A Home Lab/Shop For Kids?
sharp-bang writes "When I was growing up, my Dad let my brother and I have the run of his wood shop, and kept up a steady stream of Lego kits, Estes model rockets, chemistry sets, Heathkit projects, and other fun science stuff from the Edmund Scientific catalog, and the rest was history. I'd like to give my kids that kind of experience. If your kids were interested in science, computers, robots, and building stuff, how would you build and outfit a lab/shop for them (and you) to play in?"
diesel fuel, fertilizer, and a copy of 'the turner diaries'?
the united states is a nation of laws; badly written and randomly enforced -- frank zappa
Are you interested in adopting a 38 year old?
...Rob
The American Dream isn't an SUV and a house in the suburbs; it's Don't Tread On Me.
Buy em anything. Anything except from that catalogue. The prices are rather horrid.
Me, I say give em a can of coke and some pop rocks.
Now that is entertainment for hours.
Follow it up with a bowl of rice crispies.
Each time they ask why these things do what they do... lie... lie a lot and change it each time.
"You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
Young boys(and, okay, maybe some young girls) like to burn stuff.
It all starts with the magnifying glass and the ants, then it moves on to dousing G.I. Joes in lawnmower gasoline. Later, when they get older, firecrackers come into the mix.
Lord help you if you hand-load your own ammo: gunpowder(a mix of fast-and-slow burning ^_^ ) and primers, with some match-heads all poured into a metal can creates a louder and much more exciting(read: dangerous) projectile than an Estes rocket. Speaking of Estes rockets, screw the rocket and put just the engine on the pole.
Oh crap, I'm guilty of terrorism for posting that. Who's that knocking at my door?
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