A Visit to the Planetarium
The National Planetarium is a dome shaped building in Manila, Philippines that has shows all week. If coming from the Mall of Asia area, a notable landmark before turning right at Padre Burgos Ave is the Rizal Monument to your right.
The Planetarium had film showing schedules for free last May. Starting in June, the Planetarium now charges an afforable Php50 for adults and Php30 for kids and students.
The dome shows are on a specific time and you would need to wait for the scheduled show to start, I advise being there at least 30 minutes before, lest the slots get filled up and you would then need to wait for the next show. The first time we went, there was a short line.
Baggage counter where you need to leave your things, entry way with TV telling the story of how the Planetarium was built, some guidelines for your visit
Some notable house rules are,
- Only kids 4 years old and up are allowed;
- No cellphones are permitted inside the dome show;
- and you need to check-in your belongings to a baggage counter (including your phones or cameras);
- finally, no food is allowed, we had to drink our beverages and throw them out before entering.
There are 3 shows to choose from and I think it would be nice to have a marathon one Sunday to watch ALL three in one day, but my kids still need their nap time in the afternoon so it might not work out well for us, I can wait when they're a bit older.
The three shows are all projected on the inside of the dome. It leaves you in an absolute trance after, seeing the stars and planets right above you.
Of all three, Hayabusa is our personal favorite, while the lady at the baggage counter gave us the tip that out of the three, A Planet for Goldilocks was the one he didn't like that much. Hayabusa was his favorite as well, he says.
View their updated schedule on their facebook page.
We were early for the 4PM show and we had time to kill.
We had the exhibit around the dome all to ourselves and my husband and I tried our best to explain whichever question they had, one of which was what were the rockets on exhibit and why there were different initials (agency names) on them.
The place was dimmed so pardon the photos if they appear blurry.
First were the sun and the moon and so we told them about the Moon landing, and the astronauts who were on that mission. All around the right side were a different case on the wall for each planet. My daughter stood beside Saturn and its rings, and read about her favorite planet. Of course my son loved the rockets, what he would give to reach in a take one.
There were also exhibits of tektite rocks, which are rocks from meteorites that impacted the earth wiki. These had labels from the different places where they were obtained which they carefully read one by one.
By the entrance there was an exhibit about primitive local instruments used for rice harvest, which is the photo in the lower right part. I can't remember why they had that there.
It was great having the place to ourselves but we went around TWICE already while waiting so we were excited for the show to start. They pointed to the Big and Little Dipper and they talked about how they see it in the sky. Truthfully, I just say yes when my daughter points it out sometimes, "Great job finding it this time, sweetie". * pat on the back *
We adults need to spend time looking up to the sky more, don't you agree?
Time for the show!
Hayabusa Back to Earth
Hayabusa is my son's favorite. Hayabusa is a satellite from JAXA or Japanese Aerospare Exploration Agency that is sent on a mission to get samples from the asteroid, Itokawa. It's a heartwarming story of never giving up. Hayabusa was out of reach for months before it completed its mission, my daughter cried a bit when it hit the Earth's atmosphere and it burned up, leaving only a capsule behind. I told her it's Hayabusa's brain that contains all the knowledge it got from Itokawa. It's a beautiful storytelling of perseverance when success seems far away.
Dome Projector at the Planetarium. Picture taking not allowed inside. Yes, it looks this great in real life and that's the Tokyo Bay from Hayabusa show. Photo from National Museum Facebook Page
Journey to a Billion Suns (trailer)
This journey , this time by the European Space Agency, opens up your mind to the endless possibilities of multiple solar systems and multiple suns in our galaxy. It was a bit heavy for my kids, even for me since it explains the geometry used to measure the distance from our earth and different supernovas.
Our planetarium experience was something we want to do over and over again because it was light on the pocket (check!), very educational (check!) and I told my kids, that was a movie (in documentary form, but still, a movie, check!).
The next time we go, I'll just ask them, "Want to watch a cool movie?"
Check out our visit to the National Museum, Manila Ocean Park, Luneta Park, and Manila Zoo which are all in the vicinity of the Planetarium.
Thanks for reading!
Originally posted on luvabi.com
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Cool, I will bring my sister there. Thanks for the info ma'am! :)
Thanks for reading, hope your sister likes the planetarium like my kids do.
lapit yan sa school n pinagtpusan ko
dti nilalakd lang nmin from Phil Normal Hall
pra lng makapag aircon haha
Haha sarap nga matulog. I fell asleep a bit like 2 mins kasi puyat the night before kaso I promised my kids we would go.
Super comfy seats. 👍
narerecline p rin b? back then matigas - matanda nako e haha
Ay we didnt try reclining, the seats were new.
we used to .. sabay taas ng paa hahaha
puro babae pa kami nun mga nakauniform p ng PNU aba hahaha
mga pasaway ..
Hahahaha I can imagine.
I really like to visit one :( .
go on ahead and visit :)
Hope there is a planetarium near your area! :)
there is but it's in the school. I can't go in, hehe
Oh frnd I now have reasn to explore the entire ph!
Surely! Daming pwede puntahan :)
OH! My eldest would definitely enjoy this... he really loves science - planets and outers pace + animals specifically...
Hope to be able to visit that soon.
Oooh let me know, playdate at planetarium :)
Nice to see the visit , The fee looks nice to entry there and have lot of fun. I will love to visit the Manila and Planetarium if I ever visit there.
It is very reasonable fee. Only $1 for an educational dome show.
Yes. Looks reasonable :)
Thank you for making your children visit the Planetarium as it would satiate their curiosity of what lies beyond our planet and that we are all made up of star dust. ;)
Thank you @luvabi for your support.
God Bless you.
Our visit definitely expanded their minds to solar systems and galaxies. They understand how little a speck we are(Earth) in this Milky Way Galaxy.
Oh i like the planetarium. There's so much things to see.
J
Yes there is so much to learn and explore there :)
Nice place so we can educate our children through this planetarium :)
Yep, the kids learned a LOT from our visit :)
Thanks for visiting my blog @happyphoenix!
There comes a time when the mind takes a higher plane of knowledge but can never prove how it got there.
- Albert Einstein
Cool, I hope the experience takes them there to that higher plane :)
I enjoyed that Hayabusa back to earth. I like the narration. :D
Yeah, dramarama sa hapon style. Hayabusa, wake up.
Kakaiyak nga tuloy.