If you think your house seems a little too big for house cleaning sometimes, you haven't met Omega! Omega is a finback whale skeleton in the National Aquarium. In life, he weighted around 50 tons and was about 58 feet long—now that's big!
Unfortunately, Omega's size and position has made it virtually impossible for staff at the aquarium to get close to him to really clean the skeleton, so in the 30 years he's been in the museum, the best bath he's ever gotten came from a vacuum cleaner.
Working on some other projects brought a scaffold into the museum and Omega's team realized its usefulness. Now there are two professional conservators carefully looking at the whale's amazing bones, cleaning them and checking for damage. Everyone at the aquarium is looking forward to a clean, safer Omega!
Omega was caught by a whaler and harvested in 1883. The whaler took what he needed and let the rest go, but conservetor for P.T. Barnum and Bufflo Bill, a man by the name of Henry Ward, restored the skeleton, a huge feat.
Finally, in 1981, Omega ended up at the National Aquarium, attracting sea-lovers everywhere. And now, for the first time in his 30 years with the aquarium, Omega is getting a great clean. Conservators will also be looking for any damage, discoloration, or destabilization in the structure to see if they can keep it at its peak for as long as possible.
The Maids Cape Cod
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45 Plant Rd # 105, Hyannis , MA 02601