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Photos USA

Photo of the Week: Lunchtime in Colonial Williamsburg

Chicken pot pie at the King's Arms Tavern, Colonial Williamsburg VA (photo by Sheila Scarborough)This is the chicken pot pie served at the King’s Arms Tavern restaurant in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia.

Don’t you want to jump right into it?

Anyone can eat at the taverns in the historic area (you don’t have to buy the admissions pass to the other exhibits, buildings and performances, although I’d certainly recommend that if you have time.)

Try Christiana Campbell’s, Chowning’s and Shields in addition to King’s Arms;  they all have children’s menus (and pssst….Tarpley’s store nearby has old-fashioned candies if you don’t want a tavern dessert.)

If you want to stay in Colonial Williamsburg and truly immerse your kids in Revolutionary history, always check on the Web site for special packages that usually include hotel, breakfast and passes for everyone.

For example, I love the interactive street theater of the Revolutionary City mini-plays that reenactors stage all over the historic area, all day. Your family can participate in them with the Revolutionary City Adventure package.

Mostly, just make an excuse to get ahold of some of that pot pie.

(This post is my contribution to this week’s WanderFood Wednesday on the Wanderlust and Lipstick blog.)

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Tips USA

Dueling tourism taglines for North Carolina and Ohio

Here they are, and coincidentally both were on Chevy cars parked right next to each other in Dayton, Ohio.

You know I had to drop everything and take travel geek photos.

The plates feature taglines for two different states in two different regions of the US that both use an aviation angle to tout some “historic cred,” and perhaps encourage tourism along with state pride.

North Carolina, of course, is the home of Kitty Hawk on the Outer Banks, where the Wright Brothers conducted their famous experiments in flight around the wide-open, unpopulated sand dunes (at least, they were unpopulated way back in 1903.)

Today it’s still a nice place to visit, if a bit touristy. Plenty of lighthouses to see, although there are so many shipwrecks offshore that it’s called the “Graveyard of the Atlantic.”

Sainted Husband and I liked the area so much, we got married there a few years back, in the tiny town of Duck at the Sanderling Inn.

Ohio, on the other hand, was actually the home of the Wright Brothers and their famous bicycle shop in Dayton.

You can visit the Dayton Aviation Heritage site, but ironically the original Wright shop was transported to Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan by automotive titan Henry Ford, in an effort to preserve important historic locations.

My esteemed contacts at the Dayton Daily News tell me that the National Museum of the Air Force, at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, does an excellent job of telling the aviation story in that part of Ohio.

Pick your state plate – you’ll get a fun flying story either way!

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Tips USA

Back to the basics: hone your primitive skills at a Knap-in

Looking for a unique way to teach your kids about the past? Enjoy taking the family to living history museums?

Keep an eye out on your travels for events called “Knap-ins” or “primitive arts festivals,” where your kids can revel in their inner Sacajawea or Daniel Boone.

Similar to reenactments or battlefield encampments, a Knap-in brings together many enthusiasts who enjoy re-creating the daily lives, dress and meals of people who lived long ago (the term Knap-in is derived from the ancient practice of knapping flint into tools.)

Other primitive skills include hand-beading of cloth and skins, tracking animals, herbal medicine, knot-tying, making fires with friction tools and creating basic musical instruments. There are usually vendors and artists at a Knap-in selling such items, either already made or sometimes in kits to take home.

Children can learn a lot in one day about basic skills and tools that kept our ancestors alive.

We attended a Knap-in at beautiful Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park in north central Florida; look for such events January-April in many warm weather/Deep South US states, to avoid searing heat and bugs.

The big winner for my son was a chance to work with a costumed reenactor to learn how to throw an ancient spearing weapon, the atlatl (there’s even a World Atlatl Association for mega-enthusiasts.)

I found a few calendars for scheduled Knap-in events, and also take a look at your regional or state tourism events Website as well for possible announcements.

***  Directory of Primitive Living Skills Gatherings and Knap-ins of North America
***  Eskimo.com Upcoming Knap-ins
***  Missouri Trading Company Calendar of Events

Categories
Tips

7 museums where history lives

Bread baking demonstration, Norwegian Folk Museum, Oslo Norway (photo by Sheila Scarborough)It’s tough to re-create history with buildings and costumed people and not have it seem theme-parkish, but when it’s done well, there’s no better way to engage kids in another world and time.

Here are a few places where families can meet history face-to-face, in a largely outdoor setting so you don’t have to keep saying “Shhh!” and “Don’t run!”

** Bunratty Castle and Folk Park. The 1800s-era Folk Park is laid out around Bunratty Castle, built in 1425 and the “most complete and authentic medieval fortress in Ireland.” My family took a long weekend trip to the Shannon area of western Ireland and this attraction was a big winner. It’s an Irish “living village” of homes, businesses and people; very accessible to children.

** Edo-Tokyo Museum. “Edo” is the old name for “Tokyo,” and this museum captures many different historical periods in this sprawling Japanese city, including temples and apartments. The main indoor museum has wonderful re-created street scenes and exhibits, but there is a branch in western Tokyo called the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum that has many more buildings and artifacts. The Web site is in Japanese, but Metropolis Tokyo (sort of like Time Out) has a great description of park highlights. Japan-Guide.com lists other open-air museums in Japan.

** Old Sturbridge Village. Often considered the granddaddy of U.S. open-air living museums, I even remember visiting this New England history stalwart as a child and getting my first horehound candy stick. From their Web site:

“The period portrayed by Old Sturbridge Village, 1790-1840, is of major significance because it was a time in which the everyday lives of New Englanders were transformed by the rise of commerce and manufacturing, improvements in agriculture an transportation, the pulls of emigration and urbanization, and the tides of educational, political, aesthetic, and social change.”

Translation: there’s a lot going on for kids of all ages to watch, participate in and enjoy.

** Bokrijk. This park is in a little section of Flemish Belgium near the town of Hasselt, not far from the Dutch border (and hopefully Belgium as a nation will get over its current French/Flemish tiff.) Only open March-September, it features 3 different villages complete with daily life, farming, cooking demonstrations and handicrafts. The “Haspengouw” represents “grandmother’s life” about 100 years ago.

Tribal interpreters at Indian City USA, Anadarko Oklahoma (courtesy dj buzzard at flickr's Creative Commons)** Indian City USA. In the southwestern Oklahoma town of Anadarko, there are seven different tribes within a 30 mile radius. At this popular attraction with the unfortunate billboard-y name, Plains Indian tribe members give tours of their authentically re-created living areas, encompassing the Navajo, Chiricahua Apache, Wichita, Kiowa Winter Camp, Caddo, Pawnee and Pueblo Villages. Sure, it’s culture compressed, but if you’ve ever driven across the hundreds and hundreds of miles of central US highways with itchy, bored kids, you’ll appreciate some one-stop history of the native Americans on the Great Plains.

** Norsk Folkemuseum. I keep seeing Oslo popping up in travel magazines these days, but we found it first! 🙂 One of the highlights of our trip was this outdoor museum of 155 traditional Norwegian buildings, including a lovely wooden stave church. Many of them are occupied with costumed interpreters doing crafts and cooking (yes, it was great even in the winter snow, when we visited in March.) Where else could you “tour Norway in one day?”

** Virginia’s Historic Triangle: Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown and Yorktown. I’ve written before about what a terrific place this is for kids, but with the holidays approaching, I encourage you to visit this part of Virginia that recreates the 1600s and 1700s. Colonial Williamsburg in particular does distinctive holiday special decorations and events.

For further reading, there’s an Education.com article on U.S. living history museums.