Oshkosh
For a complete review please see the Psychotoddler. I will leave you with one interesting anecdote.
This is not a very busy museum and although it is spread out, it has good sight lines, which means you can see just about the whole room from several points. All this leads up to the group going in different directions, often at different paces. This is not really a bad thing usually, as long as you keep counting heads, etc. Also, we're in Oshkosh, so how far could they actually go?
Nonetheless, I couldn't find a certain 16 year old when we went to the next level, which is sort of in a separate wing, so he wouldn't be able to see us. I looked in 3 different hangers (exhibits are divided into hangers) and I didn't see him anywhere. Finally I had to go to the admission desk and confess I had a lost kid, not a baby, a teenager. They asked me if I wanted him paged. I declined for two reasons (1) He never listens to announcements anyway, so it wouldn't do any good and (2) if he heard it he would never forgive me, as he doubtless did not consider himself lost. But I left them my cell phone number, which he knows anyway, and said if he worked his way to the front desk would you please give me a ring. That seemed to work.
Then one of the docents spotted a familiar looking kid down in the first exhibit hall and said "Look down there, is that him?"
"No," I replied, "That's his brother", the 12 year old. Fact is, although I couldn't bring myself to admit it, I didn't even know he was missing.
(Postscript - He was in the bathroom.)







