
The Kingdom of Boomeria is a magical place of just one hectare hidden in the forest in Bonny Doon, California. Students who graduate from San Lorenzo Valley High School go out into the world and tell tales of their adventures in the Kingdom of Boomeria and find that no one believes them. After all, how many people can claim their science education included fighting medieval battles, building a pipe organ, and digging an underground labyrinth?

Preston Q. Boomer has been teaching physics and chemistry at San Lorenzo Valley High near Santa Cruz for over 50 years. He has a passion for science and believes that hands-on experience helps students understand scientific concepts. He also believes science (and life in general) should be fun. His nickname is “The Boom”, which they say is not because of explosions in chemistry class, although there are stories of experiments that went awry, like the time he drew the cops to the school after a Tesla coil cut off police communications. Boomer taught the grandparents of his current students, but has no plans to retire. He is the crazy mad scientist that we all wish we had for a teacher.

According to The Boom, the idea of Boomeria was born the night he used water guns to defend his home from students who planned to egg his house. He began construction on the kingdom in the mid 1950s on his 2.5 acre yard nestled in the woods. There were no neighbors at the time. Boomer’s two sons, Lawrence and Alex as well as many students over the years helped construct a wooden castle with a dungeon, battle turrets complete with water cannons, a pneumatic system to power the kingdom’s pipe organ, and an underground labyrinth that connects the different parts of Boomeria. The property also holds a swimming pool (which The Boom calls the “Main Aqueous Ammunition Bunker”) and a chapel built around the organ.

The tunnels beneath Boomeria were dug by students over a three-year period in the 1960s. Now they are known as the Great Tunnel, the Catacombs, and the Dungeon. While digging the tunnels, students found bones of an animal that resembles a dinosaur but still hasn’t been identified. The reconstructed skeleton now hangs in the command center. Next to the castle stands a full-size working guillotine, which is used only for watermelons. No one is allowed on the guillotine platform except The Boom himself. The entire property is wired with horns, sirens, bells, and other means of warning and communication. The loudest is the Weapon Beulah, a Navy foghorn that can be heard miles away. When approaching the castle, you’ll be greeted by The Boom shouting “Who goes there?” to which he expects a creative and intelligent reply.

The students periodically try to conquer the kingdom using the water cannons. These battles rage fiercely, but as the kingdom’s motto states, “The King Always Wins”.

The water to the cannons is controlled from the Main Engine Room. The Control Room holds the telegraph system used for communication and steam engines that power other parts of Boomeria. There is also a laboratory full of ancient chemicals and more recent experiments.

The Brotherhood of Natural Philosophers is the science club The Boom’s students founded in the 1960s. New recruits are taken to a party in Boomeria where they are expected to give a short science presentation, then are taken on a tour of the kingdom before being formally installed. Participation is not mandatory, as that would hint at hazing, but no one wants to miss it! There are activities all year long for club members, both inside the kingdom and elsewhere.

Preston Boomer’s great-grandmother gave an 1879 pipe organ to the Trinity Paris Church in San Jose many years ago. In 1953 the church replaced that organ, and The Boom took what was left of the old organ (the console and two sets of pipes) and made it a part of Boomeria. Over the years, Boomer and his students, under the supervision of organ builders Bill Reid, John West, and Bill Visscher, repaired and expanded the original organ. Now it has 2,500 pipes! You can hear a bit of organ music at The Boom’s site. Image by Flickr user graymalkn.

There are several ways you can experience Boomeria for yourself. The best way is to be a student at San Lorenzo Valley High School. If that’s not possible, you can attend the annual Boomeria Extravaganza, scheduled this year for July 10th. The event is a fundraiser for the Santa Cruz Baroque Festival and will cost you $50 per ticket, but that will entitle you to an afternoon of organ music, refreshments, and a tour of the inside of the organ, as well as a look at the rest of Boomeria. The public is invited to a Christmas carol singing each year -the event for 2010 is scheduled for December 18th. If you are between 7 and 13 years old, you can attend the Celtic Music Camp held each summer at Boomeria. Otherwise, you can contact The Boom ahead of time and ask nicely. After all, it’s his kingdom.
A large tree fell during a storm and damaged part of the castle last fall, but students and family helped remove the debris and insurance will cover repairs. The Boom said he would use the experience in his classroom lessons. It’s just another example of how this teacher uses every opportunity to teach the principles of physics.
This post was inspired by an item at the Presurfer.
Read about other personal constructions at mental_floss: The Coral Castle, Salvation Mountain, The Watts Towers, and 7 Lifelong Personal Projects.
…and his Axis I diagnosis is…
posted by Bubba on 1-26-2010 at 10:00 am
I love dedicated teachers.
In college I had a Psychology professor who would get up on a table and give birth to himself in order to demonstrate the trauma of birth.
There was a lot of screaming involved. It was entertaining to say the least.
posted by Stef on 1-26-2010 at 10:16 am
Too bad we don’t have a lot more dedicated and creative educators like this guy.
recaptcha: feminist governace
That would be a nice change of pace!
posted by Holly on 1-26-2010 at 10:16 am
While I admire the dedication of this guy, I couldn’t help but get a little creeped out by Boomeria. I guess I’ve watched too many Law and Order: SVUs.
reCaptcha: University amnesiac. That pretty much sums it up.
posted by Drew on 1-26-2010 at 10:35 am
I was one of Boomer’s students. While Boomeria is a very cool and fun place, that doesn’t mean he’s a good teacher. He’s actually quite crazy. I didn’t learn anything in his classes, he graded tests by how many pages you wrote. As a nerd, I was disappointed not to learn any Chemistry or Physics, but at least I got an A in both classes. Fun, not educational.
posted by Susan on 1-26-2010 at 10:49 am
Holly – there are dedicated and creative teachers like this! They really do exist, but when you make a standardized test the entire point of school, a lot of teachers no longer get to do the fun and creative things that help kids learn. They have to teach the things that are on the test, not what they think is interesting or important. It’s absolutely true that not all teachers are dedicated and creative, but I worry more and more (especially with Race to the Top coming with all its mandates) that test scores will be the only thing schools care about–not teachers who actually motivate students to care about learning.
posted by Fruppi on 1-26-2010 at 12:17 pm
I thought my reCaptcha was very appropriate:
approved lyceums
I would also like to hear from some of the other students who attended this class.
posted by Owen on 1-26-2010 at 1:37 pm
In response to Susan – I too was a Natrual Philosopher. My experience began in 1973. You are right, Boomer is crazy, but mostly a fun type of crazy. That ‘Party’ that was part of the initiation began with being blind folded and soaked in a dungon, then lead (still blind folded) on a round about route that ended up in a basement. The person was seated before a extra bright strobe light wearing a pair of headphones hoooked up to reverb echo feedback loop that bleed your words back to you totally out of sync with what you were saying. And to start off your had to recite the oath of the Natrual Philosophers (I swear by the beard of Sir Frances Bacon that I will not loaf …….). Any one who had been there will remember the rest. The rest of the night turned out pretty fun, and I had an experience that helped me when I went to SERE school a couple of years later after I joined the Navy. Anybody remember the KOR?
posted by 'Da guy on 1-26-2010 at 2:26 pm
You mean people don’t fight medieval battles all the time? The way I see it, the more creative you get the better. It’s great for learning in school, but it really should continue for a lifetime.
posted by Anthony Cars on 1-26-2010 at 4:45 pm
Even if the guy is crazy and you didn’t learn what you expected to learn in his class, he kept your attention and he made class interesting, yes? Then he succeeded. Learning is the student’s job — the teacher can’t make you learn if you don’t do your part. I wish I’d had him for a teacher. Science was dull as dishwater when I was in school.
posted by Siobhan on 1-26-2010 at 4:53 pm
Sounds similar to home school science.
posted by Becky on 1-26-2010 at 6:07 pm