Episodios

  • Episode 7 Are those mummies real?
    May 22 2025

    In this episode we are missing Ava who was playing basketball (the activity she loves more than anything.) Lesley and Sue talk to Gayle Gibson, an Egyptologist who works with the Royal Ontario Museum teaching children about ancient Egypt. Gayle talks about how she became an Egyptologist. She tells us how and why the ancient Egyptians mummified their dead. Although Gayle wouldn't say who her favourite mummy is, she tells a fascinating story about Nahkt, a young 16 year old weaver who was wrapped in his old clothes but then placed in a very nice coffin and buried where kings were buried even though his family was quite poor. She tells us what we can learn from studying mummies. Of course we ask about the mummified cats in the museum and Gayle explains that cats were not the only animals the Egyptians mummified.

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    25 m
  • Episode 6 - Part 2 Were there museums before settlement in what we now call Canada
    Apr 6 2025

    In this episode, we ask Megan Jerry, a member of the Siksika (or Blackfoot) Nation in Alberta, Canada if there were museums before settlement in her area of Alberta.. She works at the Blackfoot Crossing Historic Park. We asked this same question of Coralee Miller, a member of the Syilx Nation in British Columbia, Canada in episode 1. But because First Nations across Canada and United States have their own cultural practises, we thought it would be a great idea to hear some different voices answering the same question. Megan talks about how belongings, but also designs and symbols used in painting teepees and beadwork were passed down through the generations. She also explains how many articles of clothing and weapons belonging to Chief Crowfoot ended up in a museum in England and how the Historic Park got them back.

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    24 m
  • Episode 5 Why are there museums in houses
    Mar 9 2025

    In this episode, Ava, Lesley and Sue chat with Johnny and Darren who work at Historic Joy Kogawa House in Vancouver Canada. This museum is located in the childhood home of Joy Kogawa, a famous Canadian writer of Japanese descent. Johnny and Darren tell us the history of the house and how it came to be a museum. We also learn a bit about the internment of Japanese Canadians during World War II.

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    17 m
  • Episode 4: Bones and skeletons
    Dec 17 2024

    In part 1 of this episode we chat with two skeleton articulators Mike deRoos and Michi Maine. We find out that preparing bones from marine mammals like whales can be very stinky. We also discover that burying bones in horse poop is a good way to clean those bones. Mike talks about how he got into this business. And Mike and Michi tell us about some of the skeletons they've been lucky enough to articulate for museums. In Part 2 we introduce our listeners to the idea that some museums are in houses.

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    22 m
  • Episode 3: What goes where and how did it get there?
    Nov 12 2024

    In part 1 of this episode we talk to two fabrication designers, Josh Doherty works at the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver British Columbia. Stacey Winter works for the Royal BC Museum, also in Vancouver. They talk about what their jobs are and how they got into them.
    In Part two, we introduce the idea of skeleton articulation - that is putting the bones of skeletons together.

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    22 m
  • Episode 2: Is that bear real?
    Oct 14 2024

    In this episode, Ava, Lesley and Sue chat with Solange Massicotte, program Co-ordinator from the Kelowna Heritage museum. She's going to talk about the animals we see in museums. She will talk about where the animals come from, how they are cared for and why having them in a museum is so great.

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    19 m
  • Episode 1: Were there museums before settlement ?
    Aug 12 2024

    In this podcast our co-host Ava, a member of the Sqilxw Nation talks to Coralee Miller a docent at the Sncewips Heritage Museum. She asks the big question “Were there museums before settlement in what is now Canada?” Coralee explains why some things were saved and others weren't. Coralee also talks about why there are many First Nations museums today. In the Sncewips Museum, belongings come and go from the museum. We'll learn why. We'll also hear about belongings that are created for the museum.

    As well as a docent at the museum, Coralee Miller is an accomplished visual artist.


    See photos and more information at timetowonderpodcast.com

    Meet the podcasters, read our blog and listen to our episodes at timetowonderpodcast.com

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    17 m
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