| Woodley Escalator |
| Liza's so sweet! |
Woodley Park is identified normally by Rock Creek Park as well as where the The National Zoo is located . Did you know this neighborhood was not named after a person but a house? But of course, behind every house is a person, in this case, Philip Barton Key. Mr. Key was a prosperous lawyer, who moved his family from Maryland to a stylish home in Washington. What did he name this house? You guessed it! Woodley! Why so random, though? Well, Mr. Key was a traveler before he settled down with his family, so while he was in Berkshire one year, he spent some time at Woodley House and fell in love with the look of the place. Later, when Woodley was being built in Washington, he modeled it to be similar to the house in Berkshire. Today, Key's Woodley still stands and lends a lovely view of the still growing Nation's Capitol. Hey! The name Key sounds familiar right? Of course! Francis Scott Key was the nephew of Mr. Key and actually engraved his initials on a window in the mansion. Unfortunately, it was lost due to renovation, but hey! The connections are still crazy!
Our first stop in Woodley Park was the National Zoo! The zoo opened in Rock Creek Park in 1889 on a sight designed by architect, Frederick Law Olmsted. About 1,800 different animals classified in 300 different species call the zoo their home. The zoo offers two locations. One is public and located in Woodley Park, and the other is private and serves as the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute located in Front Royal, VA. Its mission is "to provide leadership in animal care, science, education, as well as sustainability is as vital as ever if humankind is to save what remains of the Earth's biological diversity."
After the pandas, we visited the Elephants. Unfortunately, they were not out, but we went into the elephant house instead! I would like to make an announcement: An elephant poops more in one sitting than I poop in a week. That is all, thank you. While we were at the house, there was a scale where you could compare your weight to an elephant's. Dude, that scale's my bestie. I wanted to take it home. After everyone weighed themselves individually, all 9 of us got on the scale and only weighed as much as a one year old elephant. Awesome, right!?
| Luke, the king of the Jungle |
Next we were off to visit the loves of my life, Ms. Shera and her tiger cubs. Unfortunately only Shera was out, but the whole lion family was out. To my future husband, in addition to a baby panda, I would also love a lion cub if that isn't too much trouble, thanks! Luke, the male lion, sat on the highest rock, and he looked like he knew he was the king of jungle. I guess he actually is, buuut, maybe he could've been a little less rude and smiled for my pictures?
After we finished at the Amazonia, we headed straight out the Rock Creek Park entrance towards Pierce Mill. Walking, we observed the architecture of Woodley Park. Woodley is famous for preserving the historical feel and architecture. This is seen through it's string of 20th century row houses lined up on the streets. The building that eluded this area was completed in only 25 years, 1905-1929. As a result of some of the modern construction, Woodley's architecture results in a cohesive urban/authentic feel.
At about 1:45, we finished at Pierce Mill, and made the journey up the HUGE hill to Connecticut Avenue, turned right, and walked about .2 miles to Van Des metro station. The end of our Metro Journey has come, but we all journeyed back to Ms. Anna's to fellowship and to have our Metro Journey Meeting. It was a nice relaxing end to a tiring day. Until next time, readers!
| Literally how all of us were after all the walking we did. |
Sounded like true zoo adventure. Wish I was able to MJ with each of you. What a wonderful blessing.
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