The Mercury News

CONFETTI FLIES, BALL DROPS FOR SOME EARLY NYE CELEBRATIO­NS

More than 2,400 people attended daytime New Year’s Eve festivitie­s at the Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose, which features a new outdoor, educationa­l play area

- By Ethan Baron ebaron@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE » Kids whose bedtime comes well before midnight got to ring in the New Year hours early at the Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose — and play and learn in an expansive new outdoor play-and-education area. While the museum’s three daily ball drops recalling the big event in New York City’s Times Square drew hordes of excited children and parents, many attendees spent considerab­le time enjoying “Bill’s Backyard” — just opened in October — where a variety of activity sites and a prolific vegetable garden surround three giant-trunked fake trees with walk- and crawl-ways in between.

“We’re building the world’s greatest campfire,” said Sara Davis, 60, of San Jose, whose grandson Judah, 3, was clearly doing the bulk of the work, beneath a shelter made with sticks supplied for kids to learn about building with natural materials.

Nearby, industriou­s youngsters were using pie pans, muffin tins and other kitchen implements to shuttle tiny rocks around a gravel pit, which features a push-button stream that’s designed to emit only a trickle.

“We decided that we needed to do our part in drought education,” said the museum’s executive director, Marilee Jennings.

Inside, families gathered around educationa­l-activity stations, parents minding busy children. Among the most popular attraction­s Saturday were the “pin screen” that allows children to form the imprint of their hands, and other body parts, by pushing against a panel of closely spaced long, plastic rods, plus a room full of water games, including a fountain that shot plastic balls into the air and a whirlpool in a trash cansized

see-through drum.

In the “Mammoth Discovery” room, Mariam Ruhi, 5, was using a small brush to clear sawdust from a replica fossil bed. “She could do this all day,” said her mother Syeda Ruhi, 36. The Cupertino family visits the museum two or three times a year, Ruhi said, but they made a point of coming on New Year’s Eve for the ball drop. “This is special,” she said.

A different kind of educationa­l activity drew 6-yearold Yinon Elmaliach, who was entranced by the threeinch plastic discs spinning in place on a circular metal surface that was also rotating quickly. “The circle stuff can spin without moving!” the Foster City boy reported.

As always at the museum’s annual New Year’s Eve event — first launched in 2006 — the ball drops saw the main hall packed with people awaiting the ball’s descent, which took place at 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. On the hour, confetti in every color of the spectrum was shot out over the crowd, which numbered around 1,000 for the first drop. The ball, designed and made in-house, came down slowly, to the cheers of children and adults. No cliche glitter-ball this — the museum’s version is bedecked

with dozens of LED lights, radiating psychedeli­c patterns as the globe falls.

“You can feel the New Year, you can feel that 2018’s coming,” said Djie Zhou, 33, who watched from a staircase with her three-yearold son Rhett as the ball descended.

The three ball drops coincide with time zones around the world, highlighti­ng the diversity of the communitie­s the museum serves, Jennings said. “It just shows a real-time reflection of our Silicon Valley environmen­t,” Jennings said.

However, among the more than 2,400 attendees were visitors who arrived from farther afield. Keshyla Mayberry drove for 2 ½ hours with her son, daughter and brother from their Fresno home to participat­e in the festivitie­s. “We’re just having a family New Year’s Eve trip,” Mayberry said.

The group had just arrived, after a stop at the Gilroy Gardens theme park, and Mayberry’s daughter Jazzlyn Phillips, 9, said she was looking forward to fossil and geology displays. “I have a rock collection back home,” she said. “I like to look for dinosaur bones.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose celebrates its annual Times Square-styled New Year’s Eve ball drop in San Jose. Though it was only 1 p.m., the event was meant to coordinate with New Year’s Eve shindigs in Moscow and Turkey.
PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose celebrates its annual Times Square-styled New Year’s Eve ball drop in San Jose. Though it was only 1 p.m., the event was meant to coordinate with New Year’s Eve shindigs in Moscow and Turkey.
 ??  ?? Two-year-old Viibhuraj Kasliwal is hoisted by his father Vishal Kasliwal for a better look at the Times Squarestyl­ed New Year’s Eve ball at the Children’s Discovery Museum of
San Jose. Some youngsters ventured outside to see “Bill’s Backyard,” a new...
Two-year-old Viibhuraj Kasliwal is hoisted by his father Vishal Kasliwal for a better look at the Times Squarestyl­ed New Year’s Eve ball at the Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose. Some youngsters ventured outside to see “Bill’s Backyard,” a new...
 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Sandhya Sundarabab­u takes a family selfie with her husband Jai and their daughter, Mithra, at the Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose New Year’s Eve celebratio­n, Sunday in San Jose.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Sandhya Sundarabab­u takes a family selfie with her husband Jai and their daughter, Mithra, at the Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose New Year’s Eve celebratio­n, Sunday in San Jose.

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