
With lower temperatures and member morning at the zoo, we are once again going to try and see the baby gorilla.  It appears that most of Dallas has the same plan and although it's only about 8:15, we have to park out near the road.  Wow!If you are new to this blog -- please use the labels area to help you find what you are looking for. Quilt info is under Feeling Crafty. Recipes are under Food. As always, the archive will show the current month's posts as well. Enjoy your time here -- feel free to leave comments. Please click the "follow" button and you will always receive the new updates.

We have a weekend all to ourselves and have opted to combine some walking with some animal watching.  It's a member morning weekend at the zoo, meaning we can get in early and have some special moments.  It's a plan and off we go.
The first part of the exhibit focuses on "goldweights."  According to the placard on the wall, "By the 17th century, Akan and Asante goldsmiths cast goldweights in the forms of humans, animals, plants, and various man-made objects.  Like some of the earlier geometric weights, representational goldweights were connected to proverbs and maxims.  For older figurative weights, many of their original associations have been forgotten.  Others have new meanings, as familiar proverbs differed among generations and geographic locations.  Adding to this complex visual communication, some proverbs carry multiple meanings.  In this display, figurative (representational) goldweights are grouped into several themes and time periods.  Broadly speaking, the human figure and animal subjects appear in goldweights starting in the 17th century.  Human figures range in age and activity.  Animals are equally diverse.  mammals, birds, fish, and insects are represented individually and in interactive groups."