This trip was pretty interesting… I expected it to be your average history location, as many places around here just have boring signage, explaining this and that and blah blah blah. I was here with my sisters and parents, and not all of us are super hyped for historical info. But the exhibits here were really cool, immersive, and interactive. We layer down on the boat beds and rolled around and pretended there was a storm, strokes the pelts in the houses, and we actually climbed a ladder into an area we weren’t allowed into… a worked spotted us and came over but was really kind and just told us it was for safety, but it was cool that we even got a view of that part. Got some delicious icecream, and oh boy that was great! The cafeteria food made me feel like I was back in highschool. I got a corn dog and chicken fingers. Also a bottle of green tea. The lady working the food was alone, and she was a bit rude when we asked for specific options, questioning why we’d want our food a specific way even though it was for allergies. It was along the lines of “why wouldn’t you want a bun with your burger??” The cashier was super kind and nice to be around though. I’ll also say the gift shop prices were much better than other places around here, $0.45 post cards and cheap posters, I got one for $5.99. It was quite the interesting adventure and dive into the past! Only off putting part was seeing some white dude dressed as a native, didn’t think people were allowed to do that. Seems cancel culture hasn’t reached him yet!