Mar
3
Thu
Budding Scientists (Preschool groups welcome) @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 3 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

The Museum of Coastal Carolina invites preschoolers to a fun, educational series of programs called Budding Scientists. Do you know a child who loves to explore outside, collect bugs and plants, or dig for shells at the beach? Bring him or her to the museum where young science lovers can learn all about our local environment through fun science experiments.

In February the theme is For the Love of Bugs. Each week we will learn about the many important roles bugs play in the environment, how bugs help plants grow, and how they help us determine how clean our water is.

These programs will be hosted by Jamie Justice, the Education Coordinator for the Museum of Coastal Carolina and Ingram Planetarium. She received her Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology from Bowling Green State University and her Master of Science in Environmental Science with concentrations in Marine and Coastal Education and Coastal Management from the University of North Carolina Wilmington. Jamie is originally from Portsmouth, Ohio and moved to Wilmington, North Carolina for graduate school in 2017. Before coming to the Museum, she worked in a variety of educational positions at summer camps and schools.

Mar
4
Fri
Touch Tank Feeding @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 4 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

You’re invited to get up close with some of the more familiar creatures found in our ocean.

Our touch tank pool allows you to gently touch marine animals such as sea stars, sea urchins, whelks, horseshoe crabs, and hermit crabs. These animals live in a variety of habitats and have developed many ways to survive the waves and predators. Volunteers are on hand to assist and teach you about these incredible animals.

Did you know, when a sea urchin “hugs” your finger if you gently touch its spines, it’s actually checking you out: Are you food or predator? If you’re neither, the animal will just gradually release you.

Mar
5
Sat
Science in 3D @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 5 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Come to the Museum of Coastal Carolina at 11:00 on October 2 and experience Science in 3D. The museum’s newest exhibit, called Before the Dinosaurs: Coal Age Monsters, uses a virtual reality (VR) mobile classroom that allows visitors to explore the Earth before the dinosaurs existed. Put on a virtual reality headset and become immersed in this unique experience. The Science in 3D program is hosted by an educational docent who will help launch each VR adventure and answer questions about the experience.

Science in 3D: Hurricane Maria @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 5 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Our Science in 3D exhibit uses a virtual reality mobile classroom to bring this exciting experience to you! Dive into the eye of Hurricane Maria, track windspeed and rainfall, and learn what to do when there is a hurricane.

Education docents will be available to assist and answer any questions you may have. Strap on a pair of virtual reality headsets and become immersed in this unique environment.

This is an North Carolina Science Festival event. The Festival celebrates the economic, educational, and cultural impacts of science in North Carolina through a series of community-based events each April (hosted by schools, colleges, libraries, museums, parks, businesses, and other local organizations). For more information, please visit ncscifest.org.

Mar
7
Mon
Ocean Animal Rescue @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 7 @ 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm

This program concerns North Carolina ocean animal rescue efforts including the Sea Biscuit Wildlife Shelter and the Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Rescue and Rehabilitation Center.  The program will also include a discussion of the largest marine mammal hospital in the world in California that has rescued over 25,000 sea lions and seals. All of these rescue efforts have a similar purpose: rescue, rehabilitation, and release. The program will detail why an animal needs to be rescued, how it is rescued, and what determines if and when the animal is released. The program will have a brief discussion of how the health of ocean animals is connected to the health of the ocean. The program will include an art activity for children.

 

 

Mar
8
Tue
Sandbar Lecture Series: Water, Water, What to Do? Creative Stormwater Solutions for Homeowners @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 8 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Join Amy Mead, NC Cooperative Extension Area Natural Resources Agent, to learn creative and attractive ways to control water on your property and help to protect the health of our waterways. Stormwater is the number one source of pollution to our coastal waterways. Using simple best management practices, we can slow stormwater, spread it out, and help it to soak into the ground.  Amy will share ideas for native plants, rain gardens, and attractive ways to incorporate these best practices into your landscape.

The Sandbar Lecture Series at Museum of Coastal Carolina brings local experts to speak about topics ranging from our coastal environment to Outer Banks history. For more information on the Sandbar Lecture Series contact Jamie Justice, Education Coordinator.

Mar
11
Fri
Touch Tank Feeding @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 11 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

You’re invited to get up close with some of the more familiar creatures found in our ocean.

Our touch tank pool allows you to gently touch marine animals such as sea stars, sea urchins, whelks, horseshoe crabs, and hermit crabs. These animals live in a variety of habitats and have developed many ways to survive the waves and predators. Volunteers are on hand to assist and teach you about these incredible animals.

Did you know, when a sea urchin “hugs” your finger if you gently touch its spines, it’s actually checking you out: Are you food or predator? If you’re neither, the animal will just gradually release you.

Mar
12
Sat
Beach Features: Lighthouses of NC @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 12 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Beach Features: Learn about the structures you see on the beaches and why they exist.

North Carolina has long been known for its beacons of light that stretch from Currituck to Bald Head Island.  This program will explore the purpose lighthouses have served in NC and some fun facts about each of these historic structures.

Presenter Jamie Justice is the Education Coordinator for the Museum of Coastal Carolina and Ingram Planetarium. She received her Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology from Bowling Green State University and her Master of Science in Environmental Science with concentrations in Marine and Coastal Education and Coastal Management from the UNC Wilmington.

Mar
14
Mon
Ocean Animal Rescue @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 14 @ 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm

This program concerns North Carolina ocean animal rescue efforts including the Sea Biscuit Wildlife Shelter and the Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Rescue and Rehabilitation Center.  The program will also include a discussion of the largest marine mammal hospital in the world in California that has rescued over 25,000 sea lions and seals. All of these rescue efforts have a similar purpose: rescue, rehabilitation, and release. The program will detail why an animal needs to be rescued, how it is rescued, and what determines if and when the animal is released. The program will have a brief discussion of how the health of ocean animals is connected to the health of the ocean. The program will include an art activity for children.

 

 

Mar
18
Fri
Touch Tank Feeding @ Museum of Coastal Carolina
Mar 18 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

You’re invited to get up close with some of the more familiar creatures found in our ocean.

Our touch tank pool allows you to gently touch marine animals such as sea stars, sea urchins, whelks, horseshoe crabs, and hermit crabs. These animals live in a variety of habitats and have developed many ways to survive the waves and predators. Volunteers are on hand to assist and teach you about these incredible animals.

Did you know, when a sea urchin “hugs” your finger if you gently touch its spines, it’s actually checking you out: Are you food or predator? If you’re neither, the animal will just gradually release you.