cartoon on PBS with Noah in the mornings. Seeing the characters and things, I expected there would be lots of fun things he'd want to play with and we'd have a solid hour of him playing there. A lot of the exhibits though, went a little over Noah's head. Maybe he just wasn't in the mood, but the ones I can remember:
Shadow Wall - Noah liked this mainly for the spinning wheel for different light colors
Elevator/Mail Box doors (You could open these and see what was there) - Noah liked opening (and slamming shut) the elevator doors
Construction Zone (Big conveyor belt to carry blocks up about 7 feet, then roll down a series of rollers to come back to the ground) - Noah only like the wheel you turn to push the blocks up...And he wanted to DRIVE the wheel, not turn it in one direction only
Playing with Wind - Noah did like this one, you had big blowers which you could use to try to turn windmills and ring windchimes.
Build Your Own Windmill - Tinkertoys you could make a windmill out of and fans to test it, but a lot of tinkertoys were missing
Grocery Store - This would've been fun, you could take plush groceries and sort them, weigh them, etc. But they only had 3 plush groceries...2 watermelons and 1 pear. Guessing most of them were taken or moved or...idk
Make Your Own Pinwheel or Windsock - This place was a mess, it was a station where you could take paper, use scissors/holepunch/other tools, and make a craft project per directions on the station. But it looked like it'd been ravaged already, we just decided to skip it at that point
Stuffed Animals - They had little rabbit/bird houses which had stuffed animals. Also a big tree which had a squirrel's hole. Noah played with those a lot too.
So, all that considered, Noah got some out of the George exhibit, but for some reason I expected there to be more "play" stuff. A lot of the exhibits seemed to be geared a little older (Ding ding ding to Shannon, she was right...Fully admitted), so Noah didn't get interested in them. So, after about 15 mins or so, we moved on...
The thing Noah loved the most was the WATER ROOM. Holy crap, that could've been where we got our money's worth. So, in this water room, there are:
Big Spout Area - This was a raised floor, slatted to let water drain, with a bunch of small spouts sticking out of the floor where water was coming up. You could then take various pipes and build water fountains out of it. Noah just liked spilling the water all on himself (Disclaimer, they did have raincoats and crocs available for borrowing, we just let Noah go to it in his regular clothes). They also have a station with two water guns where you can shoot different music instruments to make different sounds, Noah liked this too.
Water Table - HUGE, about 20-25 foot long table which sloped downwards...Different areas...at the top was a raincloud which kept water flowing into the area. Right after this, you could build channels with little walls. After this, you could either dam up the water, or create a lock (I didn't get to play with...I mean, Noah didn't get to play with this, so we didn't get to see how cool it was.) After this were various toys you could play in the water with. At the end, there was a "1 and under" exhibit which was a shallow crate sitting right above the water. I can only guess you would put your 1 year old in the crate to let them experience the water, seemed weird to me. They also had spray bottles at the end of the table you could use to spray and then squeegie the windows of the Water Room right beside the Water Table.
Big Bubble - The thing we got to play with at the Gettysburg Explore&More museum...only this one was run by the person INSIDE the bubble. Also, you had to bring this one up VERY slowly to get it to work. But, was still fun.
Sink or Float - Whole bunch of items you can toss into an aquarium to see if it sinks of floats, you can then use a lever to lift a sifting pan to retrieve objects. Noah just liked throwing things in water and playing with the lever.
Building a Boat - Legos and a water table where you could try building a boat that floats. Only one boat that I could see, but Noah just wanted to throw Legos in the water anyway
BIG DRYER - Before you leave, they have a heat lamp and a wall of blowers to try to dry some water off you. I like that one.
After about 2 hours there, we knew Noah was hungry, Shannon wasn't feeling well, so we decided to wait for the 1pm "Meet Curious George" event then leave. At 1:05, no one had come yet. Not even a museum employee to say "We're running late". Noah didn't seem to care either way, so we just left.
Overall, my impression of Port Discovery...I think Noah will get a lot out of them in 2-3 years. As smart as he is for his age, some of these exhibits are just not that appealing to him right now. Until then, there's lots of other places which are not as expensive and crowded where we can let him explore and play. But, I will give them that they had a LOT of things to explore there. But, $13 is a pretty good chunk of change, so we'll probably wait a couple of years before taking him back there.