Friday, May 11, 2012

OHOP Village and Pioneer Farm

This is one of my favorite field trips to go on.  Ohop Native American Village and Pioneer Farm.
We started out on the Pioneer side.  We got to go in the cabin where the kids got to do the chores the pioneer children did.

After the brief explanation of all the things that they do, what does Anastasia go to very first??  The shaving station.  She shaved 3 boys' whiskers and then got her own shaved.


Of course I have to notice the crocheting.

Anastasia washing the pioneer clothes.  (The girls used to wash their clothes this way in Ukraine so it wasn't much of a stretch.)

She got her hair curled by a curling iron warmed up over a oil lantern.

She also got to grate cinnamon, grind coffee, chop carrots,  and play with pioneer toys.
(Mara, does this give you any ideas for the jean quilt?)






Milking a cow.  Anastasia and cows go waaaaaaaaay back.   Ask her sometime about her cow story.

One of the boys in our group was obsessed with catching each and everyone of the chickens.

Another boy in our group stripping logs the old fashioned way.

Riding the springboard.

Then we ate lunch (always an important part) and moved on to the Ohop village side.  They have sections set up that tells about the natives activities during each season.

An box drum, decorated in the typical Pacific Northwest motifs.

Making arrowheads.

Cedar bark basket and tanned ermine hide, on loan from the Nisqually tribe.

They had lots of necklaces, hats, and cedar bark skirts/capes for the kids to dress up in.

They got to make a cotton bracelet on the Pioneer side.  Braclets with bones and teeth (really only beans and noodles) and rings out of pounded cedar bark on the Native American side.

Bear grass basket.  (oh to make things like this.....)

Anastasia and her "friendly mark", marks that say you are ok to be among the tribe.
She got to shoot a bow and arrow,  play ring toss games, try to start a fire with a stick, play basket ball with a felted ball, and try to tell an animal by it's fur and tracks.
A very entertaining, educational, and fun (if tiring) field trip!

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