March First Friday
Pratt Museum 3779 Bartlett Street , Homer, AK, United StatesFriday, March 6, 5-7pm
established in 1968
Friday, March 6, 5-7pm
Two Day Workshop Event
he second event in the series "Connecting Cultures Across the Pacific" will be presented on Thursday, November 3rd at the Pratt Museum and Park. The presentation will be given by by Olga Von Ziegesar and Shelley Gill from Winged Whale Research group.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.